Horses tend to nod their heads when they're excited or energised (feeding time, about to go out for a run, stimulation when they're bored, etc). So it's quite likely the horse is actually enjoying the music and being excited by it, especially how he stops rocking the moment the music stops.
Well may because this guy is a real native indian and for then that's no joke matter its about spiritualism and understand souls of every been on heart
Its theorized that Humans have a certain affinity to certain beats due to it reminding them of their own heartbeat or the hesrtbeat of their mother. I wonder if theres a biological reason why this horse is vibing so hard
@@shawnsodano2835 some love to think they have life all figured out and they have God in their back pocket. There's so much more going on than we'd been led to believe. Thank you.
@@ksenomorf333 It most likely triggers neurotransmitters in the brain that respond to the temple and the melodies of certain music which is why we didn’t have favorite songs or what not this is a universal trait in most complex creatures
@@cappystrano1 Vibrations, yes. But this applies to all beings, not just horses being sensitive to pressure changes. Hit the right frequency and you'll get a reaction out of anything.
Not just the horse, I love the Native American flute too. The sound is so indescribable, it takes me back in time and makes me mesmerized of the good ol’ days. It’s so beautiful.
Same here; I've got some CDs of various artists, some of whom are local & whom I got to meet & talk with at various local arts & crafts fairs. I love the music & can personal attest to its value for meditation or just plain relaxation.
@Elliot Ward Sure; here they are: One is from the "Lifescapes" label, titled, "Meditations: Native American Flute," accompanied by violin, guitar & percussion. The album is produced by John August (not sure if he's also the artist or not.) Another is released by EarthBeat! Records and titled, "Tribal Winds: Music from Native American Flutes," featuring artists from several tribes, including Cheyenne, Comanche, Ute, Navajo, Zuni, Lakota, Dakota, Kiowa, Apache, Mandan and Algonkian. And lastly there's "Raven's Song," by William Gutierrez (who also sells hand-crafted flutes.) This album was produced by Millard Clark. I had the opportunity to meet & speak with Mr. Gutierrez at the arts & wine faire where I purchased the album several years ago, and we talked a bit about his music, music theory in general, the use of alternate tuning-systems in Native American Flute and so on. I think I have some other albums too, but I'm not sure; these are the three that I've been able to find. (If I have others they might be stashed away somewhere & I've just forgotten where; it happens sometimes when you've been collecting CDs for nearly 4 decades...)
@Elliot Ward Well, I wish you luck in finding them; it might not be easy, as these were originally purchased several years ago & may no longer be available or easy to find. (Like when a book goes out-of-print.)
This horse is remembering who it is. Pure freedom and it wants to run and move. The sound is that from long ago, animals they know the past and the roots. What a beautiful song.
@@goosenuggets9693 I mean Technically Native Americans were riding horses for Centuries, and where in America before any other culture. Probably did use to play to the horses ancestors, and yes they do have ancestors, every organism, even fucking ameobae had early ancestors. So it could just be something in its DNA, there probably things you’re ancestors did that it’s just embedded in your DNA cause they did it for so long. But I mean if you can’t understand why he may be saying it’s true than you probably won’t understand what I’m saying either.
Body language saying " come closer i would like to touch the flute", a similar gesture saying come closer, at list that's what i understand from the horse's head movement 😁
Does it get any cuter than that?! I love watching animals respond to music. There are a lot of videos out where the person sits in the pasture with the instrument and starts to play and all of a sudden the whole herd of cattle is right there listening. It’s absolutely precious
Years ago when I lived in San Diego I was helping my boss do some construction on his house and spent the weekend there at his home in the Lakeside community. He had a horse coral that met in the back with 2 other neighboring corals. I took my harmonica to the back corner and sat on the fence and began playing with my eyes closed. After a bit I felt this puff on my arm and opened my eyes to discover that I was completely surrounded by horses and they were really interested and very close. I also play NA flute and shakuhachi among other ethnic and traditional flutes.
