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Urban Horse School
Приєднався 25 тра 2008
Відео
How to train your own horse PART 1 - Groundwork - Gaining respect of your space by moving the feet
Переглядів 20414 днів тому
Appreciate work experience week where teenager Nancy wants to learn of to train her own 3 year old cob.
How to train your own horse PART 3 - How to ride a circle. WHAT ARE YOU DOING WRONG?
Переглядів 11614 днів тому
Apprentice week with teenager Nancy - riding circles correctly, horses position & riders position.
How to train your own horse PART 2. How to bend, flex and steer the young horse correctly
Переглядів 8414 днів тому
Apprentice week - Teaching teenager Nancy the basics of training young horses. As she wants to start her own 3 year old cob. Here I am coaching Nancy o feel time if and correctness in the flex, bend, hind movements.
Steve Young’s Horsemanship DEMO with Bueno a 2 year old Paint filly
Переглядів 1,8 тис.16 днів тому
Steve Young horsemanship demo -Never stop improving yourself
Переглядів 51418 днів тому
Road training horses - PART 2 - Approaching a scary situation
Переглядів 13821 день тому
Road training horses PART 1 - Preparing for highly stressful situation. What will she do?
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Continue to part 2 to see what happens
Working young horse from a saddled horse
Переглядів 44623 дні тому
Circle driving fun
Переглядів 1,8 тис.23 дні тому
Preparing a horse to be ridden - Toffee’s first session
Переглядів 11523 дні тому
Training a horse on the road
Переглядів 44925 днів тому
Steve Young Horsemanship demo! #steveyoung
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Horses and hedge cutters
Переглядів 32026 днів тому
Roadwork hacking training for horses
Переглядів 89426 днів тому
All fun in games till you mess up and hit your horse
I would love to see a Steve Young demo!
It is interesting to see your uncommon enthusiasm for the Vaquero traditions in the UK.
Fabulous❤
"Bueno" for a filly? I would have thought "Buena" would be more appropriate!
pretty cool for a fatty !!!
Luv it Nicky ❤
What?
I gave up riding horses when I found motorcycles are much more controllable & take less looking after.
I have no uploaded the complete video sorry 🙈 will add a second part. This is just first part of the video
Your articulation of this event taking place is perfect. Thx for sharing.
It is called lunging
yes it may be called lunging but if she wants to call it circle driving she can it's like when you know the name of a food or smth but you still call it something else because it might be easier to remember or you just want to call it that
I could not understand ANY of the audio.
She is a pretty girl..
Very good; thank you..
very lovely
Thank you for sharing the history, love it!
Introvert horse, listen to her with those suddle movements she does t want to do then pick back up after that pause of hearing her saying she doesn’t want too, making her feel more comfortable.
Just a quick Observation on the title of the Video, I noticed it was misspelled. It’s Ramal Not Romal The world Romal does not exist. Ramal was the name given to the reins because they are a ramal of the rains. Ramal means like an extension of something. Ramal it’s a piece that comes from the principal line. Ramal = ramification = derivation. In case you are curious, for the palm is called a concha 🐚 palm concha.
No Netflix, no Disney + , no Hulu or any other streaming service. All I want to watch is Mr. Puckett’s wisdom
Saludos desde Alta California. Desde hace varios años poco antes del COVID que comencé a ver los vídeos de la familia Puckett y me alegra mucho ver cómo transmiten sus conocimientos a diferentes partes del mundo. Como Mexicano que soy me llena de orgullo ver que todos estos conocimientos se sigan usando eso hace crecer mi cultura, mi cultura no está viva y sigue dando frutos. Los felicito por haber tenido la visita de la Familia Puckett que son personas muy sabias y con muy buen humor. Espero algún día tener el gusto de conocerles en persona. Se despide de ustedes su amigo Mexicano 🇲🇽
Beautiful hoss good training aswell I love horses such a gracious powerfull animal
Pat & Deb are national treasures, it’s lovely to see them appreciated world wide. Great questions & thanks for posting!
Nice....❤🐎❤
👍🐴
Your a great mentor great videos hope to attend one of your clinics someday. 👍🐴
It would be interesting to know what Temple Grandin would have to say about vaquero horsemanship.
Who is temple grandin?
@@Madstaffy famous animal behaviorist.
@@Madstaffy Please look into who she is.
I think Pat forgets that the spanish of the mission days were white 😂 he says in the mission days before the white man, the gringo.
Oh he doesn’t, he knows his stuff. He has mentioned about the white Spanish and the white Mexicans, the ones who were the owners were lazy. the Vaqueros Mexicanos were the ones who did the actual work in the horses and with the cattle and believe me, these workers were not white.
