The horses are eating the new bale of hay. There was a lot of snorting and circling before I could coax them close enough to see what I had.
Today, the old gelding walked up to the fence near Tonka, sniffing curiously.
Tonka walked away. I'm glad he didn't spit. Poor old horse is so sweet natured, it would have shocked him.
The mares were split, the young mare is by the bale, hiding behind it, in fact. The old mare is eating a small pile of hay I used to bait her closer.
Catching the alpacas still requires a catch pen. However, I was able to get them to eat grain from the bucket. So there is hope that I'll be able to walk up to them and put a lead rope on them. Once I can do that in the pen, I can turn them loose in the pasture.
I'm not holding my breath, mind you.
Showing posts with label clicker training. Show all posts
Showing posts with label clicker training. Show all posts
Saturday, December 7, 2013
Monday, November 25, 2013
Critters VS the Weather
This weather, a nasty cold snap, has reeked havoc on my animals. The older ones (JR and my old black gelding) and myself, are struggling with joint problems.
The baby ducklings are dropping dead from the cold, even under a heat light and covered with a tarp. I put the mother duck in with them, but she's not interested in babies, she just wants her eggs.
Dumbass duck.
The older ducklings, the ones with enough body mass to stay warm, are doing fine. But it's the tiny ones that suffer. I hate late year hatchings, they are heartbreaks looking for a place to happen.
The baby goose is only two weeks old, but it has gained a tremendous amount of weight in that short time. The little bugger is solid.
The last chick is having no trouble adapting to the cold. It isn't growing as fast as it would in the summer, no surprise there. However, it is still with Phatso, and she is just as protective now as when it was newly hatched.
The alpacas are wild creatures. I shouldn't let that stop me from training them. I might not be a good horse trainer, but there has to be a way to get through to these critters. We shall see.
I'm not sure why it's considered to be so bad to have llama's and alpacas trained. Maybe people who deal with them aren't horse people, so they don't know what's possible?
I doubt that.
Most likely they aren't as genetically programmed for domestication? Sheep aren't, so it's not unheard of.
Or it could be that being a fiber animal, nobody ever bothered to give it a shot. Not sure. I guess I'm going to find out. LOL There's nothing like being a stubborn Scots/Hungarian/Irish woman to make taming the untamable a challenge.
Sometimes, I wish I had more sense.
Stay tuned.
UPDATE: It has only taken a week to go from a struggle every morning to put a lead rope on the alpacas, to a gentle pat before clicking the snap.
I'm very, very happy with the progress!
The baby ducklings are dropping dead from the cold, even under a heat light and covered with a tarp. I put the mother duck in with them, but she's not interested in babies, she just wants her eggs.
Dumbass duck.
The older ducklings, the ones with enough body mass to stay warm, are doing fine. But it's the tiny ones that suffer. I hate late year hatchings, they are heartbreaks looking for a place to happen.
The baby goose is only two weeks old, but it has gained a tremendous amount of weight in that short time. The little bugger is solid.
The last chick is having no trouble adapting to the cold. It isn't growing as fast as it would in the summer, no surprise there. However, it is still with Phatso, and she is just as protective now as when it was newly hatched.
The alpacas are wild creatures. I shouldn't let that stop me from training them. I might not be a good horse trainer, but there has to be a way to get through to these critters. We shall see.
I'm not sure why it's considered to be so bad to have llama's and alpacas trained. Maybe people who deal with them aren't horse people, so they don't know what's possible?
I doubt that.
Most likely they aren't as genetically programmed for domestication? Sheep aren't, so it's not unheard of.
Or it could be that being a fiber animal, nobody ever bothered to give it a shot. Not sure. I guess I'm going to find out. LOL There's nothing like being a stubborn Scots/Hungarian/Irish woman to make taming the untamable a challenge.
Sometimes, I wish I had more sense.
Stay tuned.
UPDATE: It has only taken a week to go from a struggle every morning to put a lead rope on the alpacas, to a gentle pat before clicking the snap.
I'm very, very happy with the progress!
Thursday, May 7, 2009
Tanamara - Eye Injury
I glossed over it yesterday, because there was a whole lot going on in the writing side of my life. But Tanamara has injured her eye, and is being confined to her stall.
It's going over like a ton of bricks.
I tried to treat it myself, Monday and Tuesday, I got the swelling down enough to tell that I needed a vet. She beat me up pretty bad, yanked me off the ground twice. I was feeling very discouraged, until the vet and his assistant did no better.
I had him shoot her up with tranquilizers. Safe, fast, effective - well no - she fought us anyway. It still took three of us.
What's a small middle-aged woman to do?
Break out the clicker and the treats.
With the help of my sister, we got to the point where I could touch Tana's face in less than an hour. The 'training' held up an hour later, when with Dad's help we got the salve in her eye.
No tranquilizers!
What did we do? Clicker training is based the dolphin training. All treats, no tricks. Look here for the definition: Wikipedia on clicker training
It works, when I have the time to apply it.
It's going over like a ton of bricks.
I tried to treat it myself, Monday and Tuesday, I got the swelling down enough to tell that I needed a vet. She beat me up pretty bad, yanked me off the ground twice. I was feeling very discouraged, until the vet and his assistant did no better.
I had him shoot her up with tranquilizers. Safe, fast, effective - well no - she fought us anyway. It still took three of us.
What's a small middle-aged woman to do?
Break out the clicker and the treats.
With the help of my sister, we got to the point where I could touch Tana's face in less than an hour. The 'training' held up an hour later, when with Dad's help we got the salve in her eye.
No tranquilizers!
What did we do? Clicker training is based the dolphin training. All treats, no tricks. Look here for the definition: Wikipedia on clicker training
It works, when I have the time to apply it.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
A Very Old Memory
After school at West Junior High I took the bus to West 5th Street. I checked in at the Leeward, where Opal was working behind the bar, ta...

-
What price to charge for an e-book? This is the great debate amongst Indie writers. Hanging out on a few independent writer sites, I'v...
-
No, it's the economy, silly. Evergreen Review posted what could have been a wonderful essay on the closing of San Francisco's bel...
-
My return to Authonomy was a gesture of good faith. It appeared that the trolls and sock puppets had been taken care of. I brought my re-dra...