wow, well spotted, no wonder he's jumpy. As it happens, I have a rooster who's lost an eye. Super jumpy, with others to fend off.
@SG-vu4qy18 сағат бұрын
i rescued a filly that was found with a foal halter grown into her head, and across her right eye. She has the same reactive nature on her right side. Lots of tension and flight response on her right a vet checked and found she could see forward but not side or rear vision. I do consistent groundwork with her using feel and vocal cues, so she knows where I'm at on her right side. Thank you, Steve, for finding the unseen symptom.
@MsDormy12 сағат бұрын
Thank the Lord your filly found you! Thank you for saving her ❤️
@Marigold50219 сағат бұрын
It must be hard for she's the cutest thing ever ( I'd be hopeless) ❤
@louisegogel797323 сағат бұрын
Always have a vet check before buying or at least first off once you’ve bought the horse? And, I’d love to have an update sometime on what happens with the horse’s eye health.
@almirakline6070Күн бұрын
Awww, 😢 , he's beautiful ❤. Hope he can learn to trust her, 🙏 and she can be careful with his left side, now that she knows he can't see out of it.
@SkYwOmAn1Күн бұрын
HE IS NOT DANGEROUS!! HE IS A HORSE, ACTING LIKE A HORSE!! IT IS NEVER THE HORSES’ FAULT, IT’S A HUMAN PROBLEM…ALWAYS!!! REMEMBER THAT!!!!!
@Goldenhawk583Күн бұрын
1 Why are you screaming? 2 A scared horse is a dangerous horse, just because it is big and strong. This does not mean anyone is blaming the horse for being a horse or for being scared, it is simply accepting that a scared horse is a denagerous horse. If you think he is not dangerois, you may make a lethal mistake, for both you and the hoirse, and it would be on you, not the horse.
@Sine-gl9ly17 сағат бұрын
Please stop shouting. That does no good for anyone, unless you are shouting a warning to others who are present but unaware.
@louisecassidy599116 сағат бұрын
I don't think you watched the vid through. The horse is almost blind on the near side, the side where we do everything. Just knowing this now must make a huge difference. And maybe you are shouting, or maybe you are simply too lazy to use caps only where appropriate. And maybe in your quick trolling of horse vids you went by the title only.
@jennyrosd2003Күн бұрын
Knowing about his compromised sight will help him so much. Glad you figured it out.
@suzannechance5876Күн бұрын
Well done again!
@vintagelady1Күн бұрын
First move w/ a difficult horse: the vet! But it must be such a relief to any horse, but particularly a blind/impaired horse, to find someone who speaks her/his language.
@whywhywhy4716Күн бұрын
Charlie is beautiful!
@janetlevy1338Күн бұрын
Good that this condition was found by Steve. I had a friend with an off the track racehorse that was blind in one eye. He started out as a nervous horse also but eventually he became a decent riding horse and after she sold him we found out they were jumping him at hunter/jumper shows. I think this might have been against the rules, but they got away with it because the horse acted normally even when jumping.
@sarahgrover3620Күн бұрын
Rolex :)
@pamelamessman975Күн бұрын
That’s so sad poor fella ☹️
@joannsmith9Күн бұрын
Thankfully you found the problem. Poor horse.
@Fifi-wv3bdКүн бұрын
Wonderful work as always Steve & Tanya 😊 Beautiful horse hopefully he's doing better now that everyone knows about his eyesight
@payntpot7623Күн бұрын
I get the impression someone else hade already suggested he might be blind in one eye, and she spent money on a trainer rather than a vet? Not saying that Steve is not very necessary in this instance for behaviour, however, priorities....? I hope she is able to go away and think and work through what Steve was saying here.
@MsDormy12 сағат бұрын
Frankly, a pony with behavior issues can be a danger to vets and other horse professionals - I’d def call Steve in before having a dominant and dangerous pony examined, if the pony wasn’t in imminent pain.
@payntpot76232 сағат бұрын
@MsDormy true, but you can always stick the horse in a crush. That's what they are made for to keep vets etc... safe. Perhaps they have not heard of a crush in the UK?
@jobee9113Күн бұрын
Well spotted Steve.
