Native America people have forgotten and it is for me the first and the best people who know befalls with nothing and now we have everything so you do not know befalls a lot like them and with them alone, their music is naturally beautiful and rating of video and music the 10.thank 's
While it may be true that the Spanish 'reintroduced' horses to the native American Indian, their level of 'horsemanship' far exceeded any of those who 'brought them.' And do to this day. While Dressage and other forms of present day 'horsemanship fumble mechanically, there can be no denying the spiritual oneness shared by NA and the Horse. When the stallion and I ride bareback/no tack, I can feel the 'Old Ones' nodding in approval from up above. Good video! Ten thumbs up!
Technically, mustangs aren't wild - they're feral. And they are all descendants of horses owned by the Spanish, the settlers, or the Native Americans. Native Americans did adapt to equestrian life very quickly, and the Great Plains tribes in particular developed a horse culture beyond compare.
gawani ponyboy is the best there is.i used his methods to break in some neglected ponys i fostered from a breeding farm. he has a complete understanding of the human/animal relationship and no other method i ve seen compares to what i read in "horse,follow closely". native american horsemanship is such an art.
hiya well now for the life of me i cant remember the name of the track as iv got hundreds of Native American tunes songs on my computer but il have a look on my computer later on, it can take ages though to play each one to find it so bare with me.
FOR Natives IPL USA,, we have shared your 20 Music Compilations, from 11 years ago Till Today,, GOOD of You HELEN, 🎁🎅🏻🎄Welcome, everybody to the 25th day of our 25 days of Christmas giveaways🎁🎅🏻🎄ZWARTE Piet in nederland,has Become Chimney Piet,Happy BirthDay to you....from 2020, Adios Zwarte Piet,
hi bought photos long time ago im sure there is a lot online to only problem i had with my photos was it didnt say which tribe they were from i kinda know now what belongs to what, but sometimes still get it wrong tho i do try and check online first.
i think it was Navajo but im not sure id have to check again as i said in anothervideo i realy should put the names of the song to the vids as i forget iv so many songs on my computer but was def NA traditional and new brought together, well traditional as in the singing.i think it twas Native American collection CDs
actualy North America was the original home of the horse species they evolved there, and thrived there for over 57 million years,About 8,000 - 10,000 years ago they are believed to have become extinct in the land of their origin, although luckily by that time they had migrated to Asia, where they spread into Europe and North Africa. then of course the spanish took them over, but folks they began in America
Asi es todos mis hermanos d sangre d todas las tribus son los legitimos dueños d todas las reservas d todo estados unidos y seguimos respetanto las leyes d nuestros ancestros tanto en la caza pezca para comer y en cuidar. Los rios lagos llanuras montañas y todo lo q manitu nos brinda para poder sobre vivir en nuestros valles y montañas asi seguimos cuidando la naturaleza conservando nuestras tradiciones leyes y conservamos nuestras familias d cualquier tribu no inmporta cual sea ho d q estado estamos comprometidos a luchar para conservar lo nuestro toda la naturaleza y nuestra raza pieles rojas mis grandes hermanos y mi gran artista Leo Rojas
The “Indian” story of America’s past is only the start of the story of the Indian past. Some knowledgable people believe vast civilizations inhabited the Americas tens of thousands of years ago (or more) of which the Indian was the last remnant of that mysterious disappearance.
