Yeah, I don't want to spend the money on that, or like the idea of injecting my body with toxins.That's considerate of you. Of course there's always botox.
Yeah, that's my brat.
Wow! I never knew horses represented betrayal. Thanks for the info!oh no, I came into this thread out of curiousity because in Aboriginal Australian culture "are you a horse person" means have you ever been a horse and are you likely to be one in future.
I have not been a horse yet, but the genetics of are being switched on in my mental processing when ever I get greedy after having been with a Man (WHO SAID HE WOULD MARRY ME THEN MARRIED TWO OTHER WOMEN ALREADY) who was once a horse. I don't mind taking horse. I have been listening to Indigenous American horse stories. Horses notable characteristic is BETRAYAL. (that man better stop accusing me of not taking him black! especially while he is with women who are not true believers)
now i am adding an edit:
I know a woman who had a horse that got angry with her and trod on her pet cockateil (that is a kind of mini parrot who lived on her shoulder)
hmph, HORSES! I don't know!
LOL!! Muscle mass has nothing to do with obedience!Upon Monday 14th August I was at the Brisbane show, (the Ekka, short for exhibition) that is a agricultural showcase. There were lots and lots of horses that were being shown for the skill of riders and trainers, and breed in horses. Lots and lots of different breeds, and I was observant that those horses that are most obedient are those with a more curved neck by stronger muscle development in the upper part of the neck. While the draught horses and also those horses used by the stockmen, are more like a racing horse with different style muslcular development. It is interesting that the most obedient horses for dressage etc, are not the most usefully breed for farmers to work with cattle from the backs of.
Now this is interesting me. What is it that other persons know about horses. It must of course be that even though certain horses are breed to be obedient to dressage training, that other breeds are more readily obedient to other tasks. But added to that we can only assume that every horse is at all times more enabled in obedience from being well cared for with kindness by a strick trainer. What is your regard for what causes obedience in a horse? I knew a dog breeder who recommended that if a puppy will lie upon its back in the palm of your hand, it will let itself be more readily trained. Are there similar signs in the disposition of horses?
My husband is loosing his muscle tone but still very obedient.LOL!! Muscle mass has nothing to do with obedience!
Have even really ever worked around horses? Your posts in this thread seem a little odd, no offense.I saw a couple of camels at the local horse show this week, and could not help but get the feeling from them that camels are more accepting of their condition as animal, than is a horse. I got caused to want to be a camel person instead of a horse person. But I will need to endure the horses, since there are so many of present. Horses seem to have a state of being in which they so want to be dis-obedient, but are being breed for the instincts of obedience and so are obedient without wanting to be. All of dressage looks like an enormous display of that. The horses are so tense, but enjoying their obedience at the same time, as though they are enjoying despising their rider. But the stock horses seem a little different, but perhaps only because they need less direction from their riders.
what do horse people reckon, since I am my self, in truth rather a Kangaroo sort of person?
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