This guy has studied and claims to have actual cattle working experience. Maybe he does, but geographical differences require different things. The low headed Texas quarter horse was one of those things. Working cattle out of the brush was easier because a low headed horse will pick his head up when needed but for whatever reason a high headed horse doesn’t usually want to lower their head that navigate the brush as easy. They are more prone to want to go around it. Sometimes that isn’t the correct option because the cattle can escape your driving direction. The low headed horse also allows you more opportunities to get a rope on cattle when you don’t have a big window for you to throw a loop through. You can’t always be positioned right on the hip. So the low head carrier doesn’t have its head up in your straight ahead path. The other thing is that horses with high heads don’t cut and sort as well as the horse that is in an athletic position. If he had to react he’s already athletically in position but if he’s up high he has to get athletic before he can react. That only takes a split second but that can be the difference in a past cow or a contained cow. In the Texas heat, time isn’t always your best friend so you don’t get a lot of do overs. I know this wasn’t what his original topic was but just expressing MY difference of opinion about low headed horses.
It's a totally different culture, texas vs california. As you say, there's not a lot of time when working in texas. In california, the environment allows for taking things slow. But speaking as someone that prefers high headcarriage, I can tell you that my horses have no issue ducking under brush. Maybe it's because we live in heavy forest.
Lo rápido disimula lo mal hecho Done fast doesn’t mean done well or done fast done unwell. There is a difference in working cattle in Alta California than in Texas, while in Alta California the way Mr. Puckett talks about is a low stress cattle handling in which May take more time but the cattle is not stressed and that transforms into weight gain and transforms into more money. The fast “athletic” depressing way horses work with cattle in Texas stressed the cattle and this transforms into loss of weight and health complications usually through diarrhea for the cattle. The depressing position the horses assume in Texas is exactly that, very depressing to watch. But the argument to say that things are done fast because of heat ??? If you work the horse and cattle fast that’s only going to overheat them, don’t you slow down to cool down your horses. It doesn’t make sense. The Alta California Vaquero style horsemanship and cattle handling customs and Practices has its philosophy closely related to that saying that goes: Work smarter not harder It’s using the brain to work cattle rather than the body to work cattle, although both are used.
By the way Mr. Puckett has plenty of years of experience working on several cattle outfits, But working out in the ranches not inside a horse pen or arena. I would like to hear how many years of experience his critics claim to have, that if they even ride horses.
This gentleman is not what he claims to be Im sorry!! He is going off of some bullshit video or heard in coffee shop.
@@frankgonzales2462 what exactly is he claiming to be besides traditional it’s usually the Texas styled Cowboys that act like they invented horsemanship. Even though early Californians were taking turns around the Horn almost a century before the first Texas cowboy was even born. And every time I end up working with puncher style, Cowboys somewhere it is the exact same thing everything goes to hell in a handbasket because everything is 100 miles an hour, and everyone is screaming like Indians or causing accidents that could’ve been prevented if their rope wasn’t tied to their saddle I am going to assume you have not ridden a true spade horse, but believe it or not their head does change elevation while they move yes, while they are standing there their heads up, do you really think they run with their heads straight up? because that bitch would be beating the hell out of their mouth
I didn't notice the interview was with Mrs Deb until I seen Pat get off his horse. Great visit with the lady behind the camera, of one of my favorite channels.
Hay Pat, we did not realise you spoke another language. I don't think what Nicole was speaking was French I think that was from the deep south of England. Could you translate what she said to Australian. Thanks Mate
Turn on the Subtitles/CC it helps quite a bit.
It is great to see Pat and Deb appreciated around the globe.
Has anyone seen what happens to Amish horses? Go to an auction and see how ALOT of these people treat their animals! Hooves are painful, working these animals being worked to death, in many situations. Heartbreaking.😢
Are there no laws in “ amish land “ ????
You are so right and these horses, while trained to harness and to work, are not as well trained as you might think, being disrespectful of your space and having a general lack of connections with people.
This is a brilliant conversation with Nicole and Deb. I truly enjoyed watching this and it really sums up what we learned in the time we spent with them and our family in Normandy. 🥰
Brilliant 🎉 Liked and Subscribed
First!and lol this is so true 😂😂
Lovely saddle where is it from? X
Love the positive attitude you have with this young lady
Are they yours?
Thank you!!
Wow! We've been talking about moving to the southern US and making a homestead, with horses of course. Google has been listening and brought me to you. Common sense! Thank you😊❤
Nice
Makes perfect sense 👌
🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
Droi
Dftftrr🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
Keep it up bro, nice tricks
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Wow
Horn,bosol oops