Connecting the Groundwork with Horseback Riding
Horse Training Help : Containment or Skills
Dear Sam: Horse Help Horsemanship Series
Tying the Horse: Are you teaching unwanted equine behaviors?
Horse Training Basics
Teaching containment or adaptability in the equine? So many unwanted equine behaviors are taught by human interactions that challenge the horse without ever teaching the horse the skills to think, search, try, and retain.
Click the link to watch on the Alternative Horsemanship YouTube Channel
New videos posted every Friday
Livestreams with Alternative Horsemanship the Remote Horse Coach
November Alternative Horsemanship Livestreams in the Locals Community
Changing mindless patterned horse interactions leads to unwanted equine behaviors.
Part 1 Mental AnticipationsSaturday Nov 5th 9am pst
Part 2 Physical Behaviors
Saturday Nov 11th 9am pst
Part 3 Specificity & Timing
Saturday Nov 25th 9am pst
Empathy and Equines
Empathy + Horses
= WeaknessUnrealistic ego-based demands without having accountability as to how a person's clarity of thoughts and intention, quality of communication, adaptability in energy, accuracy of timing, and everyday mindless interactions, are constantly "teaching" horses unwanted responses that people then criticize and chastise the equine for.
Horse Rider Tips- Anticipation and Unwanted Equine Behaviors
The urgency of the stories in our head...
So many good-intentioned equine enthusiasts unintentionally get pressured and distracted by the "story" of
*last time...
*that one time...
*what if...
*what others think...
*I hope...
Horse Behavior: Engaging the Mind before the Movement
Dear Sam: Horse Help Horsemanship Series
Horses Pressure & Release Part 2
The reality is that many riders feel like they are begging for the horse to acknowledge them. Other folks’ approach is to “make” the horse do something through physical dominance; this fuels the horse’s defensiveness. Then there are riders who learn to work “around” the horse, limiting what they ask of them to avoid potential resistance or conflict.
Pressure and release… The missing language of a quality equine partnership Part 1
Pressure and release… The missing language of a quality partnership Part 1
A majority of unwanted horse behavior stems from the animal responding with defensiveness toward any form of pressure. Spatial and physical are the most common types of pressure people use to communicate with horses. If there is physical resistance and mental distrust towards pressure, this can lead to a wary partnership between horse and human.Groundwork and Horses
Dear Sam: Horse Help Horsemanship Series
Are you teaching the horse anticipation and fear?
Most people never consider how the horse responds to just the sight of tack or notice if there are Quality Conversations while tacking up.
Each aspect of the equine interaction influences the mental reasonableness and physical softness that follows.
While the norm (often out of convenience) is to tie the horse while tacking, the degree of bother or concern a horse may have while doing so, is frequently suppressed.
Horse Interactions : Human Goals vs Quality Partnerships
Goals vs Quality
It is very easy to fall into a pattern of setting goals and getting fixated on accomplishing them to feel successful with the horse.
In more scenarios than not, the goal is frequently prioritized over assessing if there's quality during the interaction with the horse.
I will often hear people excitedly telling me about how much they have accomplished with the horse.
Then as I watch their equine's behavior and see things like: chomping on the bit
pinned ears
tails swishing
fidgeting or excessive movement
"grumpy" faces
physical tension
rigid nostrils
wide eyes
inability to stand still (mentally and physically)
avoidance at being caught/ led/ tacked/ loaded into the trailer loading or mounted
or if every time the halter is removed the horse goes running off
Helping the Highly Reactive Horse
Behaviors Sabotaging the Human and Horse Partnership
What is the most common issue I see sabotaging the human & horse partnership?
Containment
Misconceptions of a Confident Horse
Just because a horse is going through the motions of "doing things" and is "learning" does not mean that he is gaining confidence and or more curiosity from his experiences.
The horse may "quietly" tolerate a situation a few or even many times before he starts to show more obvious signs of stress, insecurity, or fear about what is being presented if he is being pushed to physically comply with the task given.
The Human Emotional Filter Sabatoging our Equine Partnership
Frequently I've had posts shared with me about how "cute" something is in a horse, mule, or donkey's behavior. Unfortunately, when folks filter their interpretation of an animal's behavior with human emotions, it clouds their judgment in learning, recognizing, or believing what the animal is experiencing and communicating.