@leelindsay5618Күн бұрын
Perhaps some better lighting in the barn can help or a bright strip of tape along the door entries or other areas so the horse may get some visual feedback to the weak eye.
@MsDormy12 сағат бұрын
Or putting a strip of that anti-draught brush stuff along the wall edges, would help him feel where the edges are, without him hurting himself. It’s got to be doable… just takes a bit of thought!! God bless his owner for calling Steve out, before giving up on the pony!
@natz6589Күн бұрын
My favourite thing is when Steve's working a horse alone and Tan is filming and you can hear Tan quietly saying "uh huh....hmmm...yes!...ooh.... good...oh dear..!..aha!..." 😄 It's incredible really because it shows that Tan is as knowledgeable as Steve and they actually work as one mind 🙏✨🩷 what a team 👍
@cb664Күн бұрын
They are a great team, but they have different roles. Steve knows horses inside out and is the training expert.
@tammyspurdle9208Күн бұрын
Stunning looking horse, so sad for horse and owner that he might be blind in one eye. Good you were asked to go see him as it could have continued to be missed. God bless you Steve. Hope something can be done to improve Charlie's eye. ❤
@karineekgКүн бұрын
Gorgeous horse ❤
@user-hb8mj1mv1xКүн бұрын
I recently audited your KZread channel and noticed a few on-page SEO issues that might be hindering your growth: 1. Video overviews are not fully optimized. 2. Titles and descriptions lack SEO optimization. 3. Missing high-volume ranked tags. 4. Create Eye-Catching thumbnails Despite your great video quality, these factors are impacting your views and subscriber count.
@magsb3Күн бұрын
Steve deserves max views as his message/training is so vital to horse owners. I hope your points help.
@paulinebaker9302Күн бұрын
Bless you Steve.
@louisegogel797323 сағат бұрын
What does all that even mean and are you a legit person or trying to hook into something for your own gain?
@podunk_woman21 сағат бұрын
@@louisegogel7973 oh, that's all legit language. I don't think they mean it in any kind of harsh way. Most KZreadrs start out with little to no social media expertise. They learn as they go. I've watched this channel improve their filming over time among other improvements . These are actually good pro tips that can help. I think this person is genuinely interested in helping them grow.
@ginnychibbaor4578Күн бұрын
He is so nervous. Diarrhea blowing poor guy
@lesleystadames2810Күн бұрын
What a shame for this beautiful horse. At least they now know
@vintagelady1Күн бұрын
But even a fully blind horse can have a very good & useful life---there are people on Horse Plus Humane Society that deliberately sek out blind horses to do trail riding. It takes special techniques 7 a lot of trust, but they do fine, & often they find a buddy to lead them around.
@deb4405Күн бұрын
I can't wait to hear how Nita is doing.
@user-ul4nm1if2eКүн бұрын
Wow, that was big. Poor thing, no wonder he is so spooky. Hope the vet checks his eyes out, might be treatable or stop things degenerating further. Lovely looking horses, such a shame. 😢 Well spotted Steve ❤
@GaliSinatraКүн бұрын
Awww poor thing. Well done Steve recognizing it.
@Fubar2024Күн бұрын
Thank you! I don't own a horse, but love watching your channel!
@sidilicious11Күн бұрын
I hope the owner can help her horse compensate now that she knows.
@spfisterer3651Күн бұрын
First of all: another fantastic video with lots of learning opportunities and another horse helped ❤ But I do have to correct Charlotte: most dressage horses at an Olympic level are dutch or german warmbloods... I read an article about it and only one horse in the last Olympic finals wasn't a warmblood. So out of the last 18, 17 were warmbloods.. And (drumroll) 1 Lusitano ❤ love Spanish horses, btw.
@CM-wk3sg2 күн бұрын
Love everything about this video! You and Charlotte enjoying your awesome horses, the wonderful landscape, Charlotte‘s big grin every time you film her! 🤩👍
@sharonchittell35043 күн бұрын
She’s a gorgeous colour. She looks metallic ❤
@debrah75483 күн бұрын
Love this video!
