My grandmother was a bush midwife in Australia in the early 20th century. Called out at night, she would saddle the old grey mare and take off into the bush, but she often took one of her big sons with a lantern to light her way over fallen trees. I wish I had known her. What a brave pioneer woman.
A packer once told me he was riding a horse leading a pack string after dark on a cloudy night on mountain trails. He couldn’t even see his hands in front of his face but the horses navigated just fine. Also don’t shine your flashlight in their eyes since it takes up to a half an hour for their night vision to come back.
I've spent a lot of time riding in the dark, and could have told anyone horses can see in the dark. But, also, your video shows the reasons why the U.S. DOJ's Title II ADA regulaton about what can be a service animal can be challenged under the Chevron case as arbitrary and capricious and exceeding the ADA statutes themselves and amounting to Autism discrimination for Autistic people for whom horses can alert us far in advance to danger that is not only dangerous to them but to us as well. One more thing, is horses tend to spook at yellow jumps, and also sometimes at red jumps. But not so much at blue or purple or orange or green jumps. The color thing with horses is just something you know if you jump horses a lot over colored jumps.
My cousins it's was out after dark. She asked me to help bring him in. It was so dark I couldn't see my hand held out. How? He'll find you Couple seconds later I felt horse breath in my neck.
Yes. Anyone who is knowledgeable in horses knows this. Buy books. & learn about horses. Owners should have these, or youre not really a good horse person.
Can they WHAT! And for training youngsters, ride out in the moonlight. They don't seem to startle in the dark, much more focused and no peripherals interfere. They go better in the dark, and after just one long ride, getting home about midnight, you have a better travelling horse. You cannot control a horse! You can, however, teach a horse to control himself. Then you gotta trust him, so he will trust you. And I don't like AI voice!
My grandmother was a bush midwife in Australia in the early 20th century. Called out at night, she would saddle the old grey mare and take off into the bush, but she often took one of her big sons with a lantern to light her way over fallen trees. I wish I had known her. What a brave pioneer woman.
A packer once told me he was riding a horse leading a pack string after dark on a cloudy night on mountain trails. He couldn’t even see his hands in front of his face but the horses navigated just fine.
Also don’t shine your flashlight in their eyes since it takes up to a half an hour for their night vision to come back.
I have been out in darkness with my horses, it always felt that they were fine with that...
I've spent a lot of time riding in the dark, and could have told anyone horses can see in the dark. But, also, your video shows the reasons why the U.S. DOJ's Title II ADA regulaton about what can be a service animal can be challenged under the Chevron case as arbitrary and capricious and exceeding the ADA statutes themselves and amounting to Autism discrimination for Autistic people for whom horses can alert us far in advance to danger that is not only dangerous to them but to us as well. One more thing, is horses tend to spook at yellow jumps, and also sometimes at red jumps. But not so much at blue or purple or orange or green jumps. The color thing with horses is just something you know if you jump horses a lot over colored jumps.
My cousins it's was out after dark. She asked me to help bring him in.
It was so dark I couldn't see my hand held out.
How?
He'll find you
Couple seconds later I felt horse breath in my neck.
Great information- thanks for sharing!
Glad it was helpful!
Greetings from Romania!🐎👍🐎
Yes. Anyone who is knowledgeable in horses knows this. Buy books. & learn about horses. Owners should have these, or youre not really a good horse person.
Can they WHAT!
And for training youngsters, ride out in the moonlight. They don't seem to startle in the dark, much more focused and no peripherals interfere. They go better in the dark, and after just one long ride, getting home about midnight, you have a better travelling horse.
You cannot control a horse! You can, however, teach a horse to control himself. Then you gotta trust him, so he will trust you.
And I don't like AI voice!