For everybody whos saying this horse is not comfortable or whatever.. To get a horse like this the horse HAS TO trust you! otherwise.. your horse will just run wherever it wants and most likely get you off somehow..
i like this! look at 0:42 when the horse spins around, if you look to the tail you see the horse does not like this very much, but he does it for his rider. pat doesn't force him to do so, and the horse could easily buck him off his back but he didn't do that. that shows the trust and cooperation of the horse.
If you want to see someone from Germany who copies unallowed Pat Parelli. He was never trained by Pat or an official trainer of Natural Horsemanship but he uses the name. I think this is interesting and a reason to get him stopped!
@jacketTalent - Hardly, I've spent a year studying it with professors specialising in exactly this - thats real scientifically qualified ones, not people just popping out of the woodwork.... clearly you need to do yours.
Having worked with one of the top equine behaviourists, I can advise, if you knew anything about how the equine learns and how this technique is implemented, you would know it is done completely under neg reinforcement. The horse is watchful, nervous, listening for cues the whole time, notice when he looses interest and focuses on something over in the field, rider looses control and grabs his mane to get the tricks going again. As some others have said...do not get drawn in! Do your homework.
Having worked with one of the top equine behaviourists, I can advise, if you knew anything about how the equine learns and how this technique is implemented, you would know it is done completely under neg reinforcement. The horse is watchful, nervous, listening for cues the whole time, notice when he looses interest and focuses on something over in the field, rider looses control and grabs his mane to get the tricks going again. As some others have said...do not get drawn in! Do your homework.
I love this kind of riding because the horse doesn't need to adapt to us, but we the riders adapt to the nature of the horse. Just by observing how they act in freedom we can do those amazing things.
If someone pushes you from the right, you move to the left. But what if you are pushed from both sides? Do you think of moving forward? No. You feel overwhelmed and don't know how react.
In natural training instead of pushing from both sides we change the balance so that the horse can move freely.
Clinton Anderson is the man..! I don't like his personality, He comes across rude. But his training for horses speaks for itself.
The proof is right there in your face. This parelli guy is a lot of show. Smoke and lights. I can do what parelli does. Not because I am some awesome horseman. But because I am a good horseman. And the main reason..! Is because I have studied, And researched, I have watched video after video on how a horses mind works. What makes them tick. What makes them scar
The spurs aren't used to cruel the horse, they are an artificial aid to guide the horse. Spurs are often frowned upon as some people use them the wrong way (ie literraly kick the horse with the spur rather than rubbing the horse or squeezing them with the spur.) They should only be used as a sterring aid not a get up and go aide.
@TheFreedomhorses, this horse is built for these kinds of manouvers. That's why you see mostly Quarter Horses or short and stocky horses at rodeos and very few thouroughbred types (tho here in oz I've seen people use thouroughbred for barrel racing) and if your going to diss rodeo, know what your talking about, because those are reining moves more than rodeo moves.
what exaclty is parelli groundwork????? i would like to try it but i never get a clear picture of what it is and how it works any way some one could explain
@AppaLoosa25 It's like that with the entire Parelli program. I'm going to get so many thumbs down here, but try Clinton Anderson instead. It really is the same stuff, but in a more user-friendly package. Don't get sucked in by Parelli's fancy adverts. You'll get a bunch of crap for doing Parelli from the rest of the horse community anyway.
@zwappp Who cares who gives you crap though? That shouldn't be the reason you don't do something. Years ago, people got crap for not beating a horse to 'break it' and now it's the opposite. I've never bought a single Parelli product, but I've still learned from their youtube videos alone, and now I have a mare I can lope bridless and side pass. Just saying, don't go with something just because everyone else is doing it. Go with something because it's kind to the horse, and it gets good results.
@AppaLoosa25 Clinton Anderson is a good horseman, but I met him in person and he training with dominance and control in mind. He did good with his lasso and carrot stick but his big thing that stuck out was when they got out of reach of his carrot stick he had no control over them, and when he didn't have the carrot stick with him they paid him no mind. I don't fault anyone who tries him, but I know several people who tried him and saw the same results he did. No carrot stick or lasso no respect
i love parelli and wish more people would use it instead of brute force, i have tried it and it works, my Nervous Cob had pulled down a barn door and chucked people off with rearing but in the last few weeks he has calmd down and now follows me, lets me halter him and plays the seven games. i also now prefer to ride my other horse bareback and we are all beggining to build a strong bond so to all you people who think that you can only train horses with whips, lungeing and harder tack, your loss.
I started riding as a young child and this "freestyle" was the only kind of riding I knew because I was too small to lift a saddle and place a bridle .Parelli is not a big deal, it just takes sensitivity and a connection to your horse. It was torture watching this grown man make that little horse switch direction back and forth so abruptly. How degrading to the poor horse. Oh yeah, that's right, those are the moves for the rodeo. I think it's cruel and unnecessary. Watch the video again.
@TheFreedomhorses Did the horse look upset to you? Was he resisting his rider? No. Pat was not hurting the horse or making him do anything he didn't want to. It takes a longggg time to build the kind of relationship it takes to do that. It's not like he jumped right on and started spurring him around like a drunken oaf.
now type in on youtube Natural horsemanship and its thesecond from the top and it should say "This is a vid about Natural Horsemanship and why you would want to do it. And i'm not saying that saddles and bridles are bad. I just want people"
I personally wanted to try parelli, unfortunatley, i ant afford it and will stick to the methods i use now which work... however, i was extremly dis-heartened when i heard about the parellis spending two hours hobbling then tying a stallions head to the hobble... at one of their demos with paying people watching.... what kind of natural horsemanship is that?? restricting and tying a horse to its own legs... and two hours of a waste... it didnt even work!
absolutley love parelli, i think his methods are great! i can now do this with my horse and i think that its wonderful that we have such partnership. and horseygalgem, i think you need to rethink about what you've said, his stuff is priced to work...and if you dont know how to use it properly it won't work for you or your horse...his equiptment can be dangerous if you have no knowledge on how to use, and it takes time and patience.
Well, I can ride with the bit in my horse's mouth but without using the reins at all. It's more of a mind-set thing for my horse. He doesn't need the bit, but he listens to my legs better with it at least in.
A horse can be a reining horse and trained by Natural Horsemanship methods. You just use the skills you build with Natural Horsemanship to communicate with the horse; what you do from there (reining, barrel racing, trail riding) is up to you.
@texasmypony I know that but I'm an advanced rider with a horse who needs some work and I'm saying that I've taken some of the methods as a rider to use to communicate to my horse and teach him some stuff. =) Thanks though!
well try to think of the horses point of view would you like to be forced going over a jump or running in circles cause if other people treated you how people treat there horses people would be having alot of problems and when a horse bites or kicks or bucks or rears it is all feedback horses learn good and bad things.
