Horse Tricks, In 2 Parts and Featuring


Book Description

Unillustrated (no pictures), 143 pages "Old doesn't mean out-dated." - Annotated - With 5 original chapters (plus Addendum) by Keith Hosman NOTE: The free or cheap copies of "Dr. Sutherland's System of Educating the Horse" found elsewhere online are poorly scanned-in, blurry and very difficult to read. The material you'll find here in my book has been reformatted for the modern era. More importantly, I've annotated the material ("added comments") and included6 additional chapters written by myself. Check out the Table of Contents, below This book brings together public domain material written by G.H. Sutherland, MD and by me, Keith Hosman. It is published in two sections. The first is a collection of dozens of tricks you can teach your horse and was written in 1861 by Dr. Sutherland. The second contains five "feats" I put to paper after finding them to be quite popular at my clinics. You will also find a fix for horses that bite, should they get nippy following some of the training which calls for the horse to pick objects up with its mouth and the like. I have annotated Dr. Sutherland's work. That's a fancy way of saying that I read through his material, then added comment to each chapter based on personal experiences, modern thinking and techniques. Know that, while they may be short, each observation or insight was placed with care; each can make big changes fast somewhere in your training. I daresay you just might recoup the cost of this book somewhere in that sea of italicized notes. Still, why should you lay down your hard-earned cash for a horse-training book written generations ago? Because author G.H. Sutherland could train horses to do tricks that you'd like to learn -- and when something works, it works. Besides, in all this time, what's really changed? It's still a human using the same simple tools to teach a horse to do the same maneuvers. Table of Contents: SECTION I DR. SUTHERLAND'S SYSTEM OF EDUCATING THE HORSE With Rules for Teaching the Horse Some 39 Different Tricks or Feats CHAPTERS INCLUDE: - TO COME WHEN CALLED - TO MAKE A BOW - TO SHAKE HANDS - TO KNOCK ON THE DOOR - TO STAND ON A TABLE - TO CIRCLE AROUND - TO JUMP THE WHIP - TO JUMP THROUGH THE HOOP - TO LIE DOWN - TO KNEEL DOWN - TO SIT UP - TO SIT UP--ANOTHER METHOD - TO WALK ON THREE LEGS - TO STAND ON HIND LEGS - TO WALK ON HIND LEGS - TO SAY YES - TO SAY NO - TO WALTZ - TO PICK UP THINGS - TO HOLD THINGS - TO CARRY AND FETCH THINGS - TO TAKE OFF CAP, COAT AND MITTENS - TO UNBUCKLE SADDLE GIRTH AND TAKE OFF SADDLE - TO OPEN AND SHUT THE DOOR - TO PUMP WATER - TO FIRE OFF A PISTOL - TO RING THE BELL - TO FIND HIDDEN THINGS - TO TELL HIS ABCs - TO COUNT OR SELECT DIFFERENT NUMBERS - TO SPELL - TO READ - TO ANSWER ANY QUESTION IN THE MULTIPLICATION TABLE - TO ADD, SUBTRACT, MULTIPLY AND DIVIDE - TO BRING THE CARDS CALLED FOR - TO TELL HIS AGE, DAYS IN THE WEEK, MONTHS IN THE YEAR, ETC. - TO TELL FORTUNE - TO PLAY CARDS - TO PASS AROUND THE HAT SECTION II "A Handful of Feats" as originally penned by Keith Hosman CHAPTERS INCLUDE: - Teach a Horse to Sidepass Toward You On the Ground - Teach Your Horse to Lower His Head While Standing - Teach Horse to Pick Up Its Feet when You Point - Teach Your Horse to Come to You (Using a Roundpen) - Teach Your Horse to Load Into a Trailer - From Some Distance ADDENDUM Fixing "Biting Horses"