@@Connection-Lost theres only 3 buttons on a trumpet, so why do begginers sound like a dying animal when starting out? oh because its a technique that only few can get down even with practice. same here, he has to hum not just blow so he creates a set pitch and note to then tamper with using the holes. actually quite complex
Me, too. I don't know enough about horse behavior to know if that response was normal. I have feeling it is not a typical response. The way certain animals appear to interact with music is fascinating! We have to be careful not to anthropomorphize their behavior, but it really does seem that many of them actually enjoy the music. It actually seems to bring happiness to them. I must admit though, I'm not sure what "happiness" means to a horse.
Why do human dance to music? Its the same...i thought abt it long time ago. One of the reason might be perhaps answered by cymatics. When a sound plays there is vibration, vibration moves matter. And we, physical things are matter. crazily specific notes create specific patterns.
@@DavidGonzalez-ff6yk The Nez Pierce (pierced nose) tribe bred them for many many generations, they loved the spotted horses. Their superior horses and horse breeding was spoken of by British horseman during the wars.. (genocide).. just saying...
This horse is having some deep ancestral memories resurface. EDIT: Yes, I am aware that horses are not native to North America and that the Europeans brought them over. I meant this comment to be light-hearted and was not making some strong declaration in regards to what is or isn't happening in this video. Unfortunately, that doesn't all transfer well through text. EDIT 2: Yes, there were horses in North America prior to the Europeans bringing their's over, but those native horses went extinct and were a distinctly separate species from the horses that the Europeans brought over.
He knows and I know. Horse follow closely. He knows what I know. So he follows me, close. It's the spirit in between us. That area. Not seen not heard but felt. My friend.
It amazing how animals react to music. Their daily lives consist of the same routine and then someone plays music for them. It must be very exciting for them.
This flute speaks of a warm hearth, full bellies, long tales and the laughter of young ones. A time when peace was present and summer days were long and endless
When I played UA-cam music (guitar, harp etc) to the hundreds of turkeys in my barn, they would turn, freeze and go dead silent. Clucking and pecking ceased, an ocean of heads focused intensely on the sound. They would listen like this for as long as I played it and obviously loved it.
@@hukihuki4135 So true. Unfortunately we sold the turkey farm a year ago. I played, rock, meditation, harp, country I played every kind of music for them. They went motionless and listened, it was reverant. I should have got it on video.
@@SR-zc6lkActually they originated as a species in the Americas alongside camels! They both spread to Eurasia via the Bering Strait and went extinct in their native land before being reintroduced by the Spanish.
@@Mariana-ud7dw I'm a realistic person and Im not stupid enough to believe that the horse is some reincarnation of a warrior's horse and then claim that I know it's real and act like it's a fact delusional people need to hear they are being delusional instead of having that insanity fed into by "nice" people
@@mutedimagination666 Everyone is entitled to their comment. What you think about it is your prerogative. It's unnecessary - in my opinion - to insult, swear or belittle them.
@@Mariana-ud7dw everyone is entitled to their own comment/opinion however this isn't op's opinion op states it as a fact without any doubt I have a right to say he's fuckin weird and being delusional cuz it's an opinion I have
The horse, in body and spirit, knows deep within its heart, that Native America is still alive. This heartwarming video deserves a bigger spotlight and a lot of love from other Native American patriots, warriors, and heroes.
For one, this flute sounds AMAZING. I fucking LOVE it. For two, bonding with animals like this is one of the things I love most about life. We are on this planet to help animals flourish and live in peace.
Music: soft, gentle and introspective
Horse: headbanging like it's an 80's rock song
This is straight Van Halen to him
@@joeschmoe6720 looks like it haha
😂😂😂😂I laughed way to hard at this
He is jamming to that sick tune!
He’s from a different era, The era of cowboys and gunslingers.
"Lemme try lemme try!"
