Drafts love to work. Ppl need to remember these are HUGE horses. Do you really want an animal this big loose, bored and trying to burn energy?! Think about it. They were bred to work and they love it! See how well the horse responds to his handler? This is a well connected team. He wouldn’t do this if he were being abused.
I admire how a 160 pound man is controlling a 1200 pound horse with a rope that wouldn't hold a dog. Well cared for horses being kept healthy with hard work that doesn't over work them. :)
Yeah.. the horses and all the animals in the wild are just wasting their time, are bored, loose, trying to burn their energy in vain instead of getting a real job.
We tend to be amazed when dressage horses do incredible things under the rider, but this special relationship between man and work horse is equally admirable. These horses are so smart and strong and look like they love to work. I am in awe.
These big beautiful drafties are so agile. I didn't thing they could climb that easy and walk over a pile of logs without tripping.. Beautiful, gentle creatures.
This is so awesome to watch!! Gorgeous horse in a beautiful setting. That horse is perfect for this job, as he can climb up and down that hill so gracefully and yet with such strength
my grandpa raised and trained horses. His pride and joy was Dick, Dan, and Dolly, beautiful Belgiums. They live for the work. They live for the pull. When I once worked at a desk job, I looked forward to going home and relaxing with a bit of physical work because my sleep was much more restful after a good physical stretch. These animals love what they were bred for! I love to watch them, they are actually thinking what's next when their lead is telling them to hem, haw, whoa, up.....awesome.
I was amazed to see that horse calmly crawl over a pile of logs. I've seen horses sacked out to walking over "teeter-totter" bridges so they don't get freaked out about encountering unstable footing. But a flat bridge is not going to shift the way a pile of logs can (I grew up in logging country in north Idaho). So impressive 😊👍🐴. Hats off to these horses and their human partners. Very cool. I wish we had more horse loggers around here.
I love seeing a Draft horse put to work doing the job they were bred to do and yes, they love to work. It's far better than seeing them put out to pasture bored out of their minds. These work horses are an investment for farmers, loggers etc and as such they are cared for better than the owners themselves. Watching these guys and girls work is an amazing thing. So powerful, yet such gentle babies.
+Kelly Widrick Yea because you see so many wild horses loading up heavy objects and dragging them around. So I guess the horse should thank them for making them do this. In the wild guess what horses do, they walk around, eat, occasionally run and males herd up and try and keep their females together while keep other stallions away which is a males main activity. With females raising young as theirs. Yes those horses have been bred over time to work like that for man but that doesn't automatically mean they like doing it. It means their ancestors were singled out to be bred because they were a little stronger and/or bigger than most others and doing that each generation has led to the horse you see. Being bred to do something does not mean you like doing it.
+jamesonsix19 these horses are domesticated. Dogs are domesticated too and dogs love to do the job they are bred to do. You clearly know jack shit about horses and animals.
Industrial machinery may have taken over most of the world, but there are still some areas--like this forest-- where industrial machinery can't go. Draft horses may not be as widely implemented as they used to be, but I don't think their original purpose will ever truly disappear =) Love draft horses so much, thanks for sharing, and without stupid music to accompany it! Just the sound of cloppity hooves and horse snorts.
It’s really cool to see these horses work. They’re well cared for and they obviously enjoy their work. The lighter horse in particular he strikes me as the type that meets his handlers at the gate!
Magnificent and powerful horses! It seems that they enjoy their work. Their owner is very good. He whistles and speak to the horses instead of hitting them.
what a great video. thanks, I have a real appreciation for these horses now...so smart and so incredibly strong. They really seem to know and like their job, also.
The trust that animal has to walk across a log deck. That’s something right there. Beautiful work guys. Only done it some with my grandpa when I was a kid.
the horses ears are up when he pulls, and his head is held high, which means he is in a good mood. so I think he is happy to do this work. which clearly means this is not abusive.