"Horse Tricks" in 2 Parts and Featuring


Book Description

"Old doesn't mean out-dated." Annotated with thoughts for the modern horseman Includes 5 original chapters by John Lyons Certified Trainer Keith Hosman In all, 44 tricks plus an addendum containing a fix for "Biting Horses"This book brings together public domain material written by G.H. Sutherland, MD and by me, Keith Hosman. It is published in two sections. The first is a collection of dozens of tricks you can teach your horse and was written in 1861 by Dr. Sutherland. The second contains five "feats" I put to paper after finding them to be quite popular at my training clinics. You will also find a fix for horses that bite, should they get nippy following some of the training which calls for the horse to pick objects up with its mouth and the like.I have annotated Dr. Sutherland's work. That's a fancy way of saying that I read through his material, then added comment to each chapter based on personal experiences, modern thinking and techniques. Know that, while they may be short, each observation or insight was placed with care; each can make big changes fast somewhere in your training. I daresay you just might recoup the cost of this book somewhere in that sea of italicized notes.Still, why should you lay down your hard-earned cash for a horse-training book written generations ago? Because author G.H. Sutherland could train horses to do tricks that you'd like to learn -- and when something works, it works. Besides, in all this time, what's really changed? It's still a human using the same simple tools to teach a horse to do the same maneuvers.NOTE: The free or cheap copies of "Dr. Sutherland's System of Educating the Horse" found elsewhere online are poorly scanned-in, blurry and very difficult to read. The material you'll find here in my book has been reformatted for the modern era. More importantly, I've annotated the material ("added comments") and included 6 additional chapters written by myself. See for yourself in the Table of Contents, which follow.Table of Contents:SECTION IDR. SUTHERLAND'S SYSTEM OF EDUCATING THE HORSE With Rules for Teaching the Horse Some 40 Different Tricks or FeatsCHAPTERS INCLUDE:- TO COME WHEN CALLED- TO MAKE A BOW- TO SHAKE HANDS- TO KNOCK ON THE DOOR- TO STAND ON A TABLE- TO CIRCLE AROUND- TO JUMP THE WHIP- TO JUMP THROUGH THE HOOP- TO LIE DOWN- TO KNEEL DOWN- TO SIT UP- TO SIT UP--ANOTHER METHOD- TO WALK ON THREE LEGS- TO STAND ON HIND LEGS- TO WALK ON HIND LEGS- TO SAY YES- TO SAY NO- TO WALTZ- TO PICK UP THINGS- TO HOLD THINGS- TO CARRY AND FETCH THINGS- TO TAKE OFF CAP, COAT AND MITTENS- TO UNBUCKLE SADDLE GIRTH AND TAKE OFF SADDLE- TO OPEN AND SHUT THE DOOR- TO PUMP WATER- TO FIRE OFF A PISTOL- TO RING THE BELL- TO FIND HIDDEN THINGS- TO TELL HIS ABCs- TO COUNT OR SELECT DIFFERENT NUMBERS- TO SPELL- TO READ- TO ANSWER ANY QUESTION IN THE MULTIPLICATION TABLE- TO ADD, SUBTRACT, MULTIPLY AND DIVIDE- TO BRING THE CARDS CALLED FOR- TO TELL HIS AGE, DAYS IN THE WEEK, MONTHS IN THE YEAR, ETC.- TO TELL FORTUNE- TO PLAY CARDS- TO PASS AROUND THE HATSECTION II"A Handful of Feats" as originally penned by Keith HosmanCHAPTERS INCLUDE:- Teach a Horse to Sidepass Toward You On the Ground- Teach Your Horse to Lower His Head While Standing- Teach Horse to Pick Up Its Feet when You Point- Teach Your Horse to Come to You (Using a Roundpen)- Teach Your Horse to Load Into a Trailer - From Some DistanceADDENDUMFixing "Biting Horses"




Horse Tricks Featuring Dr. Sutherland's System of Educating the Horse (Annotated) Together with "A Handful of Feats"