Whoever says that Pat Parelli caters to backyard horse people.......did you know that the winner of the Kentucky Derby was a Savvy Club member? ....yeah
euhhhh...sorry but the base or the drassage of this horse is not parrelli...It'a Reiner, with some methode of parelli waybe but this horse was trained for Reining first... Sorry if i'm wrong...but honestly, I'm quite sure!
@jessicalana91---AND how true is that! So many people post that they hate him or natural horsemanship but then can't tell you one thing about it or him. Interesting isn't it? I for one can't stand being ignorant but I guess to some...well it's what makes us all different right? :)
and hes not even pulling the horses hair. horses cant feel that. thats y people dont cut horses manes they pull out the uneven bits. and they dont even flinch.
put a saddle on him? r u stupid? when i first started ridding i was made to ride bareback because thats how u feel ur horse. ur so much more closer with him then wen u put a saddle on him. everyone should know how to ride bareback before they even think about hopping in a saddle. it builds the connection between you so much more and you can feel his muscles and his movements. you should start doing that so u know the right places to put ur leg pressure in a saddle.
he is a great rider and spurs aren`t horrible or something else if you use them correctly. he doesn`t hit the horse and this "pulling in its hair" doesn`t hurt the horse...you can`t see any sights of pain or cruel in this video or in the face of this horse
This guy targets the right people, people who just own a horse to own one and he just talks about his own ways, anyone can do this and not do the parelli way any horse trained should be able to do this because all it is is body weight, watch stacey westfall, she is WAY better Parelli just tries to tell you only a bond can make this, no any reining trainer can make this. lol some people will believe anything. oh and his big green ball in other videos haha dont even get me started.
I agree 100%! There is a gal at my barn who just gushes over parelli this and parelli that... So what your horse confuses a lead rope and a lunge line and mine doesn't! lol she also has one of those green balls.. I said "Why didn't you just go buy a big yoga ball?" her response? "They're not the same.." Yeah by $75!
@mscanchaser1 If you or anyone would like to know some more about it, I'd be happy to explain it some more. Videos only tell alittle bit and show the results.
@mscanchaser1 thats silly, cant you see that he hasn't a bridle, a bit, a rope? yes i thonk the balls are way to expensive, but im sure you couldnt do that bear-back and bridle-less, not with that attitude anyway
Never said I'd do it. It's not in my interest to goof around like that, but i do know young, young girls who have the very same results.. with a way more logical technic. And, that aside, point at me the day you can crawl up on a horse pulled from a killpen and ride it around in a halter.
..you're allowed to belive in what every you want, but please, try to see that there's more PR than horsemanship..
I really CAN'T understand how anyone could regard this as mediocre horsemanship. I challenge anyone trained in the conventional manner to take the saddle, bridle, martingale and whatever other paraphernalia they use off their horse and ride their horse in a way that the only means of communication is through one thin rope round the neck. development of TRUST between horse and rider.
Parelli teaches more than just riding without any tack or making bonds. He teaches that the horse should take on some responsibility during riding so he's not a mindless robot. Parelli's teachings are invaluable whether you use his methods or not.
I think the vid is great. However you get what you put time into. I will ride some of my horses without saddles and bridles too. Its all about reading and animal and
applying the right training. We all love our horses some just bond better then others. Happy Trails
Everyone that has made horrible comments- why are you watching this then? Parelli is natural horsemanship- and understanding what the HORSE is saying- using reverse-cycology / horse cycology not what we think the horse is saying!
Skippy, Pat does not prey on the weak, he looks for horse people that have heart and desire to do what it takes to get there and emmulate him. He has given many students full scholarships and among them handicapped people. Lauren Barwick, the lady who was crippled by a bale of hay, Canada's Silver and Gold Paralympic Champion, is one. Silke Valentin lives in a motorized cart and is a 3-Star Instructor in Germany, for another example. As far as Clinton goes, he's to rough on the horses.
Skippy, Alaina isn't trying to argue with you. I agree ribbons are not as important as the relationship with your horse and I have given away a truck load of ribbons and trophies. I was just the best of the worst that was there that day. Now, to some people the ribbons are important so if they are to you, ok, but don't get mad at us who aren't impressed by them. I agree Pat overcharges. Clinton gets people hurt. I have seen it. Try Mark Rashid or Buck Brannaman. No fluff. Great horsemen.
wow that was amazing.Every horse owner who want a propa relationship with a horse should do it. I av a haflinger and 2 years ago i couldnt even get him out of his stable without him tryin to kill me and i couldnt ride cause he kept chuckin me off but now that i do parelli i can ride him with just a halter and bareback. It really works you just need the passion to do it and to do it the right way, every horese is differnt xx
cool! im only a beginner at parelli =( but my friends down the field say im doing really well...... 1 day im gonna be doing that! also there is someone AMAZING at parelli and she just gave me a lesson...... it really inspired me and help me, so id just like to say thanks her!
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Ummm really. Not impressed. Any well trained saddle horse that has respect can be ridden that way. Watch how he uses he feet, legs, hands, and seat as cues. It may look like something amazing but it is just basic communication. Look when the horse backs up- how he puts his heels up to the shoulders and shakes back and forth. That is a signal to the horse- back up- or get spurs to the shoulder- I have seen this before- this guy just makes fluffy names for basic training.
First of I NEVER said my video's were tutorials on how to ride bridleless- I can make one if you would like. For your info- I am a western rider, and have worked on one of the biggest ranches in the state of OR. Gallop is the same thing as a "lope" moron- it's simply a shortened term for gallop. Maybe you should try reading comments before you comment on them.
Let me do some research to find out the age, and sex of the horse used. Depending on results I can find a horse to use and in 30 days give you a video. Perhaps you need to get out a little- go to a reining clinic- it's much simpler than it looks. I know the world is full of silly horse owners who sit back and judge- but I have more experience than most.
I'd like to see a video of YOU even riding- I can record a video my trunk of ribbons and awards.......Can you?
I appreciate your concern for my need to get "out"...I've spent plenty of time in the traditional horse world. I spent the first 7 years of my equestrian training there. Please don't make assumptions such as that. =)
Ribbons? Sure, I could. I'm sure your would out-do me though. I spent a few summers showing, however, I haven't in quite a while; it's not really my scene. Awards seem a bit shallow in my eyes...I care more about the relationship I have with my horse...Congrats on yours though. =)
Well, Im sure ribbons and awards are shallow to someone who hasn't earned them........But, I as well prefer a great relationship with my horse- and that's all Im trying to point out- it's not amazing that pat can ride a horse bridless- it's called time and training- it's not magic- most riders simply fail to spend enough training time with their own horse. Tack free riding should not seem out of reach -and amazing- instead- a motivater for riders to spend more time learning how to communicate.
