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Articles
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1 to 10 of 31 current articles.
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Questions for an Equine Law Practitioner # 9
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By Julie I. Fershtman |
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Questions for an Equine Law Practitioner # 8
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By Julie I. Fershtman |
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Questions for an Equine Law Practitioner # 7
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By Julie I. Fershtman |
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Equestrians refer to communication aids that are associated with some use of the rider's body as 'natural' aids. These include the legs, the rider's weight, the hands, and an independent seat. They call anything else an 'artificial aid.'
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By Faith Meredith |
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Every movement you make, everything you do in his presence, has meaning to the horse. The horse is a master at reading your body language and knowing just where you're at and what you're about when you first enter his space. So any time you are with a horse, you have to really pay attention.
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By Ron Meredith |
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Teaching a green horse to back provides a good example of how to combine and practice the training concepts used in heeding. Horse and handler must pay close attention to one another. The handler creates corridors of horse-logical pressures that shape the horse's feel of direction and speed.
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By Ron Meredith |
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Riders use a combination of influences to communicate with their horses. Within equestrian tradition we refer to these influences as 'aids' and we further subdivide them into 'natural' and 'artificial' aids.
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By Faith Meredith |
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Questions for an Equine Law Practitioner # 6
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By Julie I. Fershtman |
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Questions for an Equine Law Practitioner # 5
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By Julie I. Fershtman |
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Questions for an Equine Law Practitioner # 4
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By Julie I. Fershtman |
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