ok that was sheer luck, well actualy no such thing as luck but out of all my hundreds of tracks i just sat and thought ok i know these guys voices and it came to me who they were so hear look this up probably find it on Amazon Brule -spirit horses if you cant find it let me know
Horse Nations: The Worldwide Impact of the Horse on Indigenous Societies Post-1492 by Peter Mitchell, published by Oxford. Your brother may have been confused by the article he found online or perhaps the article was incorrect or purposefully misleading. He was right in a way; there were horses in the Americas before Columbus. But WAY before Columbus...as in 40 million or more years before. North America was probably the home of the equus genus, which held scores of species and subspecies of horses that changed and merged over time or went extinct. They then migrated to central Asia where a few of them were domesticated. I’m not a biologist or a paleontologist, so I can’t trace the evolution of the various equine groups much beyond this. If you are, feel free to correct me. However, as other users have said, horses in the Americas died out at the end of the last ice age. The last known evidence of native horses was found in North America around 7600 years ago in Alaska. In South America, native horses went extinct a little bit later but probably for similar reasons. It is a well established fact that this occurred, yet the reasons for the extinction are debated among scholars. Some posit that it was due to over-hunting by the first peoples in the Americas. There is evidence in both North and South America that horses were hunted by early peoples, but they did not seem to be their favored prey. Mitchell argues that extinction was most likely due to significant climate change that started well before the earliest arrival of humans and adversely affected the dry grasses that American horses and other mega-fauna consumed. This in turn may have sparked the die off of 35 large animals in the Americas as ecosystems were disrupted and humans encroached. So for thousands of years, there simply were not horses in the Americas. In fact, there are only a few domesticated animals in the Americas at all (e.g. dogs, guinea pigs, llamas, and alpacas). Europeans brought horses back to the Americas, and horses became one of the most famous “exchanges” of the Columbian Exchange. How do we know? Aside from the overwhelming fossil record mentioned above and by other users, horses proved crucial for Spanish conquistadores to topple the mighty indigenous societies that they encountered after 1492. The surprise and terror that these creatures instilled in early indigenous groups is well documented in Spanish chronicles, challenging any assertion that there were still horses around. As for your brother’s argument that there were too many wild horses for them to be feral, this same argument was repeated by Spaniards 400 years ago. Horses and cattle alike took to many of the environments in the Americas quickly, as it was once their home and they mostly lacked natural predators. Horses multiplied at a staggering rate in North, Central, and South America. Alfred Crosby, probably the most famous historian on environmental change brought about by the contact, estimated that the population of feral horses in Querétaro alone had grown to 10,000 horses in a decade, while wild cattle had a doubling rate of 15 years after 1550 in Mexico. On the Pampas, the area that I study, there were so many wild (actually feral) horses by the 18th century that many Spaniards thought them native to the Río de la Plata. The Pampas were “covered with escaped mares and horses in such numbers that they look like woods from a distance” according to one traveler. Indigenous groups all over the Americas recognized the horse for its value as both a foodstuff and a domesticate. Many societies learned to ride and use horses, which irrevocably altered lifeways all over the Americas. Famously, you see North American indigenous groups like the Dakota and the Apache becoming the quintessential image of “Native Americans” in popular culture while riding horses. In the Southern Cone, the adoption of the horse allowed indigenous groups like the Mapuche in Chile to transition from a predominantly settled agricultural group to one of the fiercest resisters of Spanish expansion. The group managed to remain independent in Patagonia until the 1880s and even spilled across the Andes, leading to a gradual process of araucanization on the Pampas. They mixed and eventually assimilated other indigenous groups, and they even raided within 30 miles of Buenos Aires according the Francis Bond Head in his travel journal from the 1810s.
While it may be true that the Spanish 'reintroduced' horses to the native American Indian, their level of 'horsemanship' far exceeded any of those who 'brought them.' And do to this day. While Dressage and other forms of present day 'horsemanship' fumble mechanically, there can be no denying the spiritual oneness shared by NA Indian and the Horse. When the stallion and I ride bareback/no tack, I get the feeling that the 'Old Ones,' are nodding in approval from above. But that's just me,,,,
ان دستور الثار والانتقام الذي ارخه المهدي المنتظر المنتقم العام والقائد الاعلى للعالم اخر الرسل و سر القران الح على ضرورة حكومته في امريكا وكندا جل المناصب العليا للهنود الحمر حقيقة غير. عليهم تعلم اللغة العربية ورفعت الجلسة ليس لدينا وقت علما الان العالم العربي في غرق النوم والحلم
Thank you, Helen. I very much enjoy your uploads!
Great video, amazing pictures and beautiful music. Thank you Helen!
really cool video !! awesome pictures !!
Thank you
Bonjour,
Je vénère ce peuple si puissant, une mélodie sublime. 🙏🙏
Merci infiniment pour ce magnifique partage.
Toutes mon amitié.
Elisabeth.
Native America people have forgotten and it is for me the first and the best people who know befalls with nothing and now we have everything so you do not know befalls a lot like them and with them alone, their music is naturally beautiful and rating of video and music the 10.thank 's
While it may be true that the Spanish 'reintroduced' horses to the native American Indian, their level of 'horsemanship' far exceeded any of those who 'brought them.' And do to this day. While Dressage and other forms of present day 'horsemanship fumble mechanically, there can be no denying the spiritual oneness shared by NA and the Horse.
When the stallion and I ride bareback/no tack, I can feel the 'Old Ones' nodding in approval from up above.
Good video! Ten thumbs up!
If only you knew how I love and respect your beautiful people,God bless the American Red Indian
Grazie per queste belle foto
nice video great horsemen and best riders ever love native american indians 😊😊😊xx
Very nice thank you 😊
I love this site, thanks!
Much, much, much respect for the Indian!
