He didn’t fall down all the way. He slipped in the mud.
If the horse wanted to attack the girl, he’da kicked her, not body checked her sideways. I’ve never seen a horse do that as a defensive measure. Has anyone else?
And if the horse isnt’ falling, how do you explain the slipping foot? And does the horse lowering his body without bending his knees look natural to you?
It doesn’t look like there’s any mud–it looks quite dry and dusty.
Anyway, the horse looks like it deliberately runs in the girl’s direction as it does the body check. It’s not like it’s just walking and it slips. That was a pretty quick movement.
Also, if the horse intended to get away from the other horse, or to continue its slow-motion flight from the little girl, it would have been easier and more natural to just bolt forward rather than running sideways. And that shoulder was dropping well before the pastern knuckled under. Frankly, I give the horse credit for keeping its body under control so well that it didn’t either fall on the kid or stomp her in the scramble as it got back upright.
Well, yeah. But that’s my point. If the horse wanted to attack, it would have bitten or kicked. If the horse wanted to get away, it would have run. It wouldn’t have shoulder-charged the girl because horses don’t do that.
I disagree that the shoulder drops earlier than the foot slipping, and you still haven’t explained why the horse’s leg slips out from under it as it steps sideways. It doesn’t “push off”, it just slips.
As others who know horses have pointed out in this thread, the horse was neither attacking nor fleeing. It was disciplining a misbehaving juvenile. The intention wasn’t to harm; it was to deliver a message. And the foot knuckling under comes after a good three steps sideways.
That was absolutely deliberate. Horses don’t “accidentally” walk sideways into something like that one does. He was actually astoundingly careful.
Horses DO “do that”. They will also body-check and/or lean & squash you into a wall/fence/another horse, if they’re either poorly mannered or extremely annoyed.
The child is incredibly lucky she didn’t get kicked to blue yonder. The parents (or whoever had that camera) should be strung up.
I don’t think it’s funny at all; the usual outcome when an animal hurts a child is for the animal to be killed, and I truly hate that (since it’s usually if not always some adults’ fault, but the animal gets the blame because it’s “just” an animal).
I didn’t think the child was tormenting the horse – as others have mentioned the child was too young to be quite aware of the situation. The girl probably wanted to “play” with the horse, but the horse was not interested, did not like children or didn’t want to spend time with that one right then.
The most striking thing to me about the video was the level of restraint shown by the horse. I don’t know much about horses but in my experience they’re pretty shy and skittish, particularly when approached from behind repeatedly. This horse seemed extremely well trained to me.
Anyone with an understanding of equine behavior and body language can see that this was a deliberate action of the part of the horse. I’ve seen horses do this to each other a hundred times.
Depends on whose point of view you are referencing. The child most certainly didn’t think she was tormenting the horse. The horse might have felt differently.
I wonder if I can pull that move on nieces and nephews at family gatherings? They seem to have a knack for finding the uncle who least wants to be bothered.
I’m a city slicker by all standards, but I thought it was comon sense not to stand behind a horse. Let alone let a child harass one. The kid and especially her care takers are lucky the kid isn’t dead.
I understand about not walking up directly behind a horse; it’s typical prey animal behavior. But IIRC you’re supposed to mount a horse from its left side, never its right. Why is that?
I should in all honesty point out that the delightfully snarky first paragraph was added by Ed Zotti; but the bulk of the article is, yes, my very own.
And if you go around behind, as was already mentioned, stay close. I make a point of keeping a hand on the rump and pressing my hip against the hindquarters. That way if the horse does kick, he can’t get any momentum.
And, just for the record, horses can “cow kick” (kicking out sideways with a hind leg). They don’t have nearly the range or power that a full-on back kick has, but it’s enough to raise a heckuva bruise.
And, just to be complete, they can nail you with a front hoof, too. I was in a wild horse race where our horse reared up and lashed out with a front foot. Nailed one of my partners in the forehead and gave him a concussion.
All that said, the kicks are pretty rare, but we need to remember that horses are large, powerful animals that are easily spooked.
I respectfully disagree. I own horses, and I’ve watched them fall. At the time he started sideways, he was moving almost straight ahead, and he telegraphed the action with his ears and neck.
I’ve also watched dominance displays where horses body check each other. I’ve had one do that to me, although not nearly that hard. He made me stumble back, so I moved in close and pressed my knuckles in behind his ribs until I made him step away. Whoever forces the other to take a step is higher in the pecking order.
The question was well answered by EddyTeddyFreddy.
I’d point out, though, that people who train trail horses don’t follow that rule. Any good trail horse (or cowhorse) will be trained to accept riders mounting from either side, because there are times out on the trail when you can’t get to the left side safely.
It actually makes sense to train any and every horse to be mounted from both sides, when you stop and think about it. Not that it’s done, of course; but it really should be.
I must say, though, the few times I’ve tried mounting from the off side felt utterly WRONG and I was quite awkward at it, even from a mounting block with a well-behaved horse.
Heh. As it happens, horses indeed are right or left sided; that is to say, they usually are more flexible bending in one direction than the other, which affects how they respond under saddle.