Changing Herd Dynamics

Equine behavior experts discuss how and why horses change ranks with changing herd dynamics—and how those changes may impact overall wellbeing and behavior. Your horse’s position in the herd may affect his overall disposition and interactions with you. Tips are provided to help your horse transition to new settings.

Forage is Key When Tackling Undesirable Behaviour in Horses

Rosa Verwijs, senior lecturer in equine behaviour at Writtle University Collegeifferent speaks about how unwanted behaviours can be caused by a lack of forage, such as stress, anxiety, aggression and resource-guarding. These might be displayed, such as abnormal oral behaviours, door-kicking, difficulty in handling and poor performance under saddle.

What Do Horses Think of Us?

A basic tenet when studying animal emotions is that negative emotions will trigger an escape or avoidance response, whereas positive emotions will trigger an approach. By gaging whether a horse will approach or avoid a person or a situation, for example, we can infer something about how it experiences that person or that situation. One…

Horses Follow Reliable Leaders

Traditionally, leadership in horses has been understood as a function of dominance, embodied in the myth of the “lead mare”: the highest-ranking individual in a group will be the one leading it. Thanks to a growing body of scientific evidence, we now know that this is incorrect.

The Science Behind Show Jumping

Show jumping is an equestrian sport that requires horses and riders to navigate a course of obstacles, including jumps and fences, within a set time frame. It’s a sport that requires precision, skill, and an understanding of the physics and biomechanics involved in horse and rider movement. This article explores the science behind show jumping…

Does Your Horse Like His Job?

Many dogs really love what they do and show great enthusiasm for it. They can barely contain themselves before running an agility course or doing scent work. Do horses love their jobs? A study conducted in Germany with 18 warmblood horses attempted to answer this question.

What Makes a Horse Gaited?

Gaited horses have the ability to trot in diagonal pairs, lateral pairs and also in a four-beat trot where each leg works independently. This ability is known as quadridextrous, exactly the same way humans can be ambidextrous. There is a vast difference between the gaited and the non-gaited horse, but why are some gaited while…