Od młodych lat słucham Waszych pieśni. Kocham ten rytm i pieśń.Najpiekniejsze pieśni które sa w moim sercu to Indiane.Wszystkiego dobrego Wam życzę
Me encantaaaa!
Great Video-peoples of honor and wisdom!
well they have not been forgotten by me here in Scotland and im sure i speak for a lot of people this side of the world,
And we thank you
Technically, mustangs aren't wild - they're feral. And they are all descendants of horses owned by the Spanish, the settlers, or the Native Americans. Native Americans did adapt to equestrian life very quickly, and the Great Plains tribes in particular developed a horse culture beyond compare.
thank's for this video!!!!! vary specialy
ich schäme mich heute noch für meine Vorfahren, was sie diesen stolzen und anmutigen Leuten antaten !
gawani ponyboy is the best there is.i used his methods to break in some neglected ponys i fostered from a breeding farm. he has a complete understanding of the human/animal relationship and no other method i ve seen compares to what i read in "horse,follow closely". native american horsemanship is such an art.
j'aime cette vidéo et cette musique 💖💕💕
hiya well now for the life of me i cant remember the name of the track as iv got hundreds of Native American tunes songs on my computer but il have a look on my computer later on, it can take ages though to play each one to find it so bare with me.
FOR Natives IPL USA,, we have shared your 20 Music Compilations, from 11 years ago Till Today,, GOOD of You HELEN, 🎁🎅🏻🎄Welcome, everybody to the 25th day of our 25 days of Christmas giveaways🎁🎅🏻🎄ZWARTE Piet in nederland,has Become Chimney Piet,Happy BirthDay to you....from 2020, Adios Zwarte Piet,
I love music
And people ask me why I ride wild mustangs!
.красивое!!! видио!!! и музыка!!! автор молодец!!!
Vraiment très beau
Thank You very much
hi bought photos long time ago im sure there is a lot online to only problem i had with my photos was it didnt say which tribe they were from i kinda know now what belongs to what, but sometimes still get it wrong tho i do try and check online first.
This is a great video! Who played the music? Do they have a group/CD's available?
Stile di vita 💗💞💓
Very nice.
обсалютно!!!, согласна с названием видио!!!
I love native Americans.
how can I find this track to buy
where did the horses come from?
i think it was Navajo but im not sure id have to check again as i said in anothervideo i realy should put the names of the song to the vids as i forget iv so many songs on my computer but was def NA traditional and new brought together, well traditional as in the singing.i think it twas Native American collection CDs
We Shall Remain
bonita melodía
los verdaderos habitantes de america.esto es la sombra de lo q alguna vez existio.y ya no volvera
actualy North America was the original home of the horse species they evolved there, and thrived there for over 57 million years,About 8,000 - 10,000 years ago they are believed to have become extinct in the land of their origin, although luckily by that time they had migrated to Asia, where they spread into Europe and North Africa. then of course the spanish took them over, but folks they began in America
I believe u my elders say the same
pjekne przepjekne dobranoc! 😇 🙏 💔
Asi es todos mis hermanos d sangre d todas las tribus son los legitimos dueños d todas las reservas d todo estados unidos y seguimos respetanto las leyes d nuestros ancestros tanto en la caza pezca para comer y en cuidar. Los rios lagos llanuras montañas y todo lo q manitu nos brinda para poder sobre vivir en nuestros valles y montañas asi seguimos cuidando la naturaleza conservando nuestras tradiciones leyes y conservamos nuestras familias d cualquier tribu no inmporta cual sea ho d q estado estamos comprometidos a luchar para conservar lo nuestro toda la naturaleza y nuestra raza pieles rojas mis grandes hermanos y mi gran artista Leo Rojas
Tempos bons
Wah-Zha-Zhi ^^^^ :)
The “Indian” story of America’s past is only the start of the story of the Indian past. Some knowledgable people believe vast civilizations inhabited the Americas tens of thousands of years ago (or more) of which the Indian was the last remnant of that mysterious disappearance.
ok that was sheer luck, well actualy no such thing as luck but out of all my hundreds of tracks i just sat and thought ok i know these guys voices and it came to me who they were so hear look this up probably find it on Amazon
Brule -spirit horses
if you cant find it let me know
We comanche were #1 in horsemanship.
I have heard that the Comanche were the best horsemen, equal to the Mongols...
Agreed !!!
COMANCHE/ CHOCTAW
@HeartofEquus then what you feel is real they are nodding in approval :)
Sorry for the 'double comment.'