+alexis hawkhand Yes, the horse looks fine. But ears aren't the only indicator, it's called body language for a reason. Ears are mostly an indicator of the direction of focus, not always mood.
+alexis hawkhand Had to chuckle as the word I kept hearing the most from these loggers was "Whoa!Whoa!" so yeah, I'd think the horses were doing fine. :D
The commands are still based on old Dutch (flemish) words. Even in the french speaking part of Belgium they use the same words. (They don’t réalisé it’s flemish). I was told that they can command each leg separatly. Very intelligent horses.
Yes they understand both languages. Granddad had 6 of them in Belgium. He would whistle and the leader would go back to the barn and all the rest of them would follow. They liked to frolic out in the field . Very good natured and gentle.
They still use draft horses in the forest, because the animals do not destroy the soil like tractors would. BTW, the horses can reach places where a tractor simple has no access. Watching these horses makes me proud to be Belgian.
Wow! They really are sure-footed. I am amazed. Also at how well they work as a team with their human. It seems to me that some of the logs could easily slide down and hit the horse from behind. How is this handled/prevented? Beautiful horses!
Wow, they're so much more atheletic than I thought. Incredible and great at problem solving. I'm sure the work has it's hazards, but these guys make me feel so clumbsy, lol.
In the '50s in northern On we had horses pulling logs by themselves. They would go to thelanding alone, get unhooked, turn around and go for another. They knew when it was lunch time and also going home time.
I remember seeing one these in person for the first time driving through the Ardennes country side and looking at the guy next to me .... "you see the size of that freak'n horse ?!?!"
When I think of my Poppa Ivy L. Steward, I remember he farmed with two Big Workhorses until about 1947 near Paoli, Oklahoma. He and they worked hard and were Strong.
Telling a draft horse not to pull is like telling a viszla or greyhound or whippet not to run, this is what they are bred for. the guy isnt putting on more weight than one horse can safely handle (that i have a problem with) hes not pushing it to pull more and more weight until it breaks something and has to be put down, hes using it for exactly what its name suggests, DRAFT, which is defined as the act of pulling a load. the time the horse slipped, he stopped the horse and moved the obstruction while looking at the legs to make sure they were not obviously damaged, then carried on. I do have to ask though (simply out of curiosity, not criticism) are there no brakes added on the logs somehow? i know with sled dogs the cart has brakes so should it start to fall faster than the dogs can run down a hill, it doesn't crash into the dogs, I was just wondering how that is achieved with the logs, so that you don´t have a log fly forward going down a hill and snap the horses tendons, is it a way you tie the rope or something so that it digs in rather than falls, or do you just rely on it not slipping?
The log is the brake. Think of the friction on 20+ feet of log grinding along deep forest litter with a million stumps, branches, and uneven ground to catch on. They don't slide downhill at all, they just pull easier. Anytime you stop the horse even on steep downgrades the butt of the log digs in. When the horse pulls, the tension and higher attachment point raise the butt of the log just a bit which allows it to move. My family has continuously used skid horses for over 100 years in upstate NY. I started at 12 so I've only been doing it for 30 years myself
God it’s amazing the things animals will do for us, gorgeous horses 💕 I loved when the horse tripped the man stopped the horse and removed the log the horse tripped on to prevent the horse from hurting himself, clearly these people love their horse 😊
The only discussion we can have here is why one of these horses is being docked. That's illegal since 2001. But they look fine and working is good for them. And they like it.
