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365 Days in Horse Country – Feeding Grain

August 15th, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – Feeding Grain  Every horse loves oats, but should every horse have grain?  This is a question that equine nutritionists have asked for years. The question you should ask yourself is whether or not your horse should have grain.  While grain is a necessity for horses performing regularly at very demanding activities, such as racing and three-day eventing, i ...

365 Days in Horse Country – Finding a Trainer

August 14th, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – Finding a Trainer  In an ideal world, horse owners would be able to train their own horses.  After all, most people manage to train their own dogs.  But horse training is different in several ways, two of the most important being, quite simply, that horses are a lot bigger than dogs, and you ride them. If you have a young horse who needs to learn the ways ...

365 Days in Horse Country – Botulism

August 13th, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – Botulism  Most people know botulism as something you get from eating contaminated canned food.  Horses can get botulism, too, although not in the same way most humans get it. Botulism is a deadly toxin produced by a bacterium called clostridium botulinum.  The metabolic process of this bacterium produces neurotoxins, which affect the horse’s nervous syste ...

365 Days in Horse Country – Trigger

August 12th, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – Trigger One of the most famous horses to ever emerge from Hollywood was a part Thoroughbred palomino stallion named Trigger.  During his career, Trigger stared in eighty-two movies.  The trusty mount of singing cowboy star Roy Rogers, Trigger was named Golden Cloud before he became Roy Rogers’ horse.  Trigger made his first appearance with Rogers in a film ...

365 Days in Horse Country – Take a Lesson

August 11th, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – Take  a Lesson    Whether you have been riding your entire life or are new to the hobby, everyone can benefit from taking a lesson. If you thing you have all the skills you need to ride well and the idea of taking a lesson seems silly to you, consider this: Even Olympic equestrians who compete at the highest levels in the world still take riding lessons.  ...

365 Days in Horse Country – Herd Behaviour

August 10th, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – Herd Behaviour  If you can count on horses for one thing, it’s to be highly tuned into other horses.  This is an expression of herd behaviour, which is an instinct that has been programmed into horses for millions of years.  Try to take a horse away from his buddies, and you will see this instinct in action. Herd behaviour developed in horses as a means o ...

365 Days in Horse Country – Dutch Warmblood

August 9th, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – Dutch Warmblood  First created to be a multi-use farm and riding horse, the Dutch Warmblood is the result of breeding a native Dutch horse with English, German, and French horses.  The Dutch maintained strict standards for breeding these horses because they were so important to the livelihood of Dutch farmers.  Horses that were lacking in soundness, intellig ...

365 Days in Horse Country – Marengo

August 8th, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – Marengo  I’ve said it before and I will say it again; behind, or rather beneath, every great war hero is a good horse.  This too is true of Napoleon.  The horse that carried him through many battles was a gray Arabian stallion named Marengo. According to legend, Napoleon rode Marengo in all of his major battles, from Moscow to Waterloo.  The horse was su ...

365 Days in Horse Country – Pre-Ride Stretch

August 7th, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – Pre-Ride Stretch     Horses aren’t the only athletes in the human-horse team.  Riding takes athetic skill in humans, tii.  Just ask any first-time rider how they feel the day after they ride.  Muscles they didn’t even know they had hurt. The demands of riding on the muscles and ligaments are why it’s always a good idea to warm up with stretches before you ...

365 Days in Horse Country – Balius and Xanthas

August 6th, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – Balius and Xanthas    The Greek hero Achilles did not conquer Troy by himself.  He had the help of two divine horses, named Balius and Xanthas, who pulled his chariot. Balius and Xanthas were brothers and were sired by none other than Zeus himself.  Their mother was a harpie (a death spirit with a bird’s body and a woman’s head).  They were given to Achille ...

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