Fair enough...Pat never claims it to be magic. He's a teacher, teaching people to teach horses. He encourages people to believe it's easily in their reach as well. Glad you feel the same way that he does. =)
One more thing, regarding your comment on my lack of shiny ribbons and stunning awards...I'm 17. Based on your profile, you're an adult, and from what I gather, well-respected in the horse world. You can't compare the awards of someone such as yourself to a child like me...I haven't had near the time you have. I'm completely sure you have more awards than me; but please do not make implications that I have none, or that I don't deserve any. Thanks.
What? YOU said you had no ribbons- I implied nothing. Nor did I say you can't earn them. Im 28, and have literally been around the horse world to Europe and back again. I give my time- FREE- to alot of owners who could not otherwise afford training. If you don't wish to be judged as an adult- you can always say your a teenager before you begin to argue. I believe Pat prays on the weak and charges too much- I do however recommend Clinton Anderson- he is to the point and has no need for fluff.
It comes down to this: A horseman does not care about the trophies on your shelf that show what a judge thought of you one day. A horseman cares about what your horse thought of you that day.
AND..........................I dont recall ever saying I dont have a good relationship with my horses- .......Im glad we agree on how much we love our horses -Prizes are an added bonus -- but you cant win unless you love your horse and they love you back-- trust is the only way
Oh god, I love how Parelli acolytes pounce at you whenever you say that Parelli is just mediocre horsemanship xDD So great! I'm probably gonna get a dozen little thumb-downs too.
Open your eyes folks! A fancy stick to prod your horse around till he learns to move before it sticks into his side isn't "how to build a relationship". And touching a horse all over? Will you trust someone who comes up to you and strokes your body all over out of the blue? Come on, have a little wit here. =)
you see what you dont understand is that you are thinking of a horse in a HUMANS perspective, however, you may or may not of noticed that horses are horses, and humans are humans, and horses are also prey animals, and they think completley different to us!
@Parellijelly Hmm, I see what you mean when you say that I'm thinking of a horse in a human's perspective. Except, horses don't really touch each other all over to gain each other's trust or respect; some horses just don't appreciate being touched, but that doesn't stop them from trusting you. They'll just 'tolerate' it. I wanted to express how "touchy-feely" the Parelli method is, and how horses aren't so touchy-feely in their natural state; they dance around each other, using energy.
@kanamoon * In my eyes, they use their natural energy to express their desires; most horses won't touch you when they want you to get away. In the wild they move symmetrically to their leader without having nuzzled him all over beforehand. I don't really believe that prodding/pulling the horse till it understands is the way, it sounds like training rather than communication; you're still relying on the physical, when horses are so responsive to simple presence, energy and expression.
I could show this to anyone at my barn and I know exactly what they would say "Wow! That guy is a great rider with a really well trained horse!" Which is true, but the truth is that not only are they both very well trained, but they both really trust each other. You got to admire that!
I love Natural Horsemanship and I am just getting the hang of it now!
Recomend any one who has a horse to try these methods. Once you get the hang of it, it realy is quite simple but very effective. The horses love it aswell. Just look how responsive this horse is in the video.
@inmadz it makes the riders leg aids easier for the horse to respond to. (instead of kicking the horse hard) especially when the rider is not using reins, he needs all the control he can get :)
@inmadz um, if you are trying to imply that he is not using a natural approach or "hurting" the horse, you are completely wrong. It's not the tools he uses, it's how he uses them and if the tools are painless. In this case, spurs are not painful or aggressive to the horse if you use them with care and when needed. If you watch the video again, you can see that he is not jabbing the horse, or even kicking the horse.
I like paralli. i think that his equipment is extreamly over priced, but i like the methods he uses. it may not work for all people or horses, but i like it and accept it.
i think that some horse people need to get over the fact that there are different methods of getting a horse to do wat you want people seem to think that only there way of training is the right way its sad because there is so many methods out there that get amazing results i support all training methods that are non curlety
@horseygalgem I agree about parelli. Though I don't like all his methods, and the use of spurs. I have taken his methods and changed what I needed to make it my own. I am working at becoming a horse trainer and have studied many different trainers. All the horses I've worked with have responded great to parelli. His method is very indepth and goes deeper than actual training.
i do parelli and it will only work if you do it correctly cause what some people do is they will do alot of the things right but then they might run out of ideas and do something stupid.
parelli does work for all horses and stallions, but only works if the person understands that it takes patience,love,language and leadership.
Euh Statarius tu ne retiens que ça de la video ? Sa position ?? Il est quand même relativement grand pour ce cheval, ça peut l'expliquer.
Et puis la video n'est pas là pour juger de comment il se tient à cheval, mais sur la performance, qui oui, est belle. Même très belle !!!!!!!
Et sinon je ne trouve pas que ce soit un spectacle de clown, bien au contraire.. Il ne me semble pas qu'il demande à son cheval de se cabrer, de se coucher, de faire la jambette, de monter sur un plot ou autre !
I saw Pat get dumped on his keester right in front of me once. It was soo funny. He was showing off, and was spinning so fast he spun off. No kicking to spin, tho. Parelli technique is awesome, even if Pat is an arrogant smart alec.
fantastic, me and my horse melody are in training for this, shes really good, she responds to a neck strap and nothing else, and will do an almost dead stop if i give a gentle tug on the strap, some times she just wants to mess around so i have to put ehr bridle back on, but, she wuldnt be the amazing horse she is now if it werent for her being a lil demon :D
when i went to see these guys it was fantastic, i hope to se them again this year :D xx
I used to think horses don't want to be with us and don't want to be ridden.
But now, I see they DO want to be with us. But only if WE PLAY, NOT WORK WITH THEM AND THEY WANT TO BE OUR PARTNERS, BUT ONLY IF WE DON'T TREAT THEM ONLY AS A RIDING OBJECT. And when they realise that all we want is a good relationship, some play and cooperation,... well you know how it is. It's a big difference. :) It just puts a smile on your face, doesn't it?
This comment has received too many negative votesshow
Its not like any of the parelli people jump on any horse and they're such great riders because they do this. Anyone who can ride decently, knows the signals, and gets on a horse that has been trained like this from the day they were born can do this. Dont flip out everyone who is in love with parelli but i mean honestly, if Pat himself got on my horse and tried to do that he would be dead.
i'm sorry but if you judge Parelli as a rider, I think you're missing the point; Parelli isn't a rider. He's a horseman. Horsemanship is infinitely more important than riding in my opinion and I rather that my horse wants to be around me much more than i want to *make* him do a pirouette. But hey, thats just me.
Sorry NothinTolt but I totally disagree. I have a horse that LOVES to be ridden and goes into a depression if I miss a day. Seriously, she wont eat. Plus he isn't just riding that horse. That horse is loving what it is doing. Just look at the way it responds. Its relaxed and very happy to listen.
my pony is relaxed while shes working too. i can ask her to do five lead changes down a quarter line. shes really good at her job =] but i don't like when people believe horses can't be happy or quick to respond unless their doing natural horsemanship.
i'll have to upload a vid of her lead changes and roll-backs sometime. probably once it stops being so rainy and dark all the time.