Funniest comment here
🌬🎵🎶🎶🎵.. lol
Put it in my nose, put it in my nose!!
funniest comment i ever seen
Yup🤣✌🤟🤙
He's probably dropping some hot bars that we can't hear
He most likely is
Facts
The horse: That's my jam!
I was about to comment the same shit lol
bahhaha
This horse is a master head banger
😁
Lmao
🌬🎶🎵🎵🎶🤗 6 2021
he is rocking to the flute music
Yeah ! It's Eddie Riggs's horse ! Ref game 😏
Hes vibing on a level beyond the spirit world.
teh ennit
😂 love that.
Indeed he is
🖕🤬🖕
Animal world🤔
Horses tend to nod their heads when they're excited or energised (feeding time, about to go out for a run, stimulation when they're bored, etc). So it's quite likely the horse is actually enjoying the music and being excited by it, especially how he stops rocking the moment the music stops.
The most impressive part of this video is the fact the flute player is able to play without laughing at the horse’s head banging.
He is at one with the horse
@@mchepel 😁😁😁😅😅😅 nice
Equanimity
Well may because this guy is a real native indian and for then that's no joke matter its about spiritualism and understand souls of every been on heart
@@mchepel Your comment is CRIMINALLY underrated! I wish I could like more than once! LOL!!
*"This is a certified hoof classic"*
UNDERRATED 💀💀
Thanks bob
You’re stupid bro LMAO 🤣 😂
💯
No
in the horse's head in that moment: CUT MY LIFE INTO PIECES, THIS IS MY LAST RESORT
Good one
Paparoach
lol!!
SUFFOCATION
*bang bang*
NO BREATHING
*bang bang*
He's imagining himself running wild and free.
Exactly. That head bob looks the same as it would in a full gallop. He's imagining the spirit of the wind in the times before they were domesticated.
Sheesh that Hit hard
Wow that’s a great observation
I don’t know if that sad or just funny as hell lmao
@@primevil110872 You have no clue what you are talking about
He felt the magic of the sound.
Or rather...the sound of music
You can't even hold it.
It's just there in the air
@@locomojoboy2 horses only run on magic and hay. Its a well known fact.
I never seen a horse vibe to music like humans do. It’s so crazy 😂😄
Its theorized that Humans have a certain affinity to certain beats due to it reminding them of their own heartbeat or the hesrtbeat of their mother.
I wonder if theres a biological reason why this horse is vibing so hard
@@tikimilliesorry for being 2 years late, but appaloosas were a favourite among the native americans, so maybe thats why
he feels the good vibes :)
Hes a spirit horse. An ancestor horse from a native tribe.
@Melissa Oestreich yeah, and Appys were bred by the Nez Pierce
@@shawnsodano2835 some love to think they have life all figured out and they have God in their back pocket. There's so much more going on than we'd been led to believe. Thank you.
Yes this feels right thank you xxx
Yes koda this feels to be true xxx
It's the song of his people
The flute: calm, slow, gentle music
The horse: “YOOOO this BANGIN’
“I know why the caged horse headbangs..”
-Chief Rocking Horse
Brilliant
I... just shat myself laughing.
full mudslide in my trousers.
GOOD ONE.
You’ve heard of dances with wolves and now here’s headbang with horses
The way the horse was bobbing its head was funny
It's a horse communication
@@shawnsodano2835 more like HORSE code
@@boejiden6637 lol, 😁😁
I also found the same thing to be amusing.
The repeated back and forth motion of the horse's head in response to the music was something that I also found to be quite entertaining.
That is the most sickest beat that horse probably heard in this life
The horse is like "Yeah, that's my jam!!"
He wants to play it too
This is exactly the type of music i thought horses would enjoy.
Someone give that horse the flute, he clearly wants to try playing it
Nah he tryna munch
Just give em a carrot to munch and enjoy the tones
That was the thought running through my heads. Like he’s trying to reach out and get a hold of it
As a drummer and a musician of over 40 years I've seen this over and over. As creatures we all love music.
ehm.. can u also explain why?
