The Herd is always just so lovely to watch, no matter what they are doing!! I love watching horse language!! When you pick it up, you know what they are doing and articulating to each other…. It’s a Beautiful Dance! ✨💦🐴💦✨
Can you send me a picture of you wearing it? Would LOVE to see that and share it with others! Another guy who follows us on Instagram sent his pic - he got the eco hoodie and loves it :)
I wish I knew how to instill more confidence in my older mare so my lead mare will stop taking her grain and barn space. Or somehow teach my lead mare more respect for other horse' s boundaries. It's been a challenge just being the two of them, but they enjoy being together otherwise. The older mare just tolerates/submits to the unfair dynamic.
you could put your older mare in a separate area to feed supplements (that's what I do with Zorra) and you can also increase barn space or feeding stations. Always have at LEAST one extra hay feeder - so 2 horses = minimum 3 feeders. Good luck!
When the horse 'tells' you 'no', and you back off and say he does not want to interact so I will leave him alone today. Well that is 100% wrong. You just taught the horse that you are lower in status and reinforced that he is higher. So he can push you around in the future. You are on the road to creating a dangerous horse. It is not the horse that is the problem, it is you.
Sure, that's the classic dominance-based, natural horsemanship perspective. It's very popular. That doesn't interest me. I'm doing something different :)
@@ListenToYourHorse It is how horses interact with one another. Your ignorance is going to get you hurt, and the horse will suffer the consequences. You are not listening to your horse.
@@gerrycoleman7290 Nope. Have had horses for decades and just fine. This video explains what I'm doing and why: Answers to Common Objections & Criticisms of Listen To Your Horse ruclips.net/video/TotV2Wi8k1Q/видео.html
@@ListenToYourHorse Fine. But realize that you are not understanding the horse's language and will not be able to effectively communicate with the horse.
"First seek to understand; THEN seek to be understood." Good rule in most situations.
The Herd is always just so lovely to watch, no matter what they are doing!! I love watching horse language!! When you pick it up, you know what they are doing and articulating to each other…. It’s a Beautiful Dance! ✨💦🐴💦✨
So true! It's very much a dance and ALL are aware and adjusting as needed, at all times.
It made me happy in the beginning when Posa came by you after he pushed you away, like “I’ll connect with you for a moment mom!”
Thankyou for your keen insight to teach us. ❤
Keen stupidity, you mean.
So sweet and nice to see the ages and stages of the herd, and the way they are naturally. Thank you
Also that last interaction is such a good example of energy communication, Cobra felt when Siyone would not be bothered, it was all feeling
I like this types of videos because i learned lot❤️
Learned a lot of the wrong ways of doing things with horses.
Its interesting to see and hear How they communicate with eachother :) everyone Who has a horse should learn How to understand them
The horse will teach you that, not her.
I got one of the sweat shirts and love the fit and feel of it
Can you send me a picture of you wearing it? Would LOVE to see that and share it with others! Another guy who follows us on Instagram sent his pic - he got the eco hoodie and loves it :)
I wish I knew how to instill more confidence in my older mare so my lead mare will stop taking her grain and barn space. Or somehow teach my lead mare more respect for other horse' s boundaries. It's been a challenge just being the two of them, but they enjoy being together otherwise. The older mare just tolerates/submits to the unfair dynamic.
you could put your older mare in a separate area to feed supplements (that's what I do with Zorra) and you can also increase barn space or feeding stations. Always have at LEAST one extra hay feeder - so 2 horses = minimum 3 feeders. Good luck!
When the horse 'tells' you 'no', and you back off and say he does not want to interact so I will leave him alone today. Well that is 100% wrong. You just taught the horse that you are lower in status and reinforced that he is higher. So he can push you around in the future. You are on the road to creating a dangerous horse. It is not the horse that is the problem, it is you.
Sure, that's the classic dominance-based, natural horsemanship perspective. It's very popular. That doesn't interest me. I'm doing something different :)
@@ListenToYourHorse It is how horses interact with one another. Your ignorance is going to get you hurt, and the horse will suffer the consequences. You are not listening to your horse.
@@gerrycoleman7290 Nope. Have had horses for decades and just fine. This video explains what I'm doing and why:
Answers to Common Objections & Criticisms of Listen To Your Horse
ruclips.net/video/TotV2Wi8k1Q/видео.html
@@ListenToYourHorse Fine. But realize that you are not understanding the horse's language and will not be able to effectively communicate with the horse.
@@ListenToYourHorse Such ignorance.
Your open barn?? is a fire hazard hope the horses don't live in there