Pat doesn't just jump on a horse and do this. He prepares the horse before. Give him a few hours with you horse and most likely he would be riding bridless. Maybe not spinning or galloping, but riding bridless.
That was amazing. This is what I'm try to do with my 8year old Arabian gelding. :) he's doing amazing with it to.
xSOSxSiDnEy96x 5 hours ago
this is so beautiful!
MyPaardenlover 2 weeks ago
bye im goin to eat grilled cheese cuz im bored jk its lunch and im hungry.
Kjordanov98 2 months ago
For everybody whos saying this horse is not comfortable or whatever.. To get a horse like this the horse HAS TO trust you! otherwise.. your horse will just run wherever it wants and most likely get you off somehow..
Kjordanov98 2 months ago
What a good horse. Beautiful riding :)
HorsesNMakeup 3 months ago
Wow that's good
thenumber1jumper 3 months ago
that s the ultimate respect between a horse and its rider...amazing!
lahockeylover 4 months ago
Wow dude that horse looks small on you. Get a bigger horse, other than that, good show ^_^
sagittarius92chan 6 months ago
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Hey everyone, why not sub to his channel?!
myunth 6 months ago in playlist Pat Parelli
You are the best!
McKosDevil 6 months ago in playlist Pat Parelli
great video!!
mnovn 6 months ago in playlist Pat Parelli
Make more! This is bloody amazing!
letuanchinh 6 months ago in playlist Pat Parelli
Woow! This is when i mean that sompheting is beatiful! I love it! but how can you learn it to your horse?
poekietjeuh 7 months ago
i like this! look at 0:42 when the horse spins around, if you look to the tail you see the horse does not like this very much, but he does it for his rider. pat doesn't force him to do so, and the horse could easily buck him off his back but he didn't do that. that shows the trust and cooperation of the horse.
rosannepaardengek 7 months ago 2
"Natural Horsemanship kann jeder lernen"
If you want to see someone from Germany who copies unallowed Pat Parelli. He was never trained by Pat or an official trainer of Natural Horsemanship but he uses the name. I think this is interesting and a reason to get him stopped!
hahaha7107 7 months ago
The horse only looks scared and confused.
KathyTheGhost 7 months ago
@KathyTheGhost
and u look like an idiot
jessicalana91 6 months ago
I´ve never seen such a brilliant rider!!Love him ♥
CathyDePolignac 7 months ago
@jacketTalent - Hardly, I've spent a year studying it with professors specialising in exactly this - thats real scientifically qualified ones, not people just popping out of the woodwork.... clearly you need to do yours.
ladybograt 7 months ago
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Having worked with one of the top equine behaviourists, I can advise, if you knew anything about how the equine learns and how this technique is implemented, you would know it is done completely under neg reinforcement. The horse is watchful, nervous, listening for cues the whole time, notice when he looses interest and focuses on something over in the field, rider looses control and grabs his mane to get the tricks going again. As some others have said...do not get drawn in! Do your homework.
ladybograt 8 months ago
Having worked with one of the top equine behaviourists, I can advise, if you knew anything about how the equine learns and how this technique is implemented, you would know it is done completely under neg reinforcement. The horse is watchful, nervous, listening for cues the whole time, notice when he looses interest and focuses on something over in the field, rider looses control and grabs his mane to get the tricks going again. As some others have said...do not get drawn in! Do your homework.
ladybograt 8 months ago 2
@ladybograt- I don't use negative reinforcement with my mare and we do a lot of this stuff. Sounds like you need to do your homework.
JacketTalent 7 months ago
@ladybograt
.... and WHEN do you see this happening? The horse looks happy and attentive: FOCUSED to me.
zavakuria 6 months ago
fantastico !!!!!!!!!!!
aliceenry 8 months ago
that is just beautiful
Silverableful 8 months ago
I love this kind of riding because the horse doesn't need to adapt to us, but we the riders adapt to the nature of the horse. Just by observing how they act in freedom we can do those amazing things.
If someone pushes you from the right, you move to the left. But what if you are pushed from both sides? Do you think of moving forward? No. You feel overwhelmed and don't know how react.
In natural training instead of pushing from both sides we change the balance so that the horse can move freely.
Gatadelscanals 10 months ago
I don't understand why such parlor tricks are found so impressive. I'd rather watch Shawn Flarida ride a reining pattern than watch this.
hannjenn 10 months ago
Clinton Anderson is the man..! I don't like his personality, He comes across rude. But his training for horses speaks for itself.
The proof is right there in your face. This parelli guy is a lot of show. Smoke and lights. I can do what parelli does. Not because I am some awesome horseman. But because I am a good horseman. And the main reason..! Is because I have studied, And researched, I have watched video after video on how a horses mind works. What makes them tick. What makes them scar
floridabettas239 10 months ago
fantastico!
...ma se gli fa una sgroppata... Parelli vola!
itanh81 10 months ago
fantastico!
...ma se gli fa una sgroppata... Parelli vola!
itanh81 10 months ago
@mariahcarrot1,
The spurs aren't used to cruel the horse, they are an artificial aid to guide the horse. Spurs are often frowned upon as some people use them the wrong way (ie literraly kick the horse with the spur rather than rubbing the horse or squeezing them with the spur.) They should only be used as a sterring aid not a get up and go aide.
MsRodeoFan 10 months ago
@TheFreedomhorses, this horse is built for these kinds of manouvers. That's why you see mostly Quarter Horses or short and stocky horses at rodeos and very few thouroughbred types (tho here in oz I've seen people use thouroughbred for barrel racing) and if your going to diss rodeo, know what your talking about, because those are reining moves more than rodeo moves.
MsRodeoFan 10 months ago
No bridle, no saddle ... 4" spurs ... how come the spurs are ok? They hurt ...
mariahcarrot1 10 months ago
SUPER.....XX
ANTUCA 11 months ago
pat parelli is great and all but i still think Clinton Anderson is the top Natural Horseman...
bensonpage1 1 year ago
MAGNIFIQUE***
wallyaimejouer 1 year ago
this is an awesome video! i am starting Parelli with my horse, and i cant wait to be able to do this with her!
MiZzCrAzY12345 1 year ago
AMAZING PRINT I SAW OF PARELLI STARING COLTS, TOM DORRANCE BENEFIT.
IT IS ON EBAY.
1_power_seller
MsNobody2121 1 year ago
es muy cabron
MrBrIoNeZzZ 1 year ago
wow.. this guy is amazing. I am trying to learn from him :)
romeoiona 1 year ago
Oh wow!! J'Adore trop son style!!
JustPaint20 1 year ago
now that real horse back riding.
rihannafan2323 1 year ago
¡Es el mejor! Wow. Quiero montar como él =D
It´s the best! Wow. I want ride as he.