@@ksenomorf333 It most likely triggers neurotransmitters in the brain that respond to the temple and the melodies of certain music which is why we didn’t have favorite songs or what not this is a universal trait in most complex creatures
His horse ancestors probably remember hearing tht tune and they're cheering through him
The saying "good music is universal" really doesn't have limits it seems! My dog absolutely loves it when put on smooth jazz
@@cappystrano1 Vibrations, yes. But this applies to all beings, not just horses being sensitive to pressure changes. Hit the right frequency and you'll get a reaction out of anything.
My guy passed the vibe check for sure
The horse puts on a good dance, but, our man's playing is fire.
Not just the horse, I love the Native American flute too. The sound is so indescribable, it takes me back in time and makes me mesmerized of the good ol’ days. It’s so beautiful.
Agreed. It is so healing. I found it also really calms my cat when she seems restless.
Same here; I've got some CDs of various artists, some of whom are local & whom I got to meet & talk with at various local arts & crafts fairs. I love the music & can personal attest to its value for meditation or just plain relaxation.
@Elliot Ward Sure; here they are:
One is from the "Lifescapes" label, titled, "Meditations: Native American Flute," accompanied by violin, guitar & percussion. The album is produced by John August (not sure if he's also the artist or not.)
Another is released by EarthBeat! Records and titled, "Tribal Winds: Music from Native American Flutes," featuring artists from several tribes, including Cheyenne, Comanche, Ute, Navajo, Zuni, Lakota, Dakota, Kiowa, Apache, Mandan and Algonkian.
And lastly there's "Raven's Song," by William Gutierrez (who also sells hand-crafted flutes.) This album was produced by Millard Clark. I had the opportunity to meet & speak with Mr. Gutierrez at the arts & wine faire where I purchased the album several years ago, and we talked a bit about his music, music theory in general, the use of alternate tuning-systems in Native American Flute and so on.
I think I have some other albums too, but I'm not sure; these are the three that I've been able to find. (If I have others they might be stashed away somewhere & I've just forgotten where; it happens sometimes when you've been collecting CDs for nearly 4 decades...)
@Elliot Ward Well, I wish you luck in finding them; it might not be easy, as these were originally purchased several years ago & may no longer be available or easy to find. (Like when a book goes out-of-print.)
I'm learning to play native flute, it's really a magical instrument.
This horse is remembering who it is. Pure freedom and it wants to run and move. The sound is that from long ago, animals they know the past and the roots. What a beautiful song.
It's like he's chanting and doing a dance. Cool horse.
All its doing is bobbing its head. "This horse looks like its chanting and dancing" where'd that speculation come from.
@@edymain8696 he dancing
@@ofpine but chanting, thats a big stretch.
@@timvanloo6 thats sickening to me.
@@timvanloo6 ‼️
He feels like he's running with the wind, that's love.
Me: Hears random ad from the TV
Also Me:
He's reliving a past memory where he and his rider were running across a prairie during a buffalo hunt.
You could be right about this...
@@kimmichaluk3072 No. He could not.
@@goosenuggets9693 I mean Technically Native Americans were riding horses for Centuries, and where in America before any other culture. Probably did use to play to the horses ancestors, and yes they do have ancestors, every organism, even fucking ameobae had early ancestors. So it could just be something in its DNA, there probably things you’re ancestors did that it’s just embedded in your DNA cause they did it for so long. But I mean if you can’t understand why he may be saying it’s true than you probably won’t understand what I’m saying either.
@@raisrizen3497 Europeans introduced the horse to north America bro.
@@jimbob465 are you dignified in your stupidity?
It's so wild... The music is so soft, soothing & relaxing, and yet the horse is head-banging like he's listening to metal...
I think this is how some people act when listening to any particularly good music, regardless of tempo and energy.
