
Kicking
© F. Thomas Breningstallfirst published in
Rural Heritage draft-animal magazine
reprinted from Rural Heritage Magazine, Winter 1997, adapted for the
Farriery Articles section.
"What can I do about a mule that kicks?"
asks Dan Lawson of Port Angeles, Washington. Dan's farrier recently came out to
shoe Dan's horses and his mule. When the farrier lifted the mule's front foot,
the mule kicked with the back foot on the same side, barely missing the
farrier's head. "That kick was meant to kill," says Dan.
Intelligently, the farrier passed on the mule. "Not a whole lot of folks
up this way know much about mules, so I'm hoping you can offer some help."
Dan's farrier showed good sense in not working on an animal that kicks. The
farrier is not responsible for training or breaking, which are up to the owner
and should be done as soon as possible after the foal is born (see "Foal
Feet Care," Rural Heritage, Spring 1996). If owners would imprint in their
foals' minds that people are part of everyday life, then breaking and training
grown horses and mules wouldn't be so dangerous. Always work carefully around
an animal that tends to kick. Unless you know the animal's history, trying to
figure out why it kicks is at best a guess. Horses and mules kick as a means of
defense (to fend off) or as a means of offense (to attack). Either way, it's
part of their inherited fight-or-flight instinct. When they kick they are:
- afraid,
- trying to defend themselves,
- just plain malicious,
- hurt and fighting the pain, or the possibility of pain,
- remembering a time when pain was inflicted (such as getting quicked by a
nail, nippers, or knife.)
The following suggestions on restraints and training aids are offered as
information only. Please do not try any of these without the
assistance of a professional horse trainer or handler. You may ask your farrier
to help, but only if he is fully informed, is capable, and is paid for his
time.
When a horse or mule is afraid, the use of restraints may make it more
afraid. If it is mean or angry, the use of restraints may make it more irate.
And if it hurts, restraints may make it afraid and angry. If you have tried
restraints and still can't trim or shoe the animal, ask your veterinarian for a
pharmacological aid.
Drugs. The safest way to trim or shoe a kicker is to have your
veterinarian in attendance to administer medication to help the animal overcome
its phobia. The type of drug used is between you and the veterinarian. But
remember, drugs are not training aids. The horse or mule you drug will not
learn well under the influence.
Twitch. A twitch is a loop of rope or chain on the end of a long
handle. The loop is placed over the mule's upper lip or nose and then twisted
to create pressure on the nose. The twitch can also be put on the base of an
ear. Either way, its effect is to calm the animal while the twitch is in place.
Stud Chain. A stud chain or lead chain is a chain with a clasp on
one end and rope on the other. Cotton rope is best, as it will not burn your
hands as nylon rope will. Put the chain through the left lower ring on the
halter, then bring it over the bridge of the nose, and attach the clasp to the
lower ring on the right side of the halter. If the animal acts up, a quick jerk
on the lead rope will sometimes change its ill ways. This chain can also be
placed under the upper lip, over the gums. Give a quick snap only when
he acts up.
Hobbles. Scotch hobbles and side lines can be used to tie up legs
or to hobble the legs together, but should be employed only by people with the
skills to use them. We don't want to injure the animal, just trim his feet.
Stocks. Some farriers use stocks to restrain the animal for
trimming and shoeing. [You'll find more on stocks in the Rural Heritage Spring
1997 issue.]
Desensitizing. The best way to train a mule or horse not to kick is
desensitizing the animal to the fear stimulus by getting him so used to it that
he no longer takes notice. Desensitizing takes time, skill, and sometimes (at
least initially) drugs.
In the long run, the skills of a good trainer can be of great help. I can't
stress strongly enough the idea that someone not versed in Training should not
try to break a kicker.
Not to disappoint you, but some horses and mules are just plain nuts. They
have a total inability to control their rational processes. In such a case,
euthanasia is the only safe way to stop a kicker from hurting or killing
someone. I have been kicked, and kicked at, by normally calm horses that had
been startled by me or by audio, visual or physical stimuli over which I had no
control--everything from thunder and lightning, gunfire, wind, rain, snow, kids
playing, dogs barking, car horns, trucks rattling, horses running, and cats
jumping.
Treat horses and mules as you would treat a bundle of dynamite with a short
fuse that at any moment could blow up without warning. Always think
"safe" and work safely around horses and mules.
F. Thomas Breningstall is an AFA and MHA certified full-time farrier living
in Fowlerville, Michigan. His column "Hoof & Hammer" appears
regularly in
RURAL
HERITAGE draft-animal magazine, and is reprinted here with permission.
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