Book Description

"Old doesn't mean out-dated." * Annotated * With 5 original chapters (plus Addendum) by Keith Hosman NOTE: The free or cheap copies of "Dr. Sutherland's System of Educating the Horse" found elsewhere online are poorly scanned-in, blurry and very difficult to read. The material you'll find here in my book has been reformatted for the modern era. More importantly, I've annotated the material ("added comments") and included 6 additional chapters written by myself. Check out the Table of Contents, below This book brings together public domain material written by G.H. Sutherland, MD and by me, Keith Hosman. It is published in two sections. The first is a collection of dozens of tricks you can teach your horse and was written in 1861 by Dr. Sutherland. The second contains five "feats" I put to paper after finding them to be quite popular at my clinics. You will also find a fix for horses that bite, should they get nippy following some of the training which calls for the horse to pick objects up with its mouth and the like. I have annotated Dr. Sutherland's work. That's a fancy way of saying that I read through his material, then added comment to each chapter based on personal experiences, modern thinking and techniques. Know that, while they may be short, each observation or insight was placed with care; each can make big changes fast somewhere in your training. I daresay you just might recoup the cost of this book somewhere in that sea of italicized notes. Still, why should you lay down your hard-earned cash for a horse-training book written generations ago? Because author G.H. Sutherland could train horses to do tricks that you'd like to learn -- and when something works, it works. Besides, in all this time, what's really changed? It's still a human using the same simple tools to teach a horse to do the same maneuvers. Table of Contents: SECTION I DR. SUTHERLAND'S SYSTEM OF EDUCATING THE HORSE With Rules for Teaching the Horse Some 40 Different Tricks or Feats CHAPTERS INCLUDE: - TO COME WHEN CALLED - TO MAKE A BOW - TO SHAKE HANDS - TO KNOCK ON THE DOOR - TO STAND ON A TABLE - TO CIRCLE AROUND - TO JUMP THE WHIP - TO JUMP THROUGH THE HOOP - TO LIE DOWN - TO KNEEL DOWN - TO SIT UP - TO SIT UP--ANOTHER METHOD - TO WALK ON THREE LEGS - TO STAND ON HIND LEGS - TO WALK ON HIND LEGS - TO SAY YES - TO SAY NO - TO WALTZ - TO PICK UP THINGS - TO HOLD THINGS - TO CARRY AND FETCH THINGS - TO TAKE OFF CAP, COAT AND MITTENS - TO UNBUCKLE SADDLE GIRTH AND TAKE OFF SADDLE - TO OPEN AND SHUT THE DOOR - TO PUMP WATER - TO FIRE OFF A PISTOL - TO RING THE BELL - TO FIND HIDDEN THINGS - TO TELL HIS ABCs - TO COUNT OR SELECT DIFFERENT NUMBERS - TO SPELL - TO READ - TO ANSWER ANY QUESTION IN THE MULTIPLICATION TABLE - TO ADD, SUBTRACT, MULTIPLY AND DIVIDE - TO BRING THE CARDS CALLED FOR - TO TELL HIS AGE, DAYS IN THE WEEK, MONTHS IN THE YEAR, ETC. - TO TELL FORTUNE - TO PLAY CARDS - TO PASS AROUND THE HAT SECTION II "A Handful of Feats" as originally penned by Keith Hosman CHAPTERS INCLUDE: - Teach a Horse to Sidepass Toward You On the Ground - Teach Your Horse to Lower His Head While Standing - Teach Horse to Pick Up Its Feet when You Point - Teach Your Horse to Come to You (Using a Roundpen) - Teach Your Horse to Load Into a Trailer - From Some Distance ADDENDUM: "Biting Horses" (Curing this most serious of vices)




Trick Training Your Horse to Success


Book Description

A world champion trainer shares her secrets for developing a well-behaved, responsive horse.




The Trick Horse Companion


Book Description

The Higher education for your horse! Trick training is one of the best-and most enjoyable-ways to enhance the intelligence, adaptability, predictability and desire of today's companion horse. In the process of teaching your horse many new skills you will discover - a safer, more confident equine companion-a "thinking" horse a horse with a "can-do" and "want-to-do" attitude a horse who displays willing compliance a better performance horse, whether in the show ring or on the trail And you will improve your horse's desire to interact and engage with you move beyond mechanical, rote learning to a new level of intelligence and self expression give your young horse a curriculum of learning that will send him to the head of the class improve everyday skills such as trailer loading, veterinary treatment, working with the farrier and hoof trimmer interact with your horse on a reciprocal level beyond your wildest dreams "Sue and Allen's Enlightened Trick Horse Training is, to my knowledge, the first trick-training method that honors the horse's intelligence and individuality." - Susana Gibson Founder and Publisher trailBLAZER magazine The Trick Horse Companion brings Trick Horse Training into the modern age of animal behavioral science. It bridges the human desire to be as one with the horse and develops a lasting and functional bond with the horse. Today's more enlightened horse enthusiasts want to know how to forge a closer relationship that includes the happiness of the horse. The Trick Horse Companion clearly explains how and why horses think and act as they do which is elementary to creating a mutually satisfying and sustainable horse/human bond. Most animal behaviorists agree horses are among the smartest of all domesticated animals, and the authors believe they are capable of much more than is ever asked of them. Horses make strong associations between objects and actions which is why we utilize plenty of props, including pedestals to mount, large balls to herd, small balls to retrieve, beanbags to sit upon, Frisbees to retrieve and cleat boards for targeting. Enlightened Trick Training is not an end point but rather a bonding and educational journey. It encourages communication and desire for interaction from the horse which promotes willing obedience as he learns to engage and respond on a higher level. All categories of Tricks are presented seamlessly and build upon each other to result in a highly- educated and responsive horse. A horse who is truly a companion, an individual that will enrich your life. "Companion" signifies the horse is elevated in his relationship with us and is a pleasure to spend time with. A companion horse may be a performance horse of any discipline or sport, a saddle or trail horse or a rescue horse-and he is a safer horse. Horses make powerful associations between objects (props) and actions, and by adding positive reinforcement including food treats, you can expect to see rapid results. Horses love this education because it is easy for them to understand and it's fun-not like work, but more like play. In all elements, the trick quickly becomes the reward rather than the work."