Body language saying " come closer i would like to touch the flute", a similar gesture saying come closer, at list that's what i understand from the horse's head movement 😁
"That's a strange carrot you got there. If you don't want to eat it, give it to me."
Does it get any cuter than that?! I love watching animals respond to music. There are a lot of videos out where the person sits in the pasture with the instrument and starts to play and all of a sudden the whole herd of cattle is right there listening. It’s absolutely precious
My guitar player's dog was with us at band practice and he started howling along to a song we were writing :^)
Prolly someone artificially insiminating it behind the shed thing
@@playablecharacter3871 too cute. I hope you did not tell him he wasn’t a true band member!!😠
I work in a slaughter house. We play music to comfort cows, pigs and horses but not chickens, before we put them in the electric bath.
i just want someone to love me the way that giraffe loves guitar
Years ago when I lived in San Diego I was helping my boss do some construction on his house and spent the weekend there at his home in the Lakeside community. He had a horse coral that met in the back with 2 other neighboring corals. I took my harmonica to the back corner and sat on the fence and began playing with my eyes closed. After a bit I felt this puff on my arm and opened my eyes to discover that I was completely surrounded by horses and they were really interested and very close. I also play NA flute and shakuhachi among other ethnic and traditional flutes.
COOL!!! 😄 Thank you very much for sharing!!! 😘❤
Right on brother
To be fair... who dosen't like the Native American flute?
Edit: well, this video got a lot of attention.
🌬🎶🎵🎵🎶💞
I want this key so badly
The cow.
Flute just be like that
Me
It speaks to his ancestors and their riders
Man I didn't expect the flute to be this beautiful
Yeah it is beautiful
Lol neither did I, but yes beautiful indeed!
Memories of the call of his ancestors.
Plot twist: The horse actually hates the music and he's trying to headbutt the dude
The comment I was looking for 🔥🔥
Headbobbing is to indicate, hay you come over here,, come here now,, let me destroy that flute..
Or he actually thinks the flute is food and he's trying to reach for it
That's what I seen honestly lol
Nah if the horse hated the music it would go full beast mode
Why there's noone talking about how spectacular his playing is!
I think there are like 3 holes so it's not exactly a grand piano.
@@Connection-Lost idc still good
horse
@@Connection-Lost theres only 3 buttons on a trumpet, so why do begginers sound like a dying animal when starting out? oh because its a technique that only few can get down even with practice. same here, he has to hum not just blow so he creates a set pitch and note to then tamper with using the holes. actually quite complex
@@OutdoorBlues wait till you here the didgeridoo, basically a hollow log, but dang is is good
The horse is excited to hear the flute. That’s some fascinating animal behavior. I’d like to explore the reason why.
Me, too. I don't know enough about horse behavior to know if that response was normal. I have feeling it is not a typical response. The way certain animals appear to interact with music is fascinating! We have to be careful not to anthropomorphize their behavior, but it really does seem that many of them actually enjoy the music. It actually seems to bring happiness to them. I must admit though, I'm not sure what "happiness" means to a horse.
let us open his skull😲
I'm joking .. don't be afraid😎😄
Feel the effect the flute music has on your body.. It’s the same feeling for this horse.. The joy of Pure beauty ..
Why do human dance to music? Its the same...i thought abt it long time ago. One of the reason might be perhaps answered by cymatics. When a sound plays there is vibration, vibration moves matter. And we, physical things are matter. crazily specific notes create specific patterns.
I kind of get the vibe that he was trying to bite the flute or something along those lines and he was just trapped so it looked like he was bobbing
"Peyote's kicking in."
"Omg. This dude's playing the flute again."
"I'M FREAKIN' OUT MAN! I'M FREAKIN' OUT!"
Horse: "That flute looks delicious.. I gotta have a taste... Damn, my neck's too short!"
It has a haunting sound. He's thinking of his ancestors.
