Some people use different commands for their horses. The horses that I ride respond to both woah and ho. Some respond better to woah and some respond better to ho. It’s her choice and her horse, she uses ho.
@@elizabethcline8981 Well it’s whoa. I know because that’s what I was always taught and still am taught. I told my instructor about the ho ho ho rubbish that people in usa think means halt or slow down and she said wow a lot father christmas impressions going on there. Ho ho means nothing.
@@danielledewitt1 🤦🏼♀️🤦🏼♀️ Horses can’t speak, they don’t care what words we use. Have you thought about non-English speaking countries. They obviously don’t use whoa, so the exact wording really doesn’t matter, it’s the tone and the horses connotations with said tone/sound.
@@danielledewitt1 and so does my horse who I say ho ho ho to. It doesn’t matter which one you use as long as your horse understands you, I recommend using the one that the last owners used.
Her whinny was so precious! She certainly loves to run. ☺️😍
She’s the cutest!!!
I’m so glad I’m not the only one who counts the strides when riding 😂
It helps me so much!!
That looks really fun!!
So much fun
Thx for posting!
Aww you two were flying! Looks like you both had an amazing time! ❤️
Truly always the best feeling in the world!
You did great! And I think your horse was having a great time.
Your horse is a rock star ⭐️
Thank you!!
Omg this looks so cool! I wish i could ride but i'm not the person for that D:
It’s whoa not ho ho ho ho.
Some people use different commands for their horses. The horses that I ride respond to both woah and ho. Some respond better to woah and some respond better to ho. It’s her choice and her horse, she uses ho.
@@elizabethcline8981 Well it’s whoa. I know because that’s what I was always taught and still am taught. I told my instructor about the ho ho ho rubbish that people in usa think means halt or slow down and she said wow a lot father christmas impressions going on there. Ho ho means nothing.
@@danielledewitt1 🤦🏼♀️🤦🏼♀️ Horses can’t speak, they don’t care what words we use. Have you thought about non-English speaking countries. They obviously don’t use whoa, so the exact wording really doesn’t matter, it’s the tone and the horses connotations with said tone/sound.
@@Emma17456 No they don’t speak english, yet Silver one of the horses I ride knows full well what whoa means.
@@danielledewitt1 and so does my horse who I say ho ho ho to. It doesn’t matter which one you use as long as your horse understands you, I recommend using the one that the last owners used.