Hi From Spain! :)
susanalopa 1 year ago
what exaclty is parelli groundwork????? i would like to try it but i never get a clear picture of what it is and how it works any way some one could explain
AppaLoosa25 1 year ago
@AppaLoosa25 It's like that with the entire Parelli program. I'm going to get so many thumbs down here, but try Clinton Anderson instead. It really is the same stuff, but in a more user-friendly package. Don't get sucked in by Parelli's fancy adverts. You'll get a bunch of crap for doing Parelli from the rest of the horse community anyway.
zwappp 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
@zwappp oh k i will check it out thanks for the anwser
AppaLoosa25 1 year ago
@zwappp Who cares who gives you crap though? That shouldn't be the reason you don't do something. Years ago, people got crap for not beating a horse to 'break it' and now it's the opposite. I've never bought a single Parelli product, but I've still learned from their youtube videos alone, and now I have a mare I can lope bridless and side pass. Just saying, don't go with something just because everyone else is doing it. Go with something because it's kind to the horse, and it gets good results.
FluffyThePurpleDino 1 year ago
@AppaLoosa25 Clinton Anderson is a good horseman, but I met him in person and he training with dominance and control in mind. He did good with his lasso and carrot stick but his big thing that stuck out was when they got out of reach of his carrot stick he had no control over them, and when he didn't have the carrot stick with him they paid him no mind. I don't fault anyone who tries him, but I know several people who tried him and saw the same results he did. No carrot stick or lasso no respect
wolfsvain2 11 months ago 2
@wolfsvain2 Interesting!
Princeaboo 10 months ago
i love parelli and wish more people would use it instead of brute force, i have tried it and it works, my Nervous Cob had pulled down a barn door and chucked people off with rearing but in the last few weeks he has calmd down and now follows me, lets me halter him and plays the seven games. i also now prefer to ride my other horse bareback and we are all beggining to build a strong bond so to all you people who think that you can only train horses with whips, lungeing and harder tack, your loss.
charlottelittlehans 1 year ago 2
I started riding as a young child and this "freestyle" was the only kind of riding I knew because I was too small to lift a saddle and place a bridle .Parelli is not a big deal, it just takes sensitivity and a connection to your horse. It was torture watching this grown man make that little horse switch direction back and forth so abruptly. How degrading to the poor horse. Oh yeah, that's right, those are the moves for the rodeo. I think it's cruel and unnecessary. Watch the video again.
TheFreedomhorses 1 year ago
@TheFreedomhorses Did the horse look upset to you? Was he resisting his rider? No. Pat was not hurting the horse or making him do anything he didn't want to. It takes a longggg time to build the kind of relationship it takes to do that. It's not like he jumped right on and started spurring him around like a drunken oaf.
horsepower13579 1 year ago 33
you realy cant read horses.
now type in on youtube Natural horsemanship and its thesecond from the top and it should say "This is a vid about Natural Horsemanship and why you would want to do it. And i'm not saying that saddles and bridles are bad. I just want people"
reply when you have seen it.
rockerbill 1 year ago
I personally wanted to try parelli, unfortunatley, i ant afford it and will stick to the methods i use now which work... however, i was extremly dis-heartened when i heard about the parellis spending two hours hobbling then tying a stallions head to the hobble... at one of their demos with paying people watching.... what kind of natural horsemanship is that?? restricting and tying a horse to its own legs... and two hours of a waste... it didnt even work!
myponiesrule123 1 year ago
Wow thats great! I'm trying to do some parelli with my horses now :)
Whitedog462 1 year ago
good make sure you do it right
rockerbill 1 year ago
Three flying changes in there:)
absolutley love parelli, i think his methods are great! i can now do this with my horse and i think that its wonderful that we have such partnership. and horseygalgem, i think you need to rethink about what you've said, his stuff is priced to work...and if you dont know how to use it properly it won't work for you or your horse...his equiptment can be dangerous if you have no knowledge on how to use, and it takes time and patience.
NoreturnThree 1 year ago 2
Well, I can ride with the bit in my horse's mouth but without using the reins at all. It's more of a mind-set thing for my horse. He doesn't need the bit, but he listens to my legs better with it at least in.
kissesaredeadly 1 year ago
I don't understand, why are so many people so negative about the Parelli system? He's like the cesar milan of the horse world, no?
JDSWriter007 1 year ago
its weird because i do parelli and i do what cesar milan does lol
rockerbill 1 year ago
A horse can be a reining horse and trained by Natural Horsemanship methods. You just use the skills you build with Natural Horsemanship to communicate with the horse; what you do from there (reining, barrel racing, trail riding) is up to you.
2phatponies 1 year ago
@texasmypony I know that but I'm an advanced rider with a horse who needs some work and I'm saying that I've taken some of the methods as a rider to use to communicate to my horse and teach him some stuff. =) Thanks though!
gottogobreyer 1 year ago
well try to think of the horses point of view would you like to be forced going over a jump or running in circles cause if other people treated you how people treat there horses people would be having alot of problems and when a horse bites or kicks or bucks or rears it is all feedback horses learn good and bad things.
rockerbill 1 year ago
Whoever says that Pat Parelli caters to backyard horse people.......did you know that the winner of the Kentucky Derby was a Savvy Club member? ....yeah
jessicalana91 1 year ago
I have seen this video so many times but I never get sick of it!
educanine9 1 year ago
euhhhh...sorry but the base or the drassage of this horse is not parrelli...It'a Reiner, with some methode of parelli waybe but this horse was trained for Reining first... Sorry if i'm wrong...but honestly, I'm quite sure!
funzie00 1 year ago
I haven't seen this in 10 years.....it is still fabulous to watch though
tanya2horses 1 year ago
"Most people who have opinions have never really seen what I've done."
-Pat Parelli
jessicalana91 1 year ago 2
@jessicalana91---AND how true is that! So many people post that they hate him or natural horsemanship but then can't tell you one thing about it or him. Interesting isn't it? I for one can't stand being ignorant but I guess to some...well it's what makes us all different right? :)
educanine9 1 year ago
Does anyone know of any Parelli Clincs coming to Alabama or Florida? Whether it's Parelli or one of his professional trainers?
wolfsvain2 1 year ago
wow lovit cool
onzinpunto 1 year ago
and hes not even pulling the horses hair. horses cant feel that. thats y people dont cut horses manes they pull out the uneven bits. and they dont even flinch.
sweetie3003 1 year ago
put a saddle on him? r u stupid? when i first started ridding i was made to ride bareback because thats how u feel ur horse. ur so much more closer with him then wen u put a saddle on him. everyone should know how to ride bareback before they even think about hopping in a saddle. it builds the connection between you so much more and you can feel his muscles and his movements. you should start doing that so u know the right places to put ur leg pressure in a saddle.
