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  2. Natural horsemanship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_horsemanship

    Some, though not all, practitioners work horses bridleless, or consider bridleless work to represent the culmination of their training. Once a horse is under saddle, most practitioners advocate use of either a loose-ring or a full cheek style snaffle bit, and rope reins that include slobber straps and a lead rope section on the left side ...

  3. Jesse Beery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesse_Beery

    He propounded common sense horse training methods, and even today, his supporters claim him to be one of very few horse trainers to have had this kind of far-reaching effect. According to the 1919 publication, 'Memoirs of Miami Valley (Ohio) Vol 1' ( Page 627): [ 1 ] "Beery Correspondence School for Horsemanship is a most unusual enterprise ...

  4. Horse training - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_training

    A horse being trained on the longe line. Horse training refers to a variety of practices that teach horses to perform certain behaviors when commanded to do so by humans. . Horses are trained to be manageable by humans for everyday care as well as for equestrian activities, ranging anywhere from equine sports such as horse racing, dressage, or jumping, to therapeutic horseback riding for ...

  5. Parelli Natural Horsemanship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parelli_Natural_Horsemanship

    Yo-yo: a game of "back and forth," which can mean that the horse backs away from the human and returns. Another type of yo-yo game involves the horse speeding up or slowing down. Circling: often compared to longeing the horse, although Parelli asserts that the two are distinctly different. In the Circling Game, it is the horse's responsibility ...

  6. Tom and Bill Dorrance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_and_Bill_Dorrance

    The Dorrance brothers' influence travelled widely throughout the United States, particularly amongst cattlemen, cowboys, who worked with horses every day. Having a relationship to their horses was far more important than winning awards or accolades in the show ring, and so horsemanship, the relationship between equine and human, was more ...

  7. Horse welfare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_welfare

    Horse rescued by a protection group while he was starving. Horse welfare or equine welfare helps describe the acceptable conditions of life and use for domesticated horses, in contrast to suffering produced by voluntary or involuntary actions of others, whether through physical abuse, mutilation, neglect, transport, vivisection or other forms of ill treatment.

  8. Catching Freedom shows why it was an 'easy decision' to ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/catching-freedom-shows-why-easy...

    Imagination, Baffert's horse left in the field as he looks for a r ecord-extending ninth Preakness victory, is second at 3-1, followed by Catching Freedom at 7-2 and Chad Brown-trained Tuscan Gold ...

  9. Horse culture in Mongolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_culture_in_Mongolia

    Mounted Mongol nomads holding horse lassos. Mongolian nomads have long been considered to be some of the best horsemen in the world. During the time of Genghis Khan, Mongol horse archers were capable of feats such as sliding down the side of their horse to shield their body from enemy arrows, while simultaneously holding their bow under the horse's chin and returning fire, all at full gallop.