yes, she is very lovely. and she looks well contented. my eldest son, in the Yukon Territory (yes, even further north than me!!) had a horse once, who used to run and hide behind trees. it was a favorite game, which they both enjoyed immensely, and would play for anyone who came to visit. Mitchell (son) would walk around the field calling the horse's name and pretending he couldn't see him, because the horse had his head hidden behind a teeny little tree (trees grow very slowly there) and thought he was invisible. then Mitchell would 'find' him, and the horse would run off to another tree.
A lifetime of kind horsemanship, I think we were doing natural horsemanship before it was ''invented''
I have completed Level One with Quantum Savvy Natural Horsemanship.
I am sad I can no longer access the Parelli learning platform, its just too expensive with too many changes.
I've tried some clicker training with good results , but haven't found any one person to wholly agree with. I guess I'll just need to keep trying to see what works
5 comments:
She's done a very good job of hiding. I can hardly see her at all.
Lovely, Abbey!
Susan, she has her eyes closed to provide extra invisibility...
Wildside, she is lovely.
yes, she is very lovely. and she looks well contented. my eldest son, in the Yukon Territory (yes, even further north than me!!) had a horse once, who used to run and hide behind trees. it was a favorite game, which they both enjoyed immensely, and would play for anyone who came to visit. Mitchell (son) would walk around the field calling the horse's name and pretending he couldn't see him, because the horse had his head hidden behind a teeny little tree (trees grow very slowly there) and thought he was invisible. then Mitchell would 'find' him, and the horse would run off to another tree.
GF, horses love to play, its an honour if they pley with us!!
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