also, the good thing about this kind of work rather than machinery is that its so selective. If you wanted to bring a tree cutter machine in there, you would have to clear every tree in the way to get to the one you wanted., if you say "well just use a chainsaw and a truck then", they prolly used a chainsaw, and you'd need to cut every tree in the way to get to the one you just cut down to pull it out with your tractor or truck . this way, you can select a tree, leave all the other ones intact, cut the tree, and pull it out, no real damage done to the rest of the wood, and the forest can live on. why do you think clear cutting is so popular these days? you want a tree, its easier to just cut them all down rather than try and weave a big heavy machine through, meanwhile these horses can pull these logs out and leave all the little ones to grow, and navigate paths as small as dirt bike trails, its just a good thing, and I really wish all logging had to be done this way, maybe wed still have forests around if it it was, but no, sadly people would rather just cut the whole wood down just to get at 2 or three trees because then its less work, and their machine can now fit
Partly true. I'm a skidder operator in the woods of Northwestern CA and yes we do clear alot of trees out of the way to make a skid trails in selective cutting areas. But I know from lots of experience that usually skid trails are cut to where you are mostly taking the trees that are going to be cut anyway and strategically placing the trail accordingly, thereby avoiding cutting trees that are designated as "leave" trees. Sometimes we do take trees that were intended to be leave trees if absolutely necessary, but that usually stays at an absolute minimum due to strict regulations, contract specifications etc. Most loggers I know don't really like clearcuts for obvious reasons, but you are right that it makes our job of moving logs far easier. But most of the work I have ever done is selective logging. Here in parts of Northern CA, landowners can be really picky about skinned up trees and minimizing damage to "leave" trees as much as possible. I've heard of guys getting fired for skinning up too many trees and driving through groves of small trees, etc. Where I'm at now they aren't so picky, but believe me they don't want us going out there and just tearing up the woods, they don't let you do that anymore. With all that said, it really isn't a problem navigating through the forest once you have experience cutting and skidding. That teaches you how to plan skid trail layout and then you can go into a given area and assess it briefly and plan accordingly. But I am not discrediting what you said at all, just pointing some things out I know from experience.
@First Impression Actually, they are. The tails look trimmed, not docked. Neither one was overloaded. They were given a break at the end with a feed bag. And aside from the one tripping onto its knees, they were incredibly sure-footed; trained that way through lots of patience.
Julius Caesar used to have these horses for his equestrian cavalrymen. Then by time Romans in the Eastern/Western roman empires used them for the clibanarii and later byzantine cataphracts.
Those horses like pulling u can tell by there body language and the fact that thhe drivers are allways having to stop them . They were. Happy doing their job
To bardzo silne stworzenia. Widać, że właściciele potrafia się obchodić. Większość ludzi w momecie kiedy koń pociągowy się potknie, biczuje. A tutaj pomagają.
Lilly Dragon oh yeah people generally use horses to get into and work in places inaccessible to machinery and/or vehicles. Plus they’re great for the environment they damage the land far less.
Dangerous work for man and horse; the logs could slide out of control. Massive objects moving out of control a common cause of injury or death among men in outdoor occupations.
Both these horses are magnificent and neither is asked to pull anywhere near capacity. I do beleive each really enjoys the work. I see where in contests such animals have to lug massive weight, but here in the real World that's not so. However, why is it the "drivers" do not take the logs ahead, first so the horses don't have to walk on the slope to pull logs past the pile. Also, why is it the logs are left in full lenghts. Would it not be more efficient to half them and ask the horse to drag two or three shorter sticks.Where I come from this is standard practice.
I can't believe that magnificent horse can walk over those logs. He is so smart. Thank you for posting.
Drafts love to work. Ppl need to remember these are HUGE horses. Do you really want an animal this big loose, bored and trying to burn energy?! Think about it. They were bred to work and they love it! See how well the horse responds to his handler? This is a well connected team. He wouldn’t do this if he were being abused.
I admire how a 160 pound man is controlling a 1200 pound horse with a rope that wouldn't hold a dog. Well cared for horses being kept healthy with hard work that doesn't over work them. :)
Yeah.. the horses and all the animals in the wild are just wasting their time, are bored, loose, trying to burn their energy in vain instead of getting a real job.
@@michaelmayfield4304 You do 14hours shifts in gold mines in South Africa, right?
@@michaldevetsedm1882 you missed the point of my comment. What would you have these horses do?
