Behaviors Have Purpose
Notes From Julie When folks tell me about problem behaviors, I hear one phrase often. I...
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Notes From Julie When folks tell me about problem behaviors, I hear one phrase often. I...
Read Moreby Julie Goodnight | | Julie Goodnight
Notes From Julie “That which does not kill you makes you stronger.” By and large, these are...
Read Moreby Julie Goodnight | | Husbandry, Julie Goodnight
Notes From Julie Are you raising a foal or young horse? Make sure you’re setting up a good...
Read MoreMy friend Nancy is a life-long rider in her 60s and a pretty good hand with a horse. One...
Read MoreAlthough often the subject of debate, to me it’s a no-brainer—yes, you can teach people feel. I do it at every clinic. Now, if your question is, are some people naturally better at feel than others, the answer is also yes. I cannot give people that talent, but I can teach anyone what they should be feeling when they ride their horse.
Read MoreReflecting on the best of 2012: We’ve taped, edited and aired 116 episodes of Horse Master since 2008. Oddly enough, even though I work with hundreds of horses and riders each year at clinics and expos,
Read MoreRecently I was in Hamilton, New Zealand, as a clinician at EquiDays, their national horse expo. I met a lot of great people there, including three talented horsewomen,
Read MoreIn every clinic that I teach, there are riders eager to canter; all they want to do is canter-canter-canter and maybe work on lead changes. Then there are those who want to canter but dread it, especially with 15 horses in the pen and everyone watching;
Read MoreThere’s a lot to being a trainer’s horse. You have to be well-trained and know your role. Julie Goodnight just brought home a new AQHA horse named Eddies Pick. Here’s his story of what it’s like to be the boss’s horse and how life changed when he happened upon the Goodnight ranch.
Read MoreHorses are instinctively herd-bound. It’s one of seven categories of instinctive behavior in horses and it is known as gregarious behavior. Quite simply, it’s desire to be with others. (By the way, the other categories of instinctive behavior in horses are flight, combative, ingestive, eliminative, reproductive and investigative behaviors.)
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