How to Catch a Herd of Horses Using High Horse - Rick Gore Horsemanship
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I love the white and brown overo paint foal. It is just beautiful color.
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All Comments (9)
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We let our horses play in the rain but when it lightening we bring them in. We have had two horses struck and killed by lightening so we play it on the safe side. Great videos! Very helpful
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@llainie4 according to equus magazine the following plants are cause for concern either because they are so toxic to horses that ingesting small amounts causes harm, or because repeated browsing over weeks or months can cause serious illness or death: purple locoweed, poison hemlock, tansy ragwort, johnsongrass, oleander, red maple leaves, water hemlock, white snakeroot, yellow star thistle, yew, and this isn't in the magazine, but foxtail is a pain in the butt too
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there's lots of poison ivy and sumac out here. I try to keep clear of it. Thanks for the info..I'm looking forward to your next video!
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Hey Rick, maybe she saw you driving up and decided to take them in, hehe, keep up the good work
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OMG RAIN! hurry everyone, the horses are gonna die! i heard rain, upon contact with horse hair, turns into acid
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Hi Rick most of your videos have a beautiful back ground with the mountains. I live on the east coast on Cape Cod. I love watching your videos and just want to say thanks for helping me make my horses life a lot easyer. I went for a trail ride today and every thing is nice and green. Is there anything I shouldn't let him nibble on while trail riding? I like to stop and give him a break and share a snack :)
llainie4 8 months ago
@llainie4 : depends on your area. Most horses know what to eat if they are not starving and have a choice they normally will not eat something they don't like.
horseawareness 8 months ago