Horses are European animals tough.
@@DavidGonzalez-ff6yk The Nez Pierce (pierced nose) tribe bred them for many many generations, they loved the spotted horses. Their superior horses and horse breeding was spoken of by British horseman during the wars.. (genocide).. just saying...
@@cheremichael367 Horses where introduced by the Spanish Empire in the Continent.
@@DavidGonzalez-ff6yk Yes, I've written that elsewhere... 👍👍
@@DavidGonzalez-ff6yk still doesn't change the fact that horses and zebras originated in North America . And before you @ me Google it
When a horse does this rocking motion it is a sign of great stress and that it is terrified.
I doubt it.
*Native American Flute Plays*
Horse: “Yo this a fuccing bop!!”
fucking*
@@R4G4M3MN0N stfu
@@jasonvoorhees2916 ok daddy 🤩🥺😘😉😭
Off top 🤣
@@R4G4M3MN0N 😩🥵🦑😏👅🥴👆😩🤩
🗣"DON'T STOP!! GIT IT GIT IT!! DON'T STOP!! GIT IT GIT IT!!"
Blessings From Texas🤠
🌬🎶🎵🎵🎶💞🐎🐎🐎🐎 blessings from hot hot Northern California.
🔥YASSSS🔥💜🐎🐴🐎💜
Ayyyyeeee 🐎🐴
This horse is having some deep ancestral memories resurface.
EDIT: Yes, I am aware that horses are not native to North America and that the Europeans brought them over. I meant this comment to be light-hearted and was not making some strong declaration in regards to what is or isn't happening in this video. Unfortunately, that doesn't all transfer well through text.
EDIT 2: Yes, there were horses in North America prior to the Europeans bringing their's over, but those native horses went extinct and were a distinctly separate species from the horses that the Europeans brought over.
Its probably having a seizure and this dude just keeps on playing.
@@stevenfetzer4911 what?
Steven isn’t the sharpest knife in the door
@@anthonyfloresjr887 He's definitely more like a spoon. Sorry Steven, I had to.
@@anthonyfloresjr887 how many knives are in the door?
I have never seen horses do that.
But have you tried to play music to any horse yet?
I play my horse drill music
You neff sneff the ket ?
He knows and I know.
Horse follow closely.
He knows what I know.
So he follows me, close. It's the spirit in between us. That area.
Not seen not heard but felt. My friend.
✊
❤❤❤
He shared his breath with the instrument😢 and the breath of the performer as well. Wow
It amazing how animals react to music. Their daily lives consist of the same routine and then someone plays music for them. It must be very exciting for them.
he's remembering riding along to it in a past life
Yes I would say the Horse digs this, he is headbanging like no tomorrow
My dog loves the didgeridoo- he sits mesmerized watching the person playing.
Mine scares the shit out of my dog. I usually just come around the corner and blast it at her though
"sounds beautiful, now let me eat it"
The horse hears the call of its ancestors and what it was like to run free on the plains with wind streaming through its hair.
I love animals, from the bottom of my heart & soul.
Beautiful flute playing too!
So beautiful so calming the beautiful horses love it to
Sing with all the voices of the mountain, paint with all the colors of the wind.
Did he just think the man was holding a carrot? He tried to get to it.
I am 😂
He's got some unusual moves but he's just enjoying himself and doing his own thing. I love this horse!
How the hell do you know?
Had such a transforming effect on the horse, it turned him halfway into a woodpecker !!!
“I would walk 5,000 miles and then I’d walk 5,000 more...”
This flute speaks of a warm hearth, full bellies, long tales and the laughter of young ones. A time when peace was present and summer days were long and endless
Horse: yeah babyy!!!!!(uncle ben's voice from urban rescue......)
When I played UA-cam music (guitar, harp etc) to the hundreds of turkeys in my barn, they would turn, freeze and go dead silent. Clucking and pecking ceased, an ocean of heads focused intensely on the sound. They would listen like this for as long as I played it and obviously loved it.
