Touch | Wild Horse Gentling | Lesson 2
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- Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
- Lesson 2 for 14-year-old feral Devil's Garden gelding #6004.
Food sharing is linked to urinary oxytocin levels in a number of social mammals, so sharing meals with animals may help facilitate bonding and build trust. Read more here:
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Music by Vlad Gluschenko
On The Way
Light of Daytime
Approaching Spring
License: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported: creativecommon...
Excellent teaching. And a huge thank you for not acting like a stuck-up snob towards people who lack horse experience. Most horse experts are abusive bullies towards people who are not familiar with horses. Too many horse experts violently hate people who don't know much about horses. WARNING: Stay away from most horse trainers, because they hate competition from other people.
I've been at the receiving end, so not interested in keeping that cycle going. Thanks for watching!
Incredible that you have figured this out. Thank God. Im learning so much by watching your videos
He’s such a good handsome boy. You did a great job at explaining each technique and why you do them. Thank you for the video. I can’t wait for more updates!
Thank you!
Just love her approach. Understand horse behavior....
I love the way you're putting together the video and your narrative explaining why you're doing things you're doing and what we see in his body language as well as what other reactions from a horse in the same situation may mean.
Thank you so much for posting these videos. My 12 year old daughter is doing a Colt Challenge, and she utilizes your instruction to help her with her mustang weanling. We both enjoy watching and learning from you! Your videos are such a valuable resource!
Thank you for watching! It means a lot to me that the videos are helpful!
Love ur method of teaching him. 14 yrs old, and such a good boy!
He definitely secretly loves the pets
He does!
I just recently discovered your videos and have been watching them to help me in my volunteer work. I volunteer at an equine rescue and this series in particular helped me so much. Yesterday was my first time trying to catch a horse that was afraid of people due to coming to the rescue from an abusive situation. I used the pressure and release techniques you show and explain here and I was able to catch and halter her and take her out for some grooming and lots of love. Thank you so much for showing and explaining what you're doing so well so that I know what my body language is communicating to the horses and also what their body language is communicating to me. You have given me valuable tools to continue helping rescue horses and I can't express how much I appreciate that. Keep doing what you're doing!
This comment made my day! I'm so glad to help! 🧡🐎
Very nice looking , well built horse and you are doing awesome with him
Thank you!
Ur amazing!
He starting to trust you bit more He thinking about coming to you but he not sure just get but i can see here it soon be a boned with him. Great Video
Thank you! This guy was a big teddy bear once we developed that trust!
Good helpful training information. Thanks for sharing
I like these videos a lot.
Thank you!
I've got a filly that's as wild as a circus poster. She's not mean but does NOT want anything to do with people.
They can be tricky sometimes! It's best to work on excercises where she gets to rest and relax when she is near you, and work when she is leaving, so she begins to view you as a good thing. Liberty work/draw can help out a lot.
He is awesome
Don't tell the other horses, but he's my favorite!
Thank you for the video it's awesome! Your explanations are incredibly helpful, articulate, simple to understand and entertaining to watch. Looking forward to more videos.
coz
❤️❤️❤️❤️
Is this Guy still available to adopt? 🐴🥰🐴
This one is staying here with me! He stole my heart. ❤
❤👍👏
Interested in why you touch the nose first and not the shoulder?
Horses explore the world with their noses. If they become curious and investigate something new, it's with their nose, and they almost always offer their part of their body first for us to touch. Touching the shoulder first also puts you in a position to be kicked or struck, and these wild horses often get agitated, block you, bolt, or swing their hind end towards you when you move past their eyes for the first several times. Geldings especially view shoulder and crest touches as a threat until they get to know you as they bite each other there when fighting. If the horse is extremely head shy, you can touch the shoulder with a whip/stick, but this is not usually the case.
@@BreakHabitsNotHorses Thankyou, I was taught that the nose/ face is the most sensitive/ vulnerable part of their body and to always go for the shoulder first! I can see how asking the horse to touch you with their nose first would be better in this situation.
Give him a name
Will be announced soon. 😊