Learn horse behavior, equine communication, health factors, improve rider mindset, develop groundwork and riding skills. Weekly articles, virtual consults and coaching sessions, monthly livestreams, and a horse learning video library. Teaching riders of all experience levels in clinics worldwide for three decades.
Horse Mirroring Behavior
Sharing a short video of a neighbor's horse mirroring what the client's horse I was working with was experiencing during her session. The more we raise awareness of the horse's mental and emotional state, the more relevant addressing their subtle, reasonable feedback becomes.
The Uncomfortable Topics: Money, Horses, and Future Planning
Looking at the books... The number of established, long-time equine professionals shutting down their businesses is occurring at an alarming rate. Many who are continuing to operate have taken massive income cuts in their attempt to keep prices the same for clients. Many professionals are having to work second jobs to cover horse business expenses.
Alternative Horsemanship™ Horse Skills Livestreams Replay
For anyone who missed February's live events:
Why is my Horse doing that?
Horse Skills: Defining Boundaries without Anger
Please use this LINK to access the videos.
Please note: After a livestream has ended, the original link to it will not work. To view or replay any previous livestream filmed in the current month, you must view them in the Livestream Replay page on The Remote Horse Coach video catalog through the link shared above.
Improving Horse Skills- the Check-In
Pain in horses- an unaddressed common denominator
Developing the Horse's Confidence
Confidence- just because a horse is going through the motions of "doing things" and is "learning" does not mean that he is gaining confidence and feeling secure from his experiences.
Reading Horse Behavior- What do you see?
Do you assess the horse's behavior after the session?
This horse whose past is not completely clear has experienced enough aggressive training that he is highly defensive toward people. He would appear very "sweet" (as long as you had a treat) and come over and impose to be caught... But once he realized there was no food, he'd leave and avoid all human interaction. If he was troubled on the lead rope, he'd either stop and lock up or bolt off. This is after the second session out in the field. I find a lot of folks want to "see" the immediate warm-and-fuzzy moments with the horse, without seeing the horse learn to work through their anticipation and old coping/default behavioral patterns. This is a good opportunity to practice reading the horse's behavior.If you're curious about in-depth horse behavior (which is the foundation to every quality equine partnership) please visit The Remote Horse Coach video catalog and click the "Horse Behavior" category at the top of the page.
Pain in Horses- Unwanted Equine Behaviors