This is a non-commercial, independent website, owned and written by Nancy Kerson, for the benefit of actual and potential adopters of BLM Mustangs and Burros and similar animals.
DVD or VHS (2-DVD or 2-VHS set) almost 3 hours of instruction!
$39.95 plus $5 shipping/handling = $44.95 total
Lesley Neuman: The First Touch Gentling Your Mustang $45.00
Lesley works with 3 wild horses at a BLM adoption, and very clearly explains what is happening, what she is doing, & what she sees in each horse as it progresses. Study this video and you can learn "pressure and release" gentling techniques to gentle your own new mustang!
Help for Burro adopters! Crystal Ward Donkey Training
All the basics of gentling, handling, and training. A MUST for new burro adopters! Good for domestic donkeys, too!
Penny - "Fifty First Dates"
Our neighbor adopted this yearling filly from High Rock HMA at 2007 Napa Mustang Day and we agreed to keep her in our BLM-spec pen and to halter train her, along with "Dun Colt" (now Zapato, powned by Judith Moore & Dale Scovil).
Like Dun Colt, Penny was worked at the adoption as part of the volunteer training demos. Edona Miller noted that she was "a handful."
Penny is a very sensitive, very reactive horse. She is sure, even after several months of positive experiences, that we intend to eat her. Although we were able to get our hands on her within a few days, months later she is still more reactive and skittish and less trusting than we would like. Once caught and in a halter and lead rope, she changes and actually learns her ground skills very well - but remains on the lookout for danger, seldom really relaxing except for a few fleeting moments at the end of a training session.
Luckily, Penny is drop-dead gorgeous, and when she's sweet, she's wonderful. We are all in love with her. Sometimes the ones you have to work the hardest with are the ones you love the most. She IS making permanent progress, but it is certainly slow!
June 2007
June 2007
July 2007
Here's Peny with Dun Colt, her "room mate" for a few weeks. The dun colt made immediate progress and within three weeks was in his new home, where he is now "Zapato."
August 2007: Penny decided she no longer wanted to be haltered, so we had to start over with the makeshift halter, like a new wild horse.
And we had to resume desensitization exercises, to try to help her relax.
Look, Penny - it doesn't hurt!
Here she is starting to loosen up
Lunging a circle - she's so very light and responsive - that's the good thing about her temperament. She responds to the lightest touch!
Late October - Early November, 2007:
OMG! Not the dreaded Halter!
Wearing a halter means you get to go out and do cool things
Aw - ain't she sweet?
Things were going so well, and then Penny decided she'd rather be wild after all
But she did work through it
Summer 2008: Here's Penny in mid-summer, enjoying the tall grasses that are still green, down by the swampy corner of our place.
Penny seems to have what my friend Betty calls "Fifty First Dates Syndrome." She goes along just fine for awhile, then one day she acts like she's totally wild again. Everything scares her, the other horses get her all stirred up, she acts like she has never seen people before. When you touch her she flinches, and it takes a few minutes to talk her down to where she can relax and enjoy being touched or groomed. Go to halter her and she turns her head away from the halter.
If I didn't know her history I would swear she was an abuse case. But she isn't. It takes a good several consecutive sessions to get her out of it. Each time she's a little better than before, so it seems to be some kind of "knot" that re-surfaces from time to time. But if you skip even a day or two, it's back to the beginning.
You can see by the worried expression that she expects it to hurt when I touch her ever so lightly.
Finally in February of 2009, her adopter and owner, Bob, an elderly lifelong horseman, came over and said he was ready for her to go to his house to live with his nice QH mare. She trailered very nicely, and immediatley hit it off well with his mare, "Snicks." Bob gets along very well with her, and she and his other mare do well together.
2011 update: The bad news is that Mr. Brown's health is failing. The good news is that, after Bob sent Penny to my friend Midori Morgan for saddle training, she bought her and absolutely loves her!
She is still very reactive and high-strung, and most likely always will be, but she is doing very well and hopefully will continue to progress.
copyright 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012 Nancy Kerson, all rights reserved - I'm happy to share, just need to be asked and have credit given where due.
Disclaimer: Horses are inherently dangerous. Use the information contained within this website at your own risk.