sweetie3003 1 year ago
Oh my gosh I need to check him out for my horse! He's really far behind in training and I just got him not to long ago! =D
gottogobreyer 1 year ago
@gottogobreyer the parelli method trains the human, not the horse, it trains the human to train the horse
texasmypony 1 year ago
he is a great rider and spurs aren`t horrible or something else if you use them correctly. he doesn`t hit the horse and this "pulling in its hair" doesn`t hurt the horse...you can`t see any sights of pain or cruel in this video or in the face of this horse
Mausiiiable 1 year ago
put a saddel on that horsey and stop pulling its hair! stopid cowboy!
mindfreakracer 1 year ago
exellentissime!!!... respect!
loalove80 1 year ago
This guy targets the right people, people who just own a horse to own one and he just talks about his own ways, anyone can do this and not do the parelli way any horse trained should be able to do this because all it is is body weight, watch stacey westfall, she is WAY better Parelli just tries to tell you only a bond can make this, no any reining trainer can make this. lol some people will believe anything. oh and his big green ball in other videos haha dont even get me started.
mscanchaser1 1 year ago
I agree 100%! There is a gal at my barn who just gushes over parelli this and parelli that... So what your horse confuses a lead rope and a lunge line and mine doesn't! lol she also has one of those green balls.. I said "Why didn't you just go buy a big yoga ball?" her response? "They're not the same.." Yeah by $75!
Mandalark 1 year ago
@mscanchaser1 If you or anyone would like to know some more about it, I'd be happy to explain it some more. Videos only tell alittle bit and show the results.
wolfsvain2 1 year ago
@mscanchaser1 actually, stacey westfall was trained by parelli, so she follows what he does.
Parellijelly 1 year ago
@Parellijelly
I thought she was just doing a pattern and the horse knew where to go and everything
jessicalana91 1 year ago
@jessicalana91
Yeah.... she was... but she was CONNECTING with the horse, and that is how he knew where to go ;)
Parellijelly 9 months ago
@Parellijelly
bahaha! LOVE the name!!! Parellijelly.... :D
zavakuria 6 months ago
@mscanchaser1 thats silly, cant you see that he hasn't a bridle, a bit, a rope? yes i thonk the balls are way to expensive, but im sure you couldnt do that bear-back and bridle-less, not with that attitude anyway
texasmypony 1 year ago
i love to see people like you.
your the kind of person that will do what it takes to listen to the horse.
rockerbill 1 year ago
This is so inspiring the way he can do this.
XxForeverEddiexX 1 year ago
..i know a 20 yo girl that can do that.. also knows a 15 yo girl that can do that.
Unfortunatly they just don't have the money backing them.
Time well spent with a horse, a welltrained horse, thats all it is...
Emeessa 1 year ago
no, not atall.
its not 'thats all it is'
i'd love to see you do this & I strongly believe in these methonds so I find you very offensive tbh.
money can't buy you an bond with your horse & it's not well trained horses atall.
People have used these methods on completely mental horses that's cured them so no, you do not need a well trained horse :l
To do parelli like this, its not money. It's patience and only a small percentage of horsey people do this, the rest just hop on their horses.
XxForeverEddiexX 1 year ago
belive in it all you want... i dont.
Never said I'd do it. It's not in my interest to goof around like that, but i do know young, young girls who have the very same results.. with a way more logical technic. And, that aside, point at me the day you can crawl up on a horse pulled from a killpen and ride it around in a halter.
..you're allowed to belive in what every you want, but please, try to see that there's more PR than horsemanship..
Emeessa 1 year ago
Impressionant !
MySalamandre 1 year ago
Just compare it to the way Sabine Birmann works her horses here on youtube! (mit Pferden sein)
Feliximke 1 year ago
bo le cheval
MrChtilolo 1 year ago
I really CAN'T understand how anyone could regard this as mediocre horsemanship. I challenge anyone trained in the conventional manner to take the saddle, bridle, martingale and whatever other paraphernalia they use off their horse and ride their horse in a way that the only means of communication is through one thin rope round the neck. development of TRUST between horse and rider.
seemorerocks 2 years ago
honestly, if you dont like parelli or NH, dont watch the video! i dont understand the logic of some people
TheJayUnit 2 years ago
that is sooo cool i can ride bare back pretty good , but he is doing it with NOTHING, good job dude
ERD1995 2 years ago
Parelli teaches more than just riding without any tack or making bonds. He teaches that the horse should take on some responsibility during riding so he's not a mindless robot. Parelli's teachings are invaluable whether you use his methods or not.
wolfsvain2 2 years ago
I think the vid is great. However you get what you put time into. I will ride some of my horses without saddles and bridles too. Its all about reading and animal and
applying the right training. We all love our horses some just bond better then others. Happy Trails
windsofcolor 2 years ago
Everyone that has made horrible comments- why are you watching this then? Parelli is natural horsemanship- and understanding what the HORSE is saying- using reverse-cycology / horse cycology not what we think the horse is saying!
Parellijelly 2 years ago
Skippy, Pat does not prey on the weak, he looks for horse people that have heart and desire to do what it takes to get there and emmulate him. He has given many students full scholarships and among them handicapped people. Lauren Barwick, the lady who was crippled by a bale of hay, Canada's Silver and Gold Paralympic Champion, is one. Silke Valentin lives in a motorized cart and is a 3-Star Instructor in Germany, for another example. As far as Clinton goes, he's to rough on the horses.
pmarzo1 2 years ago
Skippy, Alaina isn't trying to argue with you. I agree ribbons are not as important as the relationship with your horse and I have given away a truck load of ribbons and trophies. I was just the best of the worst that was there that day. Now, to some people the ribbons are important so if they are to you, ok, but don't get mad at us who aren't impressed by them. I agree Pat overcharges. Clinton gets people hurt. I have seen it. Try Mark Rashid or Buck Brannaman. No fluff. Great horsemen.
naturalhorsewoman1 2 years ago
well he's a greatt reining horse for sure
BootsChapsCowboyHats 2 years ago
Im so happy Im going next year to him as pat parelli student Im so lucky =)
xXMetalCoreFreakXx 2 years ago
wow that was amazing.Every horse owner who want a propa relationship with a horse should do it. I av a haflinger and 2 years ago i couldnt even get him out of his stable without him tryin to kill me and i couldnt ride cause he kept chuckin me off but now that i do parelli i can ride him with just a halter and bareback. It really works you just need the passion to do it and to do it the right way, every horese is differnt xx
Emma3968 2 years ago
cool! im only a beginner at parelli =( but my friends down the field say im doing really well...... 1 day im gonna be doing that! also there is someone AMAZING at parelli and she just gave me a lesson...... it really inspired me and help me, so id just like to say thanks her!
bethanygoggog 2 years ago
das ist wares reiten...
lolchantallol 2 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
Ummm really. Not impressed. Any well trained saddle horse that has respect can be ridden that way. Watch how he uses he feet, legs, hands, and seat as cues. It may look like something amazing but it is just basic communication. Look when the horse backs up- how he puts his heels up to the shoulders and shakes back and forth. That is a signal to the horse- back up- or get spurs to the shoulder- I have seen this before- this guy just makes fluffy names for basic training.
