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Wednesday, March 5, 2008
What Is Inside The Head Of A Horse
As
you may have figured out, horses do not seem
to speak our language. That
is why we must learn
to adapt and speak theirs. Have you noticed the swivel of their
ears, the movements of their hips
and the
expressions on their
face? These things are the way horses communicate
with each other
and us.
In order
to understand their language first we must understand
what our body language
says to
them. Waving arms around
in a desperate attempt to get the halter on
is sure to cause some alarm.
Running towards them
in a pasture instead of approaching them calmly can give them the image of a surprise
attack by a predator. Remember, when it
comes down to it,
no horse is bombproof so when you are around
your horse make sure your body language is slow and calm. Keeping yourself calm is the first step to helping a horse remain calm.
Horses speak
with both ends of their body
- unlike us humans who speak with
only the top half.
Not only are the back and front the ends
where the signals come from they are also the ends where injuries to humans come
from, so watch what they are telling you.
EARS BACK
Almost all horse people know that when a horse has his/her ears laid flat back something is amiss. The horse could be frightened or in most cases angry. This is a
time to watch both ends of the
horses body carefully.
Yet
this gesture is not always dangerous. The horse could
either be listening to commands or noises coming from behind or just be resting out of boredom.
As you come to know your horse you will begin to learn the
true difference.
EARS FOWARD
Not really anything to worry about right? Happy horses have their ears forward - sometimes but not always. As a horse directs his or her
attention to something its ears usually
follow. Also ears sticking up high can be signs of mischief or the horse being very alert. Good time to
remind your horse you are in charge if his/her attention span flies around
during your ride.
GROOMING
Most people approach
grooming as something that just needs to be done and nothing else. In truth grooming your horse establishes a
bond with you and that horse just as a horse would bond with other horses through grooming in the wild.
If you
treat a horse roughly or only do a quick once over with the brush the horse can only assume you are a rough or harsh handler. Whereas if you spend a lot of time grooming and
caring for the horse you
create a trusting bond with it.
View
more equine articles and classifieds at -
http://www.horsegalore.com/index.php?option=com_contentShannon Margolis
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