@judew9393 күн бұрын
Rolex… love the colour and he seems a favourite of yours
@kidstuff445553 күн бұрын
Don't use side reins when lunging or long lining, especially not cranked as tight as they did on this poor horse. It's completely normal for horses to feel very claustrophobic and trapped when their heads are forced down and they're not used to it. That's why she was rearing. Her head was held down and she didn't know how to escape it
@emerwatchorn69714 күн бұрын
Just wonder why the horses have rugs on? In summer and in the stable, pls exuse my ignorance. Otherwise a really lovely video. Ahh i just love kids, my hands are hurting like 1 min in. Lol bless
@browniewin41214 күн бұрын
I'm wondering what that horse weighs? He is so sturdy and a beautiful horse.
@debrah75484 күн бұрын
Excellent vid. Can almost feel the pony’s movements and my own responses in synch with Steve’s by about mid point. Am learning so much because it makes so much sense.
@348Tobico4 күн бұрын
I trained and worked horses for years, mostly for other people. Every time a very small or fragile woman approached me to work with her horse it turned out she had a very large, pushy horse like this one. As an average size woman at 5'6", I always wondered what neurosis makes tiny women want those large unruly horses. Best I can come up with is they want to achieve a sense of "huge" control of something massive. And they do not know that to control that massive thing you have to be the brains of the operation BEFORE you can gain control. The women I met with the problem had been convinced by bad books and bad TV and movies, that all that massive creature needs is to share your love and control both on the ground and under tack will be created. Maybe "little-nes" and spending your life feeling overlooked by others makes little women crave "huge" control of a horse that they cannot achieve in their daily "non horse" life. And after a bit the horse becomes just your disrespectful pasture pet. All because the huge horse that stokes your ego never bought into the idea that mutual fantasy love of human for horse and horse for human would take care of all that nasty training stuff. Napoleon Bonapart(sp) had issues with being short and dealt with it by conquering other countries. But the man knew how to have and control horses so they could function as he needed them to. Great video, Steve.
@devilmecare4 күн бұрын
I've learned more watching Heartland the Canadian TV series.
@lisabrown45075 күн бұрын
That neck leads me to think he may have been cut late and ran as a Stallion for a while. Giving him a pushy attitude.
@alinebrandau39825 күн бұрын
The ignorant comments here are scary.
@sharigirardeau33675 күн бұрын
I wonder if her owner LOOKED FOR a "trainer for difficult horses" just because she couldn't handle her. Or maybe she looked for a less expensive option, having spent loads on the horse and shipping her from Portugal.
@sharigirardeau33675 күн бұрын
Oh my goodness, he's absolutely STUNNING!! He'll be a good boy when you're finished, and hopefully his owner will follow your recommendations and have a happy relationship with him. ❤
@joannedevine24736 күн бұрын
It’s like he has ADD! Everything is a distraction from Focus.
@maggiscott56266 күн бұрын
Don't like this man and think he is cruel.
@ginagriffin69286 күн бұрын
Well done Steve your making a big difference in this beautiful horse lovely colour bit like a done colour.❤❤❤🐴🐴🐴❤️❤️❤️🥰😊
@ginagriffin69287 күн бұрын
Beautiful horse unusual markings,very big & heavy horse with a mind of his own but having really good training with Steve so he should learn something not to be so pushy with his owner,🐴💙💙🥰😊
@carolynstewart84657 күн бұрын
The horse should be in the audience watching the owner be trained. Horse way to fat!
Пікірлер
Yanking... *sigh*
wow, well spotted, no wonder he's jumpy. As it happens, I have a rooster who's lost an eye. Super jumpy, with others to fend off.
i rescued a filly that was found with a foal halter grown into her head, and across her right eye. She has the same reactive nature on her right side. Lots of tension and flight response on her right a vet checked and found she could see forward but not side or rear vision. I do consistent groundwork with her using feel and vocal cues, so she knows where I'm at on her right side. Thank you, Steve, for finding the unseen symptom.
Thank the Lord your filly found you! Thank you for saving her ❤️
It must be hard for she's the cutest thing ever ( I'd be hopeless) ❤
Always have a vet check before buying or at least first off once you’ve bought the horse? And, I’d love to have an update sometime on what happens with the horse’s eye health.