Skippytrucking 2 years ago
yes nice 2 c all ur videos riding like tht huh? -.-
btw "nice slow galop" is otherwhys known as a canter (english) or lope (western)
elliexena 2 years ago
First of I NEVER said my video's were tutorials on how to ride bridleless- I can make one if you would like. For your info- I am a western rider, and have worked on one of the biggest ranches in the state of OR. Gallop is the same thing as a "lope" moron- it's simply a shortened term for gallop. Maybe you should try reading comments before you comment on them.
Skippytrucking 2 years ago
You're an idiot to think this isn't impressive. I'd like to see a video of you doing this as smoothly as Pat.
It's definitely my goal to be this good with horses someday :)
AlainaJoy44 2 years ago
Let me do some research to find out the age, and sex of the horse used. Depending on results I can find a horse to use and in 30 days give you a video. Perhaps you need to get out a little- go to a reining clinic- it's much simpler than it looks. I know the world is full of silly horse owners who sit back and judge- but I have more experience than most.
I'd like to see a video of YOU even riding- I can record a video my trunk of ribbons and awards.......Can you?
Skippytrucking 2 years ago
I appreciate your concern for my need to get "out"...I've spent plenty of time in the traditional horse world. I spent the first 7 years of my equestrian training there. Please don't make assumptions such as that. =)
Ribbons? Sure, I could. I'm sure your would out-do me though. I spent a few summers showing, however, I haven't in quite a while; it's not really my scene. Awards seem a bit shallow in my eyes...I care more about the relationship I have with my horse...Congrats on yours though. =)
AlainaJoy44 2 years ago
Well, Im sure ribbons and awards are shallow to someone who hasn't earned them........But, I as well prefer a great relationship with my horse- and that's all Im trying to point out- it's not amazing that pat can ride a horse bridless- it's called time and training- it's not magic- most riders simply fail to spend enough training time with their own horse. Tack free riding should not seem out of reach -and amazing- instead- a motivater for riders to spend more time learning how to communicate.
Skippytrucking 2 years ago
Fair enough...Pat never claims it to be magic. He's a teacher, teaching people to teach horses. He encourages people to believe it's easily in their reach as well. Glad you feel the same way that he does. =)
AlainaJoy44 2 years ago
One more thing, regarding your comment on my lack of shiny ribbons and stunning awards...I'm 17. Based on your profile, you're an adult, and from what I gather, well-respected in the horse world. You can't compare the awards of someone such as yourself to a child like me...I haven't had near the time you have. I'm completely sure you have more awards than me; but please do not make implications that I have none, or that I don't deserve any. Thanks.
AlainaJoy44 2 years ago
What? YOU said you had no ribbons- I implied nothing. Nor did I say you can't earn them. Im 28, and have literally been around the horse world to Europe and back again. I give my time- FREE- to alot of owners who could not otherwise afford training. If you don't wish to be judged as an adult- you can always say your a teenager before you begin to argue. I believe Pat prays on the weak and charges too much- I do however recommend Clinton Anderson- he is to the point and has no need for fluff.
Skippytrucking 2 years ago
It comes down to this: A horseman does not care about the trophies on your shelf that show what a judge thought of you one day. A horseman cares about what your horse thought of you that day.
naturalhorsewoman1 2 years ago
@naturalhorsewoman1
AND..........................I dont recall ever saying I dont have a good relationship with my horses- .......Im glad we agree on how much we love our horses -Prizes are an added bonus -- but you cant win unless you love your horse and they love you back-- trust is the only way
Skippytrucking 2 years ago
I like your comment that is so true.
windsofcolor 2 years ago
Oh god, I love how Parelli acolytes pounce at you whenever you say that Parelli is just mediocre horsemanship xDD So great! I'm probably gonna get a dozen little thumb-downs too.
Open your eyes folks! A fancy stick to prod your horse around till he learns to move before it sticks into his side isn't "how to build a relationship". And touching a horse all over? Will you trust someone who comes up to you and strokes your body all over out of the blue? Come on, have a little wit here. =)
kanamoon 2 years ago
@kanamoon
you see what you dont understand is that you are thinking of a horse in a HUMANS perspective, however, you may or may not of noticed that horses are horses, and humans are humans, and horses are also prey animals, and they think completley different to us!
Parellijelly 1 year ago
@Parellijelly Hmm, I see what you mean when you say that I'm thinking of a horse in a human's perspective. Except, horses don't really touch each other all over to gain each other's trust or respect; some horses just don't appreciate being touched, but that doesn't stop them from trusting you. They'll just 'tolerate' it. I wanted to express how "touchy-feely" the Parelli method is, and how horses aren't so touchy-feely in their natural state; they dance around each other, using energy.
kanamoon 1 year ago
@kanamoon * In my eyes, they use their natural energy to express their desires; most horses won't touch you when they want you to get away. In the wild they move symmetrically to their leader without having nuzzled him all over beforehand. I don't really believe that prodding/pulling the horse till it understands is the way, it sounds like training rather than communication; you're still relying on the physical, when horses are so responsive to simple presence, energy and expression.
kanamoon 1 year ago
I could show this to anyone at my barn and I know exactly what they would say "Wow! That guy is a great rider with a really well trained horse!" Which is true, but the truth is that not only are they both very well trained, but they both really trust each other. You got to admire that!
dreaminofhorses10 2 years ago
MEGA !!!!
KarolinaSowa 2 years ago
wonderful :')
chtitviolette 2 years ago
Thanks for posting this video.
Parelli Rules Full Stop!!!
I love Natural Horsemanship and I am just getting the hang of it now!
Recomend any one who has a horse to try these methods. Once you get the hang of it, it realy is quite simple but very effective. The horses love it aswell. Just look how responsive this horse is in the video.
Magnificent!!!!
TheNativeDancer 2 years ago
If you look at the horses ears, you can see one flicking back and forth at one point, showing that he is listening and responding to the rider
OoHSuMtHiNgShInEy 2 years ago
AMAZING
CynaRed 2 years ago
So why is he using spurs?
inmadz 2 years ago 9
@inmadz it makes the riders leg aids easier for the horse to respond to. (instead of kicking the horse hard) especially when the rider is not using reins, he needs all the control he can get :)
purplepony24 1 year ago
@inmadz If youre a good rider, you can act more precise with them to your horse, without hurting it.
xXElelChanXx 1 year ago
@inmadz
I asked him that question in person. he said for precision.
jessicalana91 1 year ago
@inmadz To give as precision signals as possible.
KirscheLovesMusic 1 year ago 5
@inmadz um, if you are trying to imply that he is not using a natural approach or "hurting" the horse, you are completely wrong. It's not the tools he uses, it's how he uses them and if the tools are painless. In this case, spurs are not painful or aggressive to the horse if you use them with care and when needed. If you watch the video again, you can see that he is not jabbing the horse, or even kicking the horse.
romeoiona 1 year ago
hes my idle :)
whatdoesitmatter14 2 years ago
idol...
goldnhorseshoes 2 years ago
I love Pat & Linda Parelli.
