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Essential Insights for Understanding Equine Behavior and Building an Effective Partnership with Your Horse by Cherry Hill |
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| Ask someone who works with horses how best to
communicate with a balky colt and she will tell you that horses do not
respond to human cajoling. To be successful the human must understand
and work with, not against, the horse’s instincts, needs, and
fears. When a trainer resorts to human teaching methods —
reasoning, begging, bribing, even hugging and kissing — the
horse will become confused and unable to respond appropriately. But if
horses are treated respectfully with methods they understand, everyone
involved — animal and human — will be happier,
safer, and more productive. Horse trainer and instructor Cherry Hill believes that every human/horse relationship benefits from a greater human understanding of what motivates horses, how they experience the world, what makes them happy, and what worries them. Journey through the equine mind with Hill as she explores all that makes a horse tick. How do his basic needs dictate his behavior and mood? What touches and tastes appeal to his senses? How does his “flight or fight” instinct dictate his response to sudden movements? Hill offers interactive experiments — fun for both horse and human — that bear out her findings on horse behavior. And her final chapter presents simple training methods that draw from the insights and information presented throughout the book. |
![]() How To Think Like A Horse Essential Insights for Understanding Equine Behavior and Building an Effective Partnership with Your Horse by Cherry Hill Storey Publishing, 2006. Order a copy |
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