Awww, 😢 , he's beautiful ❤. Hope he can learn to trust her, 🙏 and she can be careful with his left side, now that she knows he can't see out of it.
HE IS NOT DANGEROUS!! HE IS A HORSE, ACTING LIKE A HORSE!! IT IS NEVER THE HORSES’ FAULT, IT’S A HUMAN PROBLEM…ALWAYS!!! REMEMBER THAT!!!!!
1 Why are you screaming? 2 A scared horse is a dangerous horse, just because it is big and strong. This does not mean anyone is blaming the horse for being a horse or for being scared, it is simply accepting that a scared horse is a denagerous horse. If you think he is not dangerois, you may make a lethal mistake, for both you and the hoirse, and it would be on you, not the horse.
Please stop shouting. That does no good for anyone, unless you are shouting a warning to others who are present but unaware.
I don't think you watched the vid through. The horse is almost blind on the near side, the side where we do everything. Just knowing this now must make a huge difference. And maybe you are shouting, or maybe you are simply too lazy to use caps only where appropriate. And maybe in your quick trolling of horse vids you went by the title only.
Knowing about his compromised sight will help him so much. Glad you figured it out.
Well done again!
First move w/ a difficult horse: the vet! But it must be such a relief to any horse, but particularly a blind/impaired horse, to find someone who speaks her/his language.
Charlie is beautiful!
Good that this condition was found by Steve. I had a friend with an off the track racehorse that was blind in one eye. He started out as a nervous horse also but eventually he became a decent riding horse and after she sold him we found out they were jumping him at hunter/jumper shows. I think this might have been against the rules, but they got away with it because the horse acted normally even when jumping.
Rolex :)
That’s so sad poor fella ☹️
Thankfully you found the problem. Poor horse.
Wonderful work as always Steve & Tanya 😊 Beautiful horse hopefully he's doing better now that everyone knows about his eyesight
I get the impression someone else hade already suggested he might be blind in one eye, and she spent money on a trainer rather than a vet? Not saying that Steve is not very necessary in this instance for behaviour, however, priorities....? I hope she is able to go away and think and work through what Steve was saying here.
Frankly, a pony with behavior issues can be a danger to vets and other horse professionals - I’d def call Steve in before having a dominant and dangerous pony examined, if the pony wasn’t in imminent pain.
@MsDormy true, but you can always stick the horse in a crush. That's what they are made for to keep vets etc... safe. Perhaps they have not heard of a crush in the UK?
Well spotted Steve.
Perhaps some better lighting in the barn can help or a bright strip of tape along the door entries or other areas so the horse may get some visual feedback to the weak eye.
Or putting a strip of that anti-draught brush stuff along the wall edges, would help him feel where the edges are, without him hurting himself. It’s got to be doable… just takes a bit of thought!! God bless his owner for calling Steve out, before giving up on the pony!
My favourite thing is when Steve's working a horse alone and Tan is filming and you can hear Tan quietly saying "uh huh....hmmm...yes!...ooh.... good...oh dear..!..aha!..." 😄 It's incredible really because it shows that Tan is as knowledgeable as Steve and they actually work as one mind 🙏✨🩷 what a team 👍
They are a great team, but they have different roles. Steve knows horses inside out and is the training expert.
Stunning looking horse, so sad for horse and owner that he might be blind in one eye. Good you were asked to go see him as it could have continued to be missed. God bless you Steve. Hope something can be done to improve Charlie's eye. ❤
Gorgeous horse ❤
I recently audited your KZread channel and noticed a few on-page SEO issues that might be hindering your growth: 1. Video overviews are not fully optimized. 2. Titles and descriptions lack SEO optimization. 3. Missing high-volume ranked tags. 4. Create Eye-Catching thumbnails Despite your great video quality, these factors are impacting your views and subscriber count.
Steve deserves max views as his message/training is so vital to horse owners. I hope your points help.
Bless you Steve.
What does all that even mean and are you a legit person or trying to hook into something for your own gain?
@@louisegogel7973 oh, that's all legit language. I don't think they mean it in any kind of harsh way. Most KZreadrs start out with little to no social media expertise. They learn as they go. I've watched this channel improve their filming over time among other improvements . These are actually good pro tips that can help. I think this person is genuinely interested in helping them grow.
