Native American Style of Horse Taming
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 19 ก.พ. 2022
- Native American Style of Horse Taming by Toni Arnal. This time we upload a different video filmed during a country & western festival. It shows the moment of taming a horse that had never been ridden. A magical moment where horse and man join their paths for the first time and forever.
Horses are arguably one of the greatest animals humans ever domesticated. Strong and fast, these intelligent animals have had profound impacts on the societies they touched. From the Mongol steppes and the deserts of North Africa, to the lush forests of mainland Europe; horses were used widely in the old world for lots of reasons. When European breeds were introduced to North America in the 15th and 16th century they slowly began to work their way into the fabric of many Native American societies that gained access to them. As it did with other societies, the horse became the central feature in many Native cultures. This was particularly evident in the Great Plains region.
One of the more interesting aspects of Native American’s relationship with the horse was how they were able to train, or “break”, them for riding. Today, most horse trainers have access to specialty pens, tools, and equipment to get horses started under saddle. However, back in the frontier days, the methods of starting horses were quite a bit different. While methods likely varied from place to place, there are a few primary sources from the 1830s describing how Native Americans broke wild horses. These sources reveal quite a lot about the realities of life in the 19th century.
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I loved the Spirit movie when I was a kid. today is the day I understood, that the Native American part is closer to reality, than I could dream.
I'm so glad to have found at last one video of a horse being trained without breaking their spirit or restraining parts of em in a dangerous way good job!
Very impressed!, long rope method is for expert trainers only
Agreed
Wow no words used, no crop or whip. just body language, the lead, patience, understanding, and positive feedback. This is beautiful to watch
Absolutely 💯, loving horses teaches you how to treat people 😊💖
You can see that he was speaking, just all the audio was replaced with music
Absoulty the most calm and serene way to break a horse. Think terrifieing a horse by bucking them till there spririt is broke is wrong . Love this man can see his gental.touch and patients. 👍👍♥️♥️
@@tatumergo3931 they where literally domesticated for that specific purpose
That's because he is not breaking the horse
Fastest soft break I've ever seen, just amazing
so gentle and natural... amazing ❣️❣️❣️
Truly beautiful I new in my heart there is always a better way. Thank you for allowing me to learn your ways and I will take it along my journey with the spirit horses. 🙏
such a beautiful horse , heckuva way to ease it into your confidence
Beautiful horse ! I like it ! Love you horses !❤😘🙂
Some of the moves the trainer is making are far from originally native American - they are older than his grandparents AND not even American at all.
Think the originator was actually an Aussie I do believe... I've seen them used for many years especially where he mounts and lays out and rubs the horse. Its a great method and works beautifully.
Makes for a happy trustworthy 🐎...
Actually "Doma India" (as it reads on the back of his T-shirt) stands for "Indian Taming" and is originally the way that the "originals" trained their horses down there in the Argentinean Patagonia
you might be referring to the
"Kell Jeffery Method"
Jim Wilton was another Australian champion trainer and used different methods altogether.
So beautiful!
This is beautiful. Taking notes here!
The first Avatar movie makes me think of this
I’m not a horse person, but this is very cool. Not even a bit in his mouth!
My gray feral mare could neverrr
This is called natural 'Trust' between two species... You would find it very commonly among communities living close to nature, all over the world...and not only with horses or dogs, in Asia it's with wild animals like snakes, eagles, elephants, bears and sometimes even lions...
the music adds to the magic
This guy is magistic magical and magnificent
Ah yes lead and arena training, without a saddle helps them feel less restricted when training them ☺️💞
Lots of bonding and affection, encourages these big babies 💕😘 like a child
This is a gorgeous Palomino. Is he gilded or is she a mare transitioning from a filly?
Good man
A horse named horse...wow!
Hello New Hillbilly
A beautiful thing.....
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The Comanche broke wild horses by strangling them with a rope until they were near passing out. Then they'd climb on them and the horse would be docile. People think that Native Americans were mystical. They were just people.
People also commonly lump every tribe into the same thing lol
Oof