You should make a video of it! I'm sure people would be interested in watching it
Thank you so much for sharing!!! 😘😍❤
@@hukihuki4135 So true. Unfortunately we sold the turkey farm a year ago. I played, rock, meditation, harp, country I played every kind of music for them. They went motionless and listened, it was reverant. I should have got it on video.
@@SatumainenOlento Thank you.
They know.....They certainly do know. They are very spiritual animals ♥️💜♥️💜♥️
🌬🎶🎵🎵🎶💞🐎🐎🐎🐎
Beautiful, the flute playing and the horses reaction.💕
Wow, what a hauntingly beautiful instrument.
Beautiful..... hello from Sydney Australia
Hello from Dover delware
@@aprilhurd8677 Hello from hell
He's vibing beyond spirit in the world he's vibing in his soul of peace
WOW!! How wonderful!
This is great! Animals love music too. Cows are mesmerized by music & chase after it.
🌬🎵🎶🎶🎵💞 fir sure
The horse : "HELL YEAH THIS ONE IS A MF BANGER BRO"
Remembering his ancestors in the good ole days.
Good old days, but only after horses came over with the Europeans.
@@62mer I'm pretty sure wild horses existed in America before that
@@Wild4lon No they didn't.
@@SR-zc6lkActually they originated as a species in the Americas alongside camels! They both spread to Eurasia via the Bering Strait and went extinct in their native land before being reintroduced by the Spanish.
*except for the camels of course 😁
Most nostalgic sound you can have your ears enjoy. What a great performer.
Horse is running in the ancestoral spirit plane.
Give him the choice!
His ears are laid back!
He can't get away.
laid back ears dont always mean theyre angry/uncomfortable, laid back ears can also mean a horse is trying to concentrate
Horse body language isn't as simple as ears back equals angry...
You could say that flute speaks to him on a spiritual level...
Looks more like the horse wants to break the flute in half.
He must have been a indigenous warrior’s horse in his past life and knowing the spirit world is truly truly real and beautiful
Wtf what is with you it ain't that deep fuckin weirdo
@@mutedimagination666 Wow, you're a nice person aren't you. 🤔
@@Mariana-ud7dw I'm a realistic person and Im not stupid enough to believe that the horse is some reincarnation of a warrior's horse and then claim that I know it's real and act like it's a fact delusional people need to hear they are being delusional instead of having that insanity fed into by "nice" people
@@mutedimagination666 Everyone is entitled to their comment. What you think about it is your prerogative. It's unnecessary - in my opinion - to insult, swear or belittle them.
@@Mariana-ud7dw everyone is entitled to their own comment/opinion however this isn't op's opinion op states it as a fact without any doubt I have a right to say he's fuckin weird and being delusional cuz it's an opinion I have
I want a playlists of this flute being played. This is good to sleep too
he felt that in his spirit bro... get him to a booth he got stories to tell
Bringing back good memories.
🌬🎵🎶🎶🎵💞
Beautiful flute playing ❤️
It’s as if the beatiful horse was saying, “Yaaaasss!!! This is my jam right here!!!”
The horse, in body and spirit, knows deep within its heart, that Native America is still alive. This heartwarming video deserves a bigger spotlight and a lot of love from other Native American patriots, warriors, and heroes.
He is actually motioning his request for "Bang Your Head" by Quiet Riot.
Horse is straight head banging to that banger, just like his ancestors ❤
He’s literally just vibin
Aww he loves it. So precious
that music. So soothing. its the notes hes not playing
Horse: Ooohh shit. That's my jam right there.
For one, this flute sounds AMAZING. I fucking LOVE it. For two, bonding with animals like this is one of the things I love most about life. We are on this planet to help animals flourish and live in peace.
Thats awsome. Nothing better then a human treating an animal with care and respect.
This makes sense to me and brings me peace.