@@michaelmayfield4304 agree. The guy’s an idiot
We tend to be amazed when dressage horses do incredible things under the rider, but this special relationship between man and work horse is equally admirable. These horses are so smart and strong and look like they love to work. I am in awe.
Had the pleasure of coming across a team of these working in the Ardennes. Felt like I was transported back in time.
These big beautiful drafties are so agile. I didn't thing they could climb that easy and walk over a pile of logs without tripping.. Beautiful, gentle creatures.
This is so awesome to watch!! Gorgeous horse in a beautiful setting. That horse is perfect for this job, as he can climb up and down that hill so gracefully and yet with such strength
my grandpa raised and trained horses. His pride and joy was Dick, Dan, and Dolly, beautiful Belgiums. They live for the work. They live for the pull. When I once worked at a desk job, I looked forward to going home and relaxing with a bit of physical work because my sleep was much more restful after a good physical stretch. These animals love what they were bred for! I love to watch them, they are actually thinking what's next when their lead is telling them to hem, haw, whoa, up.....awesome.
I was amazed to see that horse calmly crawl over a pile of logs. I've seen horses sacked out to walking over "teeter-totter" bridges so they don't get freaked out about encountering unstable footing. But a flat bridge is not going to shift the way a pile of logs can (I grew up in logging country in north Idaho). So impressive 😊👍🐴. Hats off to these horses and their human partners. Very cool. I wish we had more horse loggers around here.
They doing any hiring out that way I could use a change of scenery ???/... Patriot Perry ...
It's incredible how fearless these horses are. And how well the people communicate with them during work!
I love seeing a Draft horse put to work doing the job they were bred to do and yes, they love to work. It's far better than seeing them put out to pasture bored out of their minds. These work horses are an investment for farmers, loggers etc and as such they are cared for better than the owners themselves. Watching these guys and girls work is an amazing thing. So powerful, yet such gentle babies.
+Kelly Widrick Yea because you see so many wild horses loading up heavy objects and dragging them around. So I guess the horse should thank them for making them do this. In the wild guess what horses do, they walk around, eat, occasionally run and males herd up and try and keep their females together while keep other stallions away which is a males main activity. With females raising young as theirs. Yes those horses have been bred over time to work like that for man but that doesn't automatically mean they like doing it. It means their ancestors were singled out to be bred because they were a little stronger and/or bigger than most others and doing that each generation has led to the horse you see. Being bred to do something does not mean you like doing it.
+jamesonsix19 12345678900987654321qwertyuiopåasdghjklöäzxcvbnm,.!?+×÷=%_€£¥₩@#$/^&*()-'":;!?,.`~\|{}[]▪○●□■☆★♡♥°•◇◆¤《》¡¿TJGHKVR
+jamesonsix19 these horses are domesticated. Dogs are domesticated too and dogs love to do the job they are bred to do. You clearly know jack shit about horses and animals.
+jamesonsix19 // You watch too much TV.
Industrial machinery may have taken over most of the world, but there are still some areas--like this forest-- where industrial machinery can't go. Draft horses may not be as widely implemented as they used to be, but I don't think their original purpose will ever truly disappear =) Love draft horses so much, thanks for sharing, and without stupid music to accompany it! Just the sound of cloppity hooves and horse snorts.
Those horses look well cared for. You can see it in their posture and coat.
It’s really cool to see these horses work. They’re well cared for and they obviously enjoy their work. The lighter horse in particular he strikes me as the type that meets his handlers at the gate!
Nice to see horses doing the jobs they were originally bred for.
S J James people are just lazy tho 😑
@@AsmrxRaven Too lazy to pick up trees.
@@jerredlong1023 Never saw a horse close by?
Magnificent and powerful horses! It seems that they enjoy their work. Their owner is very good. He whistles and speak to the horses instead of hitting them.
what a great video. thanks, I have a real appreciation for these horses now...so smart and so incredibly strong. They really seem to know and like their job, also.
Beautiful, gentle, and strong!
