Posted by Heather Toms at Jan 29th, 2012 in Horses
A good equestrian knows how to read her horse’s expressions. Because before you can teach your mare dressage actions or even just enjoy riding her, you must implant the fundamentals in her first, which entails her understanding you and you understanding her. And our equine pals can’t exactly tell us how they feel—we have to read their expressions. We’ll take the practice of basic roping for instance.
It is not hard to find a roping teacher or lesson thanks to roping clinics. Trainers who set up such clinics often provide manuals or at the very least advise the owner to accustom their pony to ropes and prepare the animal for the actual roping clinic.
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Interpreting Your Horses Expressions To Boost Coaching Outcomes
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Posted by Heather Toms at Jan 28th, 2012 in Horses
Come winter cut back on the pony riding and equestrian sports and concentrate on your horse’s feed—or just how much she needs. Because when such seasons are near, you know your hard keepers are going to be harder to feed than they already are.
All horses are influenced by a range of physical and emotional factors—thin horses more than others. Some of the more significant contributing factors are teeth, calorie needs, stomach parasites, and stress.
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How To Feed A Thin Horse Through Winter Without Getting Bankrupt
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Posted by Heather Toms at Jan 27th, 2012 in Horses
When it comes to holistic horse health care, as an old adage goes: “nothing can’t be healed.” Whether, it is lack of energy, a puny stomach, or poor posture, there is no condition that can not be made better. But of course, it takes a lot of active participation on the part of the pony owner. An equestrian ought to know better than merely give up without exhausting all possible treatments, both conventional and alternative.
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Posted by Heather Toms at Jan 26th, 2012 in Horses
Horses have similar traits to humans, and a number of these may be employed to overcome our equestrian training problems and learning blocks.
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Horses Practice A New Manoeuvre Whilst In Pasture
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Posted by Heather Toms at Jan 25th, 2012 in Horses
An equestrian with enough enthusiasm in horses and enough skill to be able to make any steed a safe mount for horse riding can teach newbs some measure of riding on horseback. In fact , many trainers and owners are rather more than adequately experienced and therefore sufficiently skilled to teach intermediate lessons on not just pony riding, but other manoeuvres employed in sport and shows. But herein surfaces a dilemma, though many are capable enough and learned enough in equine and equestrian workings, many of them don’t have licenses or certificates to teach what they know.
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Certification and Licensing Of Pony Riding Instructors
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