Monkey travels really well with company, but solo is a different story. When I picked him up as a 2yo he was solo in a lorry, and stomped and kicked most of the way from Kent to Norfolk!
He loads really well, but if I lead him in he will sometimes shoot back before I can get to shut the breach bar and ramp. So I switched tact and I now stand outside and point him in and he goes. But either way he is anxious about it, his little face is pitiful.
I have spent a lot of time using a clicker to keep it all as positive as possible. He won't really eat hay or haylage in the trailer. He has a mirror in the trailer. I fixed a bucket to the front ramp (which doesn't open anymore) and put his horselyx in there (his favorite treat of all time) so he gets reward as soon as he goes in, and I've spent a fair bit of time just stood with him giving him a scratch for calm behaviour. I even fed him in there last night.
The additional challenge I have, Jess screams bloody murder when we go out the gate (including when I ride and he now ignores it then), so he screams back in the trailer, the drove is a mile of horse fields and they all call in reply to him as we pass, which winds him up even more. It's a dead end road, this is the only way out. I have wondered about getting him some pompoms (earmuffs) to dull the auditory overload?
I am a bit torn on next steps, I hate that he is so worried by it all but he has always been anxious, and gentle repetition has got him through all the other things that worried him initially. So the options I see are to load him without going anywhere (desensitize) or just load and go (flooding), but either way, do it daily, or give it time to sink in in-between? and short trips or longer ones to let him settle into it more?
Added pressure, we go away at the end of the month, and ideally he needs to travel solo (25-30 mins), my friends have kindly said they will take their 2 over, drop one and come back for him but their 2 don't separate well and that means leaving 1 on it's own somewhere no matter which order you do it in and as we are going for L's birthday I don't really want their horses stressed before we start.
He loads really well, but if I lead him in he will sometimes shoot back before I can get to shut the breach bar and ramp. So I switched tact and I now stand outside and point him in and he goes. But either way he is anxious about it, his little face is pitiful.
I have spent a lot of time using a clicker to keep it all as positive as possible. He won't really eat hay or haylage in the trailer. He has a mirror in the trailer. I fixed a bucket to the front ramp (which doesn't open anymore) and put his horselyx in there (his favorite treat of all time) so he gets reward as soon as he goes in, and I've spent a fair bit of time just stood with him giving him a scratch for calm behaviour. I even fed him in there last night.
The additional challenge I have, Jess screams bloody murder when we go out the gate (including when I ride and he now ignores it then), so he screams back in the trailer, the drove is a mile of horse fields and they all call in reply to him as we pass, which winds him up even more. It's a dead end road, this is the only way out. I have wondered about getting him some pompoms (earmuffs) to dull the auditory overload?
I am a bit torn on next steps, I hate that he is so worried by it all but he has always been anxious, and gentle repetition has got him through all the other things that worried him initially. So the options I see are to load him without going anywhere (desensitize) or just load and go (flooding), but either way, do it daily, or give it time to sink in in-between? and short trips or longer ones to let him settle into it more?
Added pressure, we go away at the end of the month, and ideally he needs to travel solo (25-30 mins), my friends have kindly said they will take their 2 over, drop one and come back for him but their 2 don't separate well and that means leaving 1 on it's own somewhere no matter which order you do it in and as we are going for L's birthday I don't really want their horses stressed before we start.