Horses are prey animals. Concealing weakness is instinct, which means the horse showing obvious pain has usually been uncomfortable for a while.
Learn to read tension: ears held back or stiffly sideways, tightening above the eye, a strained muzzle, flared nostrils, a clenched jaw. Researchers have formalised this as the horse grimace scale, and it is worth learning properly.
A horse that has become difficult is far more often in pain than in a mood. Before you reach for a training solution, rule out the physical one. Saddle fit, teeth, feet and back are the usual suspects, and a vet is the right place to start.
Yes, and they are good at it. As prey animals they mask weakness. Subtle behavioural change is often the only early sign.
A research-backed method of reading facial tension — ears, eyes, muzzle, nostrils — to assess pain. It is genuinely useful once you learn it.
Not always, but it is the first thing to rule out. Sourness under saddle is more often physical than attitudinal.
If you see acute signs, or a subtle change that persists more than a day or two. Describing what is different is enough to start the conversation.
Find an Equine Veterinarian
Find an Equine VeterinarianYes, and they are good at it. As prey animals they mask weakness. Subtle behavioural change is often the only early sign.
A research-backed method of reading facial tension — ears, eyes, muzzle, nostrils — to assess pain. It is genuinely useful once you learn it.
Not always, but it is the first thing to rule out. Sourness under saddle is more often physical than attitudinal.
If you see acute signs, or a subtle change that persists more than a day or two. Describing what is different is enough to start the conversation.