Training Tip: Addressing Dominant Herd Behavior in Horses

0705_Tip

Question: We are slowly introducing a 4-month-old weanling into a herd of 13. We have a dominant 19-month-old gelding that is displaying behavior that we can’t explain. When together in the paddock, the gelding is controlling basically every step the weanling is allowed to make. He doesn’t get any freedom whatsoever to move independently. There’s no aggression involved so far. Is this normal and why? – Aruba-Girl

Answer: Yes, your horses’ behavior is absolutely normal. No matter if you put two horses together or 20, within a herd horses develop a social order to determine who leads and who follows. The leader of the herd decides when the herd moves, which direction it goes in, and when it eats. The leader makes the decisions, drinks first and eats the best feed.

Each of the horses in a herd has a specific place. The number two horse can threaten any horse but the leader. Each horse has individuals he can boss and those he is bossed by, except the horse at the bottom of the pecking order. He is bossed by everyone and threatens no one. No horse wants to be the one at the bottom of the herd—he drinks last and gets the worst feed.

Your 19-month-old gelding ranks higher in the pecking order of your herd than your weanling does, and he’s proving to your weanling that he can and will move his feet. If you stop to watch how a herd of horses interacts, you’ll notice that the horses are constantly trying to move up the pecking order and the leader must assert himself every day and prove that he is capable of leading the herd.

Unless you think that your weanling is going to get injured, I wouldn’t worry about your herd’s behavior. If you are worried that your weanling is going to get hurt, then I would separate him from the gelding.

Have a horsemanship question or looking for more training tips? Check out the No Worries Club.

More News

Back to all news

See All
FILES2f20152f122f1208_03.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Give Yourself the Gift of Knowledge

While you’re in the present-giving mood this holiday season, give you and your horse the gift of a better partnership…

Read More
0211_Tip

9 months ago

Training Tip: Respect Leads to Trust

A horse will not trust you until he respects you. No amount of gentle murmurings and treat feeding will get…

Read More
0103_Tip

3 years ago

Training Tip: Let Your Horse Digest Corrections

When you make a correction and your horse responds correctly, let him think about it. Literally stop and let the…

Read More
0521_01

1 year ago

Congratulations to Our Newest Method Ambassadors

We’re excited to welcome four Method Ambassadors to the Downunder Horsemanship team! The horsemen spent the last seven weeks at…

Read More