JillA
Well-Known Member
I feel that horsemanship is being broken down into painting by numbers.
That's Parelli for you!!
I feel that horsemanship is being broken down into painting by numbers.
A good or great trainer will also be a great student and will be constantly reviewing and changing elements as they learn more. Sadly I think MR and some of his ilk are caught in a dogma trap because of how their brands/companies have been built up around certain flag poles of ideology, and we are in a great age for equine scientific research which can highlight better ways for going forward. What I am grateful for from MR, is that he opened the door for a shift in how we approach horses and train, and many of his ways are sound but are wrapped up in a load of sudo science claptrap that does not bear up under any form of scrutiny.
I remember seeing a video of someone getting a horse to 'join up' with a remote control toy car-obviously that spoke Equus too
This may be how join-up works: follow me or else I will keep driving you away - under the assumption that being chased is aversive and something the horse would rather not do. How plausible does this sound to you? Or do you think the human in join-up is actor more like the predator with prey than a dominant horse with a submissive horse? Or something different from either of those?Follow me, I know best. And if you don't follow me I'll drive you in front of me. My Alpha is a gelding. When he comes in, all come in. When he goes out, all go out. Sometimes the others try and drag him out when he wants to be in , but he won't go and they won't go without him. Humans use this one all the time.
This isn't specific to the alpha, though, in that courage/lack of fear or confidence is a quality that a horse or human can show without necessarily being dominant. That would be consistent with the observation that leadership and dominance aren't always seen in the same horse (as in the case of your alpha gelding), and that leadership roles can be quite fluid or dynamic under some circumstances (more natural settings that don't impose the same pressures to compete that domestic regimes often do, see e.g. the video I linked above).'This is not safe, I'm out of here'. If the Alpha is frightened by something, everyone is frightened by it. Any of the other three can be frightened by themselves, but not the Alpha. Humans inadvertently use this one all the time, to ill effect. Nervous handlers/riders make nervous horses.
I'm curious to know how Mark Rashid has changed in what he advocates, because I haven't really followed what he's been doing since about 15 years ago.Interestingly Mark Rashid has changed repeatedly over the years -but a lot of his students are 'stuck' where he was 15/20 years ago. When I was at a demo a few years ago some people seemed really put out that he no longer advocated things he used to. So I can see why trainers just stick to their USPs. The 'fans' are as rigid and dogmatic as the trainers. And in some cases far more so!
Why do you think it's sad? From the horse's point of view, is being made to do something by someone controlling a toy car worse than being made to do the same thing by person 'in person'?that's just sad for the horse.![]()
So they have put up a statement about the physical condition of the horse having taken it to a vet and stated what was on the rehoming form 4 years ago when they acquired her. I am not sure why they didn't just address that statement quickly on facebook if they believed it to be untrue rather than let it gain any pace but I guess that is one if the troubles with social media.
In doing so they do seem to have missed the main point regarding what happened to the horse, personally I think I would have wanted to make an informed decision as to whether it was the right thing for my horses before I sent them but suspect as a lot of people they've not really thought the techniques through.
https://www.facebook.com/ewncharity/posts/1023288467819937
I'm not quite sure how the horse can have been relaxed and confident while being lunged and long reined, and yet its actions in the round pen were just it being "fresh". I'm afraid I doubt her ability to assess the psychological well being of the horse, given that they were happy with the round pen session initially, enough to post a video online and be planning another session the next day.
We only saw from just before they put the rider on but in that time she was showing no sign of being fresh, she was lathered up behind the saddle so had obviously been worked fairly hard by then
That was my feeling too - I don't see how an unfit horse could be fresh after having been lunged and long reined, and the horse in the video certainly didn't look it to me.
I'm concerned that someone in charge(?) of a rescue is such a poor judge of the horse's state of mind that she thought the horse was in any condition to work, let alone be treated in that manner.
Why do you think it's sad? From the horse's point of view, is being made to do something by someone controlling a toy car worse than being made to do the same thing by person 'in person'?
Ah, I see what you mean. In this case, there was a person in the loop, watching the horse and interacting/responding via the car's movement. So there was no danger of the horse being chased beyond the limits of what the person would do if they were in the pen with the horse. Indeed, the person aimed to produce exactly the same series of responses that would be produced by a human trainer. Empathy would still be there, at least in principle, because the person is responding to the horse.RC car - no empathy - cannot interact with horse, or respond to its cues. Which is unfair on the horse imho.
I'm curious to know how Mark Rashid has changed in what he advocates, because I haven't really followed what he's been doing since about 15 years ago.
Ah, I see what you mean. In this case, there was a person in the loop, watching the horse and interacting/responding via the car's movement. So there was no danger of the horse being chased beyond the limits of what the person would do if they were in the pen with the horse. Indeed, the person aimed to produce exactly the same series of responses that would be produced by a human trainer. Empathy would still be there, at least in principle, because the person is responding to the horse.
The quality of interaction would certainly be different, though - I'll give you that! I'm just not sure that having an animate object make the horse do certain things rather than a person would in itself be cruel or unfair. What if the person acted via a humanoid robot, producing human movements and observing the horse through the robot's 'eyes'?
No worries! Thanks for posting the link to the article.yes I see now (when it was first mentioned I thought someone meant a fully automated car but god knows why I thought that) but I found the article and posted a link to it; it was actually done as a study into how the join up technique itself works with a person controlling the car and making it chase etc. Still not sure how I got the idea it was automatic but anyway....![]()
I read the article about the car. My comment would be the car has no body language, it's physical shape does not change. Even very young horses pick up on your body language, l use a snap of the fingers or a flat palm, they soon know if you are wound up, your body is stiffer and your movement less fluid, you hold you breath. The only time they get chased if if they refuse to be caught, and I will not let them stand. Eventually it's true they do drop their head but they know I am cross,so we make peace, they are caught, no grudges, and go back to our normal way of communication. I do not think a car is that subtle.
Agree about the lack of subtlety - but what do we take from the fact they managed to get the horse to respond in a way that looks like join-up without subtle, human body language?I read the article about the car. My comment would be the car has no body language, it's physical shape does not change. Even very young horses pick up on your body language, l use a snap of the fingers or a flat palm, they soon know if you are wound up, your body is stiffer and your movement less fluid, you hold you breath. The only time they get chased if if they refuse to be caught, and I will not let them stand. Eventually it's true they do drop their head but they know I am cross,so we make peace, they are caught, no grudges, and go back to our normal way of communication. I do not think a car is that subtle.
Agree about the lack of subtlety - but what do we take from the fact they managed to get the horse to respond in a way that looks like join-up without subtle, human body language?
Boss are not physically stronger, but tend to be problem solvers and use their brain, and others learn by watching them