My father used to log with horses in the mountains in Alberta. What a joy to see how it was done.
Great teamwork in what looks like hilly and tough terrain. I love these horses.
The trust that animal has to walk across a log deck. That’s something right there. Beautiful work guys. Only done it some with my grandpa when I was a kid.
Stunning horse and great partnership! :D
That horse walked over those logs like they weren't even there! What a majestic steed!
A joy to watch these wonderful horses working. And you can tell that they love it!
The lighter one is just *so beautiful*
These horses are gorgeous! They definitely have great communication.
the horses ears are up when he pulls, and his head is held high, which means he is in a good mood. so I think he is happy to do this work. which clearly means this is not abusive.
+alexis hawkhand Yes, the horse looks fine. But ears aren't the only indicator, it's called body language for a reason. Ears are mostly an indicator of the direction of focus, not always mood.
TurkeyBurglar Jones obviously
alexis hawkhand Then why did you comment that?
+alexis hawkhand Had to chuckle as the word I kept hearing the most from these loggers was "Whoa!Whoa!" so yeah, I'd think the horses were doing fine. :D
I grew up around horses and I know horse body language. These are happy, confident horses and this was a great video.
3:25 Hehe 😆😚💗
I can't stop replaying this part, what a cutie !!!! x3
The bay roan is like: "Whadday mean, 'whoa?' I'm a dray horse; let me dray already!" XD
This is awesome!! Thank you for posting.
The commands are still based on old Dutch (flemish) words. Even in the french speaking part of Belgium they use the same words. (They don’t réalisé it’s flemish). I was told that they can command each leg separatly. Very intelligent horses.
Yes they understand both languages. Granddad had 6 of them in Belgium. He would whistle and the leader would go back to the barn and all the rest of them would follow. They liked to frolic out in the field . Very good natured and gentle.
They still use draft horses in the forest, because the animals do not destroy the soil like tractors would. BTW, the horses can reach places where a tractor simple has no access. Watching these horses makes me proud to be Belgian.
My god that horse is a monster he's built like a tank
Thank the ALMIGHTY for the gift of these magnificent animals.
Wow! Bulldozers in the flesh. Thanks for demonstrating the old school way to get things done.
This is the most beautiful video of horse logging !
Magnifique le travail avec les chevaux et si on pouvait y revenir plus ce serait parfait 👍
very nice video ,,you never over loaded them ,like a lot of other people do ,,good job
Beautiful sweet beasts of burden. Give them lots of love from me.
what a beautiful looking horse.
Wow! They really are sure-footed. I am amazed. Also at how well they work as a team with their human. It seems to me that some of the logs could easily slide down and hit the horse from behind. How is this handled/prevented? Beautiful horses!
Prachtig om naar te kijken!
Wow, they're so much more atheletic than I thought. Incredible and great at problem solving. I'm sure the work has it's hazards, but these guys make me feel so clumbsy, lol.
Amazing video, thanks for sharing your fantastic work horses. Quite impressed I gotta say.
Merci
In the '50s in northern On we had horses pulling logs by themselves. They would go to thelanding alone, get unhooked, turn around and go for another. They knew when it was lunch time and also going home time.
I remember seeing one these in person for the first time driving through the Ardennes country side and looking at the guy next to me .... "you see the size of that freak'n horse ?!?!"
This is so peaceful and so very different from logging with machines.
I like the fact that they have treats in their mouths
Great video from mountain and amazingly strong horses ..thx for installation this video . greetings from Canada!😉 😊 😋 😎
Amazing animals and clearly well taken care of.
Stunning horses, beautiful video.
Ils ont été élevés dans le respect et avec beaucoup d'attention. Merci
Incredible proprioception ... I've never seen a horse walk across a pile of logs like that!
great video beautiful horses so well trained thanks a lot bro that's awesome
kept strong and healthy from bit work,,, and well fed and looked after,,, grand ol system
When I think of my Poppa Ivy L. Steward, I remember he farmed with two Big Workhorses until about 1947 near Paoli, Oklahoma. He and they worked hard and were Strong.