Horse Nations: The Worldwide Impact of the Horse on Indigenous Societies Post-1492 by Peter Mitchell, published by Oxford. Your brother may have been confused by the article he found online or perhaps the article was incorrect or purposefully misleading. He was right in a way; there were horses in the Americas before Columbus. But WAY before Columbus...as in 40 million or more years before. North America was probably the home of the equus genus, which held scores of species and subspecies of horses that changed and merged over time or went extinct. They then migrated to central Asia where a few of them were domesticated. I’m not a biologist or a paleontologist, so I can’t trace the evolution of the various equine groups much beyond this. If you are, feel free to correct me.
However, as other users have said, horses in the Americas died out at the end of the last ice age. The last known evidence of native horses was found in North America around 7600 years ago in Alaska. In South America, native horses went extinct a little bit later but probably for similar reasons. It is a well established fact that this occurred, yet the reasons for the extinction are debated among scholars. Some posit that it was due to over-hunting by the first peoples in the Americas. There is evidence in both North and South America that horses were hunted by early peoples, but they did not seem to be their favored prey. Mitchell argues that extinction was most likely due to significant climate change that started well before the earliest arrival of humans and adversely affected the dry grasses that American horses and other mega-fauna consumed. This in turn may have sparked the die off of 35 large animals in the Americas as ecosystems were disrupted and humans encroached. So for thousands of years, there simply were not horses in the Americas. In fact, there are only a few domesticated animals in the Americas at all (e.g. dogs, guinea pigs, llamas, and alpacas).
Europeans brought horses back to the Americas, and horses became one of the most famous “exchanges” of the Columbian Exchange. How do we know? Aside from the overwhelming fossil record mentioned above and by other users, horses proved crucial for Spanish conquistadores to topple the mighty indigenous societies that they encountered after 1492. The surprise and terror that these creatures instilled in early indigenous groups is well documented in Spanish chronicles, challenging any assertion that there were still horses around. As for your brother’s argument that there were too many wild horses for them to be feral, this same argument was repeated by Spaniards 400 years ago. Horses and cattle alike took to many of the environments in the Americas quickly, as it was once their home and they mostly lacked natural predators. Horses multiplied at a staggering rate in North, Central, and South America. Alfred Crosby, probably the most famous historian on environmental change brought about by the contact, estimated that the population of feral horses in Querétaro alone had grown to 10,000 horses in a decade, while wild cattle had a doubling rate of 15 years after 1550 in Mexico. On the Pampas, the area that I study, there were so many wild (actually feral) horses by the 18th century that many Spaniards thought them native to the Río de la Plata. The Pampas were “covered with escaped mares and horses in such numbers that they look like woods from a distance” according to one traveler.
Indigenous groups all over the Americas recognized the horse for its value as both a foodstuff and a domesticate. Many societies learned to ride and use horses, which irrevocably altered lifeways all over the Americas. Famously, you see North American indigenous groups like the Dakota and the Apache becoming the quintessential image of “Native Americans” in popular culture while riding horses. In the Southern Cone, the adoption of the horse allowed indigenous groups like the Mapuche in Chile to transition from a predominantly settled agricultural group to one of the fiercest resisters of Spanish expansion. The group managed to remain independent in Patagonia until the 1880s and even spilled across the Andes, leading to a gradual process of araucanization on the Pampas. They mixed and eventually assimilated other indigenous groups, and they even raided within 30 miles of Buenos Aires according the Francis Bond Head in his travel journal from the 1810s.
While it may be true that the Spanish 'reintroduced' horses to the native American Indian, their level of 'horsemanship' far exceeded any of those who 'brought them.' And do to this day. While Dressage and other forms of present day 'horsemanship' fumble mechanically, there can be no denying the spiritual oneness shared by NA Indian and the Horse.
When the stallion and I ride bareback/no tack, I get the feeling that the 'Old Ones,' are nodding in approval from above. But that's just me,,,,
Sahrawi histoire 1976 Le Sahara occidental capital de le monde car le dernier gouvernement du mahdi el montader c'est logique pour information
i znowu pytam jak Europejczycy/katolicy/mogli zniszczyc tak wspanialy kraj i Narod
Wrong Native American Indians always had the horse before the Spanish, the horse survived the last ice age in North America.
ان دستور الثار والانتقام الذي ارخه المهدي المنتظر المنتقم العام والقائد الاعلى للعالم اخر الرسل و سر القران الح على ضرورة حكومته في امريكا وكندا جل المناصب العليا للهنود الحمر حقيقة غير. عليهم تعلم اللغة العربية ورفعت الجلسة ليس لدينا وقت علما الان العالم العربي في غرق النوم والحلم
It makes me sick