I loved, I love and I'll love they!
I don't speak English, sorry. :)
KonskaGrzywa 2 years ago
I like paralli. i think that his equipment is extreamly over priced, but i like the methods he uses. it may not work for all people or horses, but i like it and accept it.
i think that some horse people need to get over the fact that there are different methods of getting a horse to do wat you want people seem to think that only there way of training is the right way its sad because there is so many methods out there that get amazing results i support all training methods that are non curlety
horseygalgem 2 years ago 14
@horseygalgem I agree about parelli. Though I don't like all his methods, and the use of spurs. I have taken his methods and changed what I needed to make it my own. I am working at becoming a horse trainer and have studied many different trainers. All the horses I've worked with have responded great to parelli. His method is very indepth and goes deeper than actual training.
wolfsvain2 1 year ago
@horseygalgem Very well stated! That is exactly my sentiment...
GoldenLuckyCharm 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
@horseygalgem; Very well stated! That is exactly my sentiment...
GoldenLuckyCharm 1 year ago
i do parelli and it will only work if you do it correctly cause what some people do is they will do alot of the things right but then they might run out of ideas and do something stupid.
parelli does work for all horses and stallions, but only works if the person understands that it takes patience,love,language and leadership.
rockerbill 1 year ago
@horseygalgem i like the parallis. there extreamly agenst curlety
CherokeeCheval 1 year ago
Parelli is a miracle worker!
Countrygal3595 2 years ago 9
On dirait un spectacle de clown...
Blague à part, il ne se tient pas très bien à cheval... Même si ça reste une belle performance!
statarius 2 years ago
Euh Statarius tu ne retiens que ça de la video ? Sa position ?? Il est quand même relativement grand pour ce cheval, ça peut l'expliquer.
Et puis la video n'est pas là pour juger de comment il se tient à cheval, mais sur la performance, qui oui, est belle. Même très belle !!!!!!!
Et sinon je ne trouve pas que ce soit un spectacle de clown, bien au contraire.. Il ne me semble pas qu'il demande à son cheval de se cabrer, de se coucher, de faire la jambette, de monter sur un plot ou autre !
shakiira53 2 years ago
Wow cool! I love it nice horse.
Mizzybelly 2 years ago
I saw Pat get dumped on his keester right in front of me once. It was soo funny. He was showing off, and was spinning so fast he spun off. No kicking to spin, tho. Parelli technique is awesome, even if Pat is an arrogant smart alec.
IJustHadAGreatIdea 2 years ago 4
Pat Parelli is my god :D
<3
Alvarifan 2 years ago 4
i like it, but i think you kick the horse too much when you spinn it.
annacortez15 2 years ago
this is amazing!!
Izucha11176 2 years ago
cool horse ana beautiful
emilka1120 2 years ago
Crazy gait changes!
bellsandshells 2 years ago
every show should be parelli
nikkyspirit 2 years ago 3
cool!
jumphorsejump 2 years ago
Wow!! I'm working on doing this with my horse.. it's amazing fun!
DancesWithHorses123 2 years ago
same iv got my horse almost done level 1 its AMAZING
countrystar88 2 years ago
Good Job! I am doing level 2 right now. I am already riding bridless! Its amazing!!
mariahandmeT 2 years ago
fantastic, me and my horse melody are in training for this, shes really good, she responds to a neck strap and nothing else, and will do an almost dead stop if i give a gentle tug on the strap, some times she just wants to mess around so i have to put ehr bridle back on, but, she wuldnt be the amazing horse she is now if it werent for her being a lil demon :D
when i went to see these guys it was fantastic, i hope to se them again this year :D xx
xXeMokiDXxMCRXx 2 years ago
I used to think horses don't want to be with us and don't want to be ridden.
But now, I see they DO want to be with us. But only if WE PLAY, NOT WORK WITH THEM AND THEY WANT TO BE OUR PARTNERS, BUT ONLY IF WE DON'T TREAT THEM ONLY AS A RIDING OBJECT. And when they realise that all we want is a good relationship, some play and cooperation,... well you know how it is. It's a big difference. :) It just puts a smile on your face, doesn't it?
tajgatjasa 2 years ago 4
wow, i wish i can be 1/10 as good one day
FreddyOgSigrid 2 years ago
I love this :)
OddAmanda 2 years ago
WAAAAW
4riinee 2 years ago
wow. someone looked at my horse to do that...lol i dont think he would have been the best candidate though...cool thoug
XxXJanessaJXxX 2 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
Its not like any of the parelli people jump on any horse and they're such great riders because they do this. Anyone who can ride decently, knows the signals, and gets on a horse that has been trained like this from the day they were born can do this. Dont flip out everyone who is in love with parelli but i mean honestly, if Pat himself got on my horse and tried to do that he would be dead.
xRebelRiderx 2 years ago
i'm sorry but if you judge Parelli as a rider, I think you're missing the point; Parelli isn't a rider. He's a horseman. Horsemanship is infinitely more important than riding in my opinion and I rather that my horse wants to be around me much more than i want to *make* him do a pirouette. But hey, thats just me.
blameitonKATIE 2 years ago
fact: he is on the horse and moving. he is riding it.
I totally agree with xRebelRider. I'm sure that if Parelli had my horse for a long, long time she could do some of this.
Another thing is that horses never want to be worked or ridden. They would all (yes all of them) rather be out in a pasture.
natural horsemanship is awsome! but we need to stop turining it into a cult.
NothinToIt 2 years ago
Sorry NothinTolt but I totally disagree. I have a horse that LOVES to be ridden and goes into a depression if I miss a day. Seriously, she wont eat. Plus he isn't just riding that horse. That horse is loving what it is doing. Just look at the way it responds. Its relaxed and very happy to listen.
JessicaLynnGardner 2 years ago
my pony is relaxed while shes working too. i can ask her to do five lead changes down a quarter line. shes really good at her job =] but i don't like when people believe horses can't be happy or quick to respond unless their doing natural horsemanship.
i'll have to upload a vid of her lead changes and roll-backs sometime. probably once it stops being so rainy and dark all the time.
NothinToIt 2 years ago
They would rather be out in the pasture unless you make riding FUN.
SassaSavvy 2 years ago 2
Pat doesn't just jump on a horse and do this. He prepares the horse before. Give him a few hours with you horse and most likely he would be riding bridless. Maybe not spinning or galloping, but riding bridless.
SassaSavvy 2 years ago 2
He is just so good and patient ! I admire him !
PocoZeph 2 years ago 4
Wow! To jest Cudowne, tak świetnie porozumiewać się z Koniem!
LoVeHoRseS142 2 years ago