Telling a draft horse not to pull is like telling a viszla or greyhound or whippet not to run, this is what they are bred for. the guy isnt putting on more weight than one horse can safely handle (that i have a problem with) hes not pushing it to pull more and more weight until it breaks something and has to be put down, hes using it for exactly what its name suggests, DRAFT, which is defined as the act of pulling a load. the time the horse slipped, he stopped the horse and moved the obstruction while looking at the legs to make sure they were not obviously damaged, then carried on. I do have to ask though (simply out of curiosity, not criticism) are there no brakes added on the logs somehow? i know with sled dogs the cart has brakes so should it start to fall faster than the dogs can run down a hill, it doesn't crash into the dogs, I was just wondering how that is achieved with the logs, so that you don´t have a log fly forward going down a hill and snap the horses tendons, is it a way you tie the rope or something so that it digs in rather than falls, or do you just rely on it not slipping?
The log is the brake. Think of the friction on 20+ feet of log grinding along deep forest litter with a million stumps, branches, and uneven ground to catch on. They don't slide downhill at all, they just pull easier. Anytime you stop the horse even on steep downgrades the butt of the log digs in. When the horse pulls, the tension and higher attachment point raise the butt of the log just a bit which allows it to move. My family has continuously used skid horses for over 100 years in upstate NY. I started at 12 so I've only been doing it for 30 years myself
Y. L
L.
I was wondering about that too. You stated the question much better than I could have. Thanks!
Fine horses and good horsemanship.
Amazing, lovely horses
WOW!!! WOW !!!! well done man that is phenomenal !!
Gardeners Beehive The big fly in parejeptica
God it’s amazing the things animals will do for us, gorgeous horses 💕 I loved when the horse tripped the man stopped the horse and removed the log the horse tripped on to prevent the horse from hurting himself, clearly these people love their horse 😊
I bet the horse is happy to go downhill sometimes :D log is moving almost by itself, a little lighter to pull!
Awesome video... Thanks
Powerful animals. Hard work whether you're using horses or machines. A good honest living.
my neighbor still logs with draft horses. They are Suffolks. (Appalachian Mountains of NC).
Brings back memories of my childhood
it's incredible how strong those workhorses are
The only discussion we can have here is why one of these horses is being docked. That's illegal since 2001. But they look fine and working is good for them. And they like it.
What is docked?
@@iloveamerica8541 the tail being cut off usually by a vet but in some countries it can be done by the breeder
also, the good thing about this kind of work rather than machinery is that its so selective. If you wanted to bring a tree cutter machine in there, you would have to clear every tree in the way to get to the one you wanted., if you say "well just use a chainsaw and a truck then", they prolly used a chainsaw, and you'd need to cut every tree in the way to get to the one you just cut down to pull it out with your tractor or truck . this way, you can select a tree, leave all the other ones intact, cut the tree, and pull it out, no real damage done to the rest of the wood, and the forest can live on. why do you think clear cutting is so popular these days? you want a tree, its easier to just cut them all down rather than try and weave a big heavy machine through, meanwhile these horses can pull these logs out and leave all the little ones to grow, and navigate paths as small as dirt bike trails, its just a good thing, and I really wish all logging had to be done this way, maybe wed still have forests around if it it was, but no, sadly people would rather just cut the whole wood down just to get at 2 or three trees because then its less work, and their machine can now fit
Partly true. I'm a skidder operator in the woods of Northwestern CA and yes we do clear alot of trees out of the way to make a skid trails in selective cutting areas. But I know from lots of experience that usually skid trails are cut to where you are mostly taking the trees that are going to be cut anyway and strategically placing the trail accordingly, thereby avoiding cutting trees that are designated as "leave" trees. Sometimes we do take trees that were intended to be leave trees if absolutely necessary, but that usually stays at an absolute minimum due to strict regulations, contract specifications etc.
