Thursday, May 26, 2005

Horse Training: How Camaros teach us a valuable lesson

The Horse Training Lesson
Taught By Camaros


In 1967 the Camaro was created by
General Motors.

They called it "Camaro" because in
French it meant "pal" and GM said the real
mission of the car was to be a close companion
to its owner.

But a French executive corrected
them and said "Camaro" doesn't mean anything
in English or French.

The lesson there is to know for sure
before you do something. And knowing for sure
means checking with an expert.

Same goes for horse training. When a
horse is misbehaving or needs to learn some-
thing, the owner should know how to solve it.
And that's learned by talking with an expert
or referring to a guide.

Interestingly, even if you don't know
"how" to do something you can often figure it
out just by understanding the horse's nature.

As a for instance, a mistake often made
when handling a young horse is to treat him like
a buddy.

If the colt thinks you're his playmate
instead of the leader, he'll try being rough
and tough with you as he would another playmate
horse.

Thus, he must be taught early on that
you are the boss and you must be respected.

He shouldn't invade your space, bump
you, bite, and for sure not threaten or kick.

If you watch horses interact, the
subordinate horses would "never" threaten
the dominat horse.

The dominat horse gets that respect.

And if the colt learns that early on
and accepts you as boss from the get-go, then
training will be so much smoother from then on.

Adios for today.


Sincerely,

Andy Curry
www.horsetrainingandtips.com


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How To Train Horses For Killer Results - Everytime!

Click here to find out how:
http://www.horsetrainingandtips.com/horse_owners_manual.htm

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