He is so nervous. Diarrhea blowing poor guy
What a shame for this beautiful horse. At least they now know
But even a fully blind horse can have a very good & useful life---there are people on Horse Plus Humane Society that deliberately sek out blind horses to do trail riding. It takes special techniques 7 a lot of trust, but they do fine, & often they find a buddy to lead them around.
I can't wait to hear how Nita is doing.
Wow, that was big. Poor thing, no wonder he is so spooky. Hope the vet checks his eyes out, might be treatable or stop things degenerating further. Lovely looking horses, such a shame. 😢 Well spotted Steve ❤
Awww poor thing. Well done Steve recognizing it.
Thank you! I don't own a horse, but love watching your channel!
I hope the owner can help her horse compensate now that she knows.
First of all: another fantastic video with lots of learning opportunities and another horse helped ❤ But I do have to correct Charlotte: most dressage horses at an Olympic level are dutch or german warmbloods... I read an article about it and only one horse in the last Olympic finals wasn't a warmblood. So out of the last 18, 17 were warmbloods.. And (drumroll) 1 Lusitano ❤ love Spanish horses, btw.
Love everything about this video! You and Charlotte enjoying your awesome horses, the wonderful landscape, Charlotte‘s big grin every time you film her! 🤩👍
She’s a gorgeous colour. She looks metallic ❤
Love this video!
Rolex… love the colour and he seems a favourite of yours
Don't use side reins when lunging or long lining, especially not cranked as tight as they did on this poor horse. It's completely normal for horses to feel very claustrophobic and trapped when their heads are forced down and they're not used to it. That's why she was rearing. Her head was held down and she didn't know how to escape it
Just wonder why the horses have rugs on? In summer and in the stable, pls exuse my ignorance. Otherwise a really lovely video. Ahh i just love kids, my hands are hurting like 1 min in. Lol bless
I'm wondering what that horse weighs? He is so sturdy and a beautiful horse.
Excellent vid. Can almost feel the pony’s movements and my own responses in synch with Steve’s by about mid point. Am learning so much because it makes so much sense.
I trained and worked horses for years, mostly for other people. Every time a very small or fragile woman approached me to work with her horse it turned out she had a very large, pushy horse like this one. As an average size woman at 5'6", I always wondered what neurosis makes tiny women want those large unruly horses. Best I can come up with is they want to achieve a sense of "huge" control of something massive. And they do not know that to control that massive thing you have to be the brains of the operation BEFORE you can gain control. The women I met with the problem had been convinced by bad books and bad TV and movies, that all that massive creature needs is to share your love and control both on the ground and under tack will be created. Maybe "little-nes" and spending your life feeling overlooked by others makes little women crave "huge" control of a horse that they cannot achieve in their daily "non horse" life. And after a bit the horse becomes just your disrespectful pasture pet. All because the huge horse that stokes your ego never bought into the idea that mutual fantasy love of human for horse and horse for human would take care of all that nasty training stuff. Napoleon Bonapart(sp) had issues with being short and dealt with it by conquering other countries. But the man knew how to have and control horses so they could function as he needed them to. Great video, Steve.
I've learned more watching Heartland the Canadian TV series.
That neck leads me to think he may have been cut late and ran as a Stallion for a while. Giving him a pushy attitude.
The ignorant comments here are scary.
I wonder if her owner LOOKED FOR a "trainer for difficult horses" just because she couldn't handle her. Or maybe she looked for a less expensive option, having spent loads on the horse and shipping her from Portugal.
Oh my goodness, he's absolutely STUNNING!! He'll be a good boy when you're finished, and hopefully his owner will follow your recommendations and have a happy relationship with him. ❤
It’s like he has ADD! Everything is a distraction from Focus.
Don't like this man and think he is cruel.
Well done Steve your making a big difference in this beautiful horse lovely colour bit like a done colour.❤❤❤🐴🐴🐴❤️❤️❤️🥰😊
Beautiful horse unusual markings,very big & heavy horse with a mind of his own but having really good training with Steve so he should learn something not to be so pushy with his owner,🐴💙💙🥰😊
The horse should be in the audience watching the owner be trained. Horse way to fat!
Great compilation!