Most loggers I know don't really like clearcuts for obvious reasons, but you are right that it makes our job of moving logs far easier. But most of the work I have ever done is selective logging. Here in parts of Northern CA, landowners can be really picky about skinned up trees and minimizing damage to "leave" trees as much as possible. I've heard of guys getting fired for skinning up too many trees and driving through groves of small trees, etc. Where I'm at now they aren't so picky, but believe me they don't want us going out there and just tearing up the woods, they don't let you do that anymore. With all that said, it really isn't a problem navigating through the forest once you have experience cutting and skidding. That teaches you how to plan skid trail layout and then you can go into a given area and assess it briefly and plan accordingly. But I am not discrediting what you said at all, just pointing some things out I know from experience.
Super sorozatok,a leg kedvesebb állatfaj,vègsökig nèzem !
One word: Awesome
Magnificent animals
Well trained, well taken care of - well loved.
@First Impression Actually, they are. The tails look trimmed, not docked. Neither one was overloaded. They were given a break at the end with a feed bag. And aside from the one tripping onto its knees, they were incredibly sure-footed; trained that way through lots of patience.
Beautiful 👍🏻😊
What wonderful animals.
A lost way of life. Thank you.
Julius Caesar used to have these horses for his equestrian cavalrymen. Then by time Romans in the Eastern/Western roman empires used them for the clibanarii and later byzantine cataphracts.
Thanks for the interesting info ^_^
@@DatDapperBoi iDHLdo
what a beautiful animal!
Those horses like pulling u can tell by there body language and the fact that thhe drivers are allways having to stop them . They were. Happy doing their job
I asked a horse one time do you want some oats? He raised his tail and said a feeeeeeeew😆
Lovely to watch
amazing and beautiful, to me it looks like harmony 'at work';))
I used to do this worked for horse n harness logging n southern Oregon hard work falling tree's n yarding them with a horse
Just like work hard and put back up til ready to use and never hear thank u. But always ready 4 what ever . Strong at heart and mind and strighent
Hard working horses, I just hope those logs don't hit them on the back legs as they pulling them down the banks ....
That tree at 3:40 went on forever.
Умные животные таких и в цирке не всегда найдется,хазяива молотцы.Взаимо доверенность на высшем уровне .
Что за страна,не подскажите.
Stupendi questi cavalli....
To bardzo silne stworzenia. Widać, że właściciele potrafia się obchodić. Większość ludzi w momecie kiedy koń pociągowy się potknie, biczuje. A tutaj pomagają.
Le respect de l'animal est la clef de la réussite. Merci pour votre compliment
they make a great team
Hola Mi Amigo!! Dónde es ? Muy buenos caballos!!!
een prachtige traditie die jamerlijk steeds meer in de vergetelheid zinkt
I didn't know horses could crawl over a pile of logs like that!
Lilly Dragon oh yeah people generally use horses to get into and work in places inaccessible to machinery and/or vehicles. Plus they’re great for the environment they damage the land far less.
They can drop some about same size too😂
les meilleurs chevaux de trait Napoléon le savait déja .......
Very impressive giants.
beautiful creatures...
and here I hired a big trailer like a sucker 😂
Dangerous work for man and horse; the logs could slide out of control. Massive objects moving out of control a common cause of injury or death among men in outdoor occupations.
In some Asian countries used elephants doing these works, I do not know horses also working in this field. Thanks.
Both these horses are magnificent and neither is asked to pull anywhere near capacity. I do beleive each really enjoys the work. I see where in contests such animals have to lug massive weight, but here in the real World that's not so.
However, why is it the "drivers" do not take the logs ahead, first so the horses don't have to walk on the slope to pull logs past the pile. Also, why is it the logs are left in full lenghts. Would it not be more efficient to half them and ask the horse to drag two or three shorter sticks.Where I come from this is standard practice.
Very interesting!