What’s Scary?

By Terry Golson


Which do you think is scarier to my horse?

This:

 

or this?

 

The answer is the branch!

Although Tonka has settled calmly into his new home,

and has seen that downed pine bough every day since he’s arrived, when I tried to ride past it, Tonka deemed it something to be wary of. He slowed down. He stopped. No big drama, but Tonka was clearly concerned.

The trail to the woods goes alongside Tonka’s paddock. This branch was in the way. It’s a familiar object that posed no threat. I don’t know why Tonka was worried, but I have some ideas. It has to do with how horses see. Horses have the largest eyes of any land mammal.

Gorgeous.

 

You know the difference between the panorama (pano) and the square settings on your phone camera? Horses see the world in pano. We see it in square. They can see detail at distance, but can’t focus on things close up. They’re partially color blind – they can see what we call yellows, blues and grays. Although some horses can perform what look like color discrimination tests, it’s likely that they’re detecting brightness and luminescence, not color. So, what I see as green foliage is not-so-distinct mottled shades of grey to Tonka. Also, it takes a horse’s eyes longer than ours to adjust from sunlight to dark, and there was deep shade to the right. With pano vision, that shady area was as important to him as what was right in front of us. Or, it might have been difficult for Tonka to discern whether the footing under the branch was safe. Or maybe it wasn’t how he viewed it per se, but that just as we were getting near it, smoke from the neighbor’s burning brush pile wafted over, which made Tonka more cautious overall.

In any event, when faced with such an obstacle on the trail, I let my horse look. I don’t discount his worries. I’m glad for his input. I like a thinking horse who wants to keep us both safe. I let Tonka know by my body language (he can feel where my eyes are), that I’m giving it a good once over, too. Then I let him know that I’ve decided that it’s okay and we can get going. I sit plumb, look right past the branch, and give him a squeeze with my calves. It’s his tactile cue to move on. In this case, he kept his hooves planted, still doubtful that navigating over the pine bough was a good idea. So, I thumped his sides with the flat of my legs, sort of an I’m serious, it’s fine! I could practically hear him say, Okay, okay, I’ll go if you say so, as he carefully stepped over it. (If he had continued to balk, or act fearfully, I would have gotten off and led him over. Horses are often braver when their person is next to them, not on them.)

Not much further down the trail, we saw a beach ball. Unlike a branch on the ground, a beach ball is totally out of place, and yet Tonka barely glanced at it. Why was he so unconcerned?

I’ve noticed this before – Tonka is more alert to natural things that are not quite right, than to manmade objects that are out of place. Perhaps this is because we’ve done a lot of work getting him used to, and being rewarded for, interacting with unusual obstacles.

 

Perhaps it’s because Tonka knows that dangers lurk hidden in brush, but that beach balls and such have never jumped out at him.

In an event, we continued on, walked over downed tree trunks on a trail, had a nice explore at the bottom of a small field, got to a road, turned around and headed home. On the way back, Tonka didn’t glance twice at the beach ball or eyeball the branch. He was 100% relaxed the whole way home.

What does your horse spook at? What do they not spook at that you were sure they would?

Note: information about horse eyesight and other senses can be found in detail in Equine Behavior: A Guide for Veterinarians and Equine Scientists by Paul McGreevy.


5 thoughts on “What’s Scary?

  • Kim

    I would have to say it’s also branches and brush for my horse as well. When we go out on the trails if there is a single branch out of place Booker will let me know with a look and a strong blowing sound. I have to look very carefully before I figure out exactly what is different, but there is always something. And when we go back past it from the other direction it’s scary all over again. Afterwards it’s the new normal, until the next change in topography. On the other hand, he’s fine with any vehicle we come across. I once had a friendly ups driver stop next to us and offer my horse a pineapple snack cup through the open door. Booker put his head inside the opening and accepted the treat!

  • sally

    My guy is really very good out and about by ourselves. Something that I think will make him concerned never really does. What really rocks his world is seeing a group of bicyclist in the distance, moving at a good clip, with their colored jerseys and we can hear them talking. He swears that undulating, noisy line is a huge snake out for his hide, and he will actually stand, shaking and snorting.

    • Terry Golson Post author

      A group of bicycles, or even one, is a perfect example of something that is difficult for a horse to decipher. If I can, I ask the cyclists to please stop and use their “human voices.” As soon as Tonka hears them, he realizes that there are actually people in the helmets and spandex.

  • Gin

    Most of the horses I had over the years spook at hikers with the big rectangle backpacks that hide the actual shape of the hiker. Even asking them to talk doesn’t help a lot like it does with cyclists. One of my mares I have now spooks at downed trees along the trail. There are a lot of them since we’ve had so many bad storms, she will walk quietly past most of them, then will spook at one, I don’t know what she perceives as the difference. She is a lot better now than she used to be, when she was young we had to practically check out half the logs before she would go past them.

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