icelandichorse.blogspot.com
Icelandic Horse: Stepping Pace Gait
http://icelandichorse.blogspot.com/2009/03/stepping-pace-gait.html
Icelandic Horses and horse training. Tuesday, March 03, 2009. The stepping pace is a lateral gait which can be done at the speed of walk, intermediate gait, or fast gait. This is a natural gait of some Icelandic Horses. For more information and description, along with video, of stepping pace, please see:. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). ClickRyder, Clicker Training for Horses. Teaching a Horse to Talk. Misty, In Alaska, With Her Icelandic Horse. Gaits of Gaited Horses. TWH and Trail Skills. Icelandic...
icelandichorse.blogspot.com
Icelandic Horse: Noseband
http://icelandichorse.blogspot.com/2008/10/noseband.html
Icelandic Horses and horse training. Sunday, October 19, 2008. There is always a concern with nosebands that are too tight. To protect the horse's welfare, we should ask why the nosebands are so tight? What is the reason for it? Is it a case of the horse not knowing how to respond to the bit as a tool of communication? Or a case of the rider not knowing how to use a bit? Or possibly the bit does not fit properly and the horse is trying to get away from the nutcracker action? Teaching a Horse to Talk.
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Icelandic Horse: Icelandic Horse in Alaska Parade
http://icelandichorse.blogspot.com/2009/01/icelandic-horse-in-alaska-parade.html
Icelandic Horses and horse training. Tuesday, January 06, 2009. Icelandic Horse in Alaska Parade. Here is Misty, with her Icelandic Horses, in a holiday parade in Alaska. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). ClickRyder, Clicker Training for Horses. Teaching a Horse to Talk. Listen very carefully to hear the horses "talking". As they learn, they will get louder; this is just the start. Misty, In Alaska, With Her Icelandic Horse. Misty and her Icelandic Horse, in Alaska, plowing through a snow drift.
icelandichorse.blogspot.com
Icelandic Horse: Beautiful Icelandic Horse
http://icelandichorse.blogspot.com/2009/01/beautiful-icelandic-horse.html
Icelandic Horses and horse training. Monday, January 12, 2009. This is a beautiful chestnut Icelandic Horse gelding with flaxen mane and tail. The colors of his tack are gorgeous, with the turquoise saddle pad matching the breast collar and the bridle. He is carrying a Myler sweet iron, but the reins are attached to the sidepull. Wind Gait Icelandic Horses: http:/ windgait.com/. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). ClickRyder, Clicker Training for Horses. Teaching a Horse to Talk. Gaits of Gaited Horses.
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Icelandic Horse: Skjoldur, Icelandic Horse
http://icelandichorse.blogspot.com/2008/11/skjoldur-icelandic-horse.html
Icelandic Horses and horse training. Saturday, November 01, 2008. Skjoldur, Icelandic Horse. In the pitch dark. It pains me to think I will never feel what it is like to ride him again except in my memory. They had ever ridden. Lori Cox wrote after riding him in a seventy five miler in Nevada that it was like riding a horse on wheels. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). ClickRyder, Clicker Training for Horses. Teaching a Horse to Talk. Misty, In Alaska, With Her Icelandic Horse. Gaits of Gaited Horses.
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Icelandic Horse: Icelandic Horse Drawing
http://icelandichorse.blogspot.com/2008/11/icelandic-horse-drawing.html
Icelandic Horses and horse training. Friday, November 21, 2008. Sofie from Denmark did a great job on this Icelandic Horse drawing. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). ClickRyder, Clicker Training for Horses. Teaching a Horse to Talk. Listen very carefully to hear the horses "talking". As they learn, they will get louder; this is just the start. Misty, In Alaska, With Her Icelandic Horse. Misty and her Icelandic Horse, in Alaska, plowing through a snow drift. Gaits of Gaited Horses. TWH and Trail Skills.
icelandichorse.blogspot.com
Icelandic Horse: Icelandic Horse Slow Motion
http://icelandichorse.blogspot.com/2010/01/icelandic-horse-slow-motion.html
Icelandic Horses and horse training. Monday, January 04, 2010. Icelandic Horse Slow Motion. It is interesting to view the legs of the Icelandic Horse in slow motion. Conformation problems may cause the transverse legs to cross over each other (rope walking), and the style of riding with mechanical aids, or the pounding of the feet on the ground may cause the joints to hyperextend (such as seeing the bottom of the front feet from the front, as in the above picture, not a good thing). Gaits of Gaited Horses.
icelandichorse.blogspot.com
Icelandic Horse: Here We Go, No Hands!
http://icelandichorse.blogspot.com/2008/11/here-we-go-no-hands.html
Icelandic Horses and horse training. Friday, November 28, 2008. Here We Go, No Hands! This is a fun video to watch. The horse appears to have a little problem with the bit, but the rider does not seem to be keeping a lot of contact on the reins, so that's good. She is comfortable enough to drop the reins (altho Reynir drops the tolt and goes into trot; he may need the contact to be able to perform the gait). It is very nice to see the much looser rein, and less heavy contact. Teaching a Horse to Talk.
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Icelandic Horse: Marketing the Icelandic Horse
http://icelandichorse.blogspot.com/2009/05/marketing-icelandic-horse.html
Icelandic Horses and horse training. Thursday, May 21, 2009. Marketing the Icelandic Horse. North America has several breeds of easy gaited horses; horses that gait naturally. In the Icelandic Horse world, we see the horses being forced to gait through heavy contact, nosebands, dig and pinch saddles, shoes, boots, whips, concussive practices, etc. From an article about Marketing the Icelandic Horse:. For the Paso Fino: "Awareness of the Paso Fino as we know it today didn't spread outside Latin America un...