Gareth,
The thing is, horses that are untrained or barely trained can be spooked by anything they see as being different. A shirt on a tree, or a garbage bag, or even a stick on the ground can scare a horse if it isn't trained. My contention is that a city pony would be used to all kinds of things, but if the passage was a place where it and the cart often ended up, I don't think blood would scare it, but I think an anomoly in its path would. None of the horses I had were afraid of odd smells, even skunks (though I was), but something odd in their regular path could make them shy away, sometimes.
My horses had to grow up around dogs, cats, and many, many neighborhood kids. Generally speaking, and this is a fact, smell doesn't affect horses. Some, yes, but not generally. The pony would have smelled the body on the ground, however, and known where it was, but it wouldn't have been the blood that scared it, just the knowledge that there was something there.
Cheers,
Mike
The thing is, horses that are untrained or barely trained can be spooked by anything they see as being different. A shirt on a tree, or a garbage bag, or even a stick on the ground can scare a horse if it isn't trained. My contention is that a city pony would be used to all kinds of things, but if the passage was a place where it and the cart often ended up, I don't think blood would scare it, but I think an anomoly in its path would. None of the horses I had were afraid of odd smells, even skunks (though I was), but something odd in their regular path could make them shy away, sometimes.
My horses had to grow up around dogs, cats, and many, many neighborhood kids. Generally speaking, and this is a fact, smell doesn't affect horses. Some, yes, but not generally. The pony would have smelled the body on the ground, however, and known where it was, but it wouldn't have been the blood that scared it, just the knowledge that there was something there.
Cheers,
Mike
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