I've had a cribbing horse and it's well nigh impossible to stop. And the leather collar would make sores on her delicate neck so I had to remove it. I think the only way to stop it is to make sure that there are no surfaces on which they can crib. And it's a very bad addiction which can never be fully cured.
I think the article forgot to mention the you should put buckets and feed pans at ground level. horses typically wont crib that low. Also, checking for ulcers is another option. My horse started cribbing one day for no apparent reason. After alot of reseach we had him check for ulcers and the put on preventitive. I haven't seen him doing is since, and he doesnt were a collar
I agree with everyone here,and although most horses will completely stop cribbing when given 24/7 turnout, I have actually seen horses go to a post and crib there all day long,instead of grazing. That's how addicted some horses get. Thanks for the advice though! It was awesome! And yes I agree with Amber. Buckets and Feed pans at ground level is a great idea.
One of the mares at my friends ranch cribs, but she doesn't grab onto anything. One of the geldings will use his water buckets, even if you give him hay.
I recently acquired a cribber. He has ulcers, a super busy brain, and is stabled (not turnout yet in Oregon, still too wet! but that will be coming soon) I bought a "busyhorse.com" hay bag, it slows down his feeding and keeps him busy for much of the day, thus slowing down the cribbing. I and others have noticed however that the more "stress" in the barn the more he cribs, thus he cribs more when I am about to leave and cribs more when the roudy kids are in the barn. The collars dont work and neither does nasty tasting stuff. The busyhorse works the best as well as keeping a calm atmosphere and dealing with a cranky stomach.