Crime, Shame and Reintegration


Book Description

Crime, Shame and Reintegration is a contribution to general criminological theory. Its approach is as relevant to professional burglary as to episodic delinquency or white collar crime. Braithwaite argues that some societies have higher crime rates than others because of their different processes of shaming wrongdoing. Shaming can be counterproductive, making crime problems worse. But when shaming is done within a cultural context of respect for the offender, it can be an extraordinarily powerful, efficient and just form of social control. Braithwaite identifies the social conditions for such successful shaming. If his theory is right, radically different criminal justice policies are needed - a shift away from punitive social control toward greater emphasis on moralizing social control. This book will be of interest not only to criminologists and sociologists, but to those in law, public administration and politics who are concerned with social policy and social issues.




What I'd Teach Your Horse


Book Description

If you broke your horse to saddle and rode it for the first time yesterday, this book (chapter 1) is where you'd start tomorrow. If you have an older horse and you've taught him everything you know and he still don't know nothin', this book is where you'd start, (chapter 2). It's a roadmap to building the foundation every horse needs, regardless of age, breed or background, regardless of what you've got ultimately planned for that horse. Afterwards, when your horse knows this book back to front, go train for barrels, roping, eventing, jumping or dressage. But today, basics are basics. Section I is the stuff your horse needs to know. Section II is the stuff (the theory) you need to know. Practice the first handful of chapters in order, as written. Beyond that, you should feel free to mix and match depending on your needs or abilities. Some chapters are dependent upon others - but in those cases, I've spelled out necessary prerequisites. Question: "I just bought a horse. What do I do now?" Answer: "Buy my book, 'What I'd Teach Your Horse.'" Contents: SECTION I, BASICALLY TRAINING YOUR HORSE - Legs Mean Move (Step 1 if This Is "Day 2" for Your Young Horse) - Hip Control, Part I - Hip Control, Part II - Classic Serpentine - Train Your Horse to Travel Straight - Clockwork: How to Teach Anything to Your Horse - Shoulder Control - The Reverse Arc Circle - How to Fix Leaning Shoulders - Serpentine: Indirect to Direct - Speed Control - Slow Down, Part I: Move the Hip - Slow Down, Part II: Wherein We Train the Brain - Balky Horses: Comatose One Minute, Hot to Trot the Next - Crossing Creeks and Scary Stuff - Teach Your Horse to Lower Its Head While Standing - Better Back Ups - Simple Steps to Power Steering - Diagonal Movement ("Leg Yields Without the Legs") - Softening - Getting Leads - A Fix for Cross-Firing (aka "Cross-Cantering") - Hips, Get Behind the Shoulders (And Stay Put) - Hips-in (aka "Haunches-in" or "Travers") - Neck Reining How-To SECTION II, TEACHING YOU, THE THEORY BEHIND THE PRACTICE - The First Thing I Do - Each Time You Mount Up, Do This - How to Pick Up Your Reins Like a Pro - Training Magic: Release on the Thought - What You're Feeling For - Reins Tell Direction, Legs Tell Speed - Talking Horse - See Yourself Leading When Riding - Perfect the First Time - Six Easy Ways to Improve Your Training - Rider Checklists - Diagnosing Problems Books by This Author Meet the Author: Keith Hosman "If I had a dollar for every email I get asking "what to do" to make a riding horse out of the mare Uncle Emo just traded for the old RV—or how to retrain a horse that's grown rusty—or some version on either theme, I'd be the world's first gazillionaire. With the publication of this book then, I'm hoping to grab that distinction."







Modern Horsemanship


Book Description