THAL - trust&human&animal=love

THAL - trust&human&animal=love We help animals and their owners in finding better ways to live together through means of TTEAM, Connected riding, energetic osteopathy & zoopharmacognosy.

Ne moremo posplošit človeških kompleksov na živali...
28/12/2018

Ne moremo posplošit človeških kompleksov na živali...

Dominance hierarchies, alpha positions or leadership in social groups of horses are man-made concepts that should not form the basis of human–horse interactions. Horses are social animals that mainly interact with each other on a bilateral level (i.e. each horse has an individual relationship with...

Ker sem v fazi prav počasnega plazenja s porodniške, potrpite prosim še malo :) Zaenkrat sem še vedno dosegljiva le na s...
14/12/2018

Ker sem v fazi prav počasnega plazenja s porodniške, potrpite prosim še malo :) Zaenkrat sem še vedno dosegljiva le na sms (040 850 095), ker sem na Fb le na ene 4 mesece (če). Se pa že pripravlja ogromno materiala za akcijo spomladi...prišepnem tudi, da nisem več one-girl-band, ampak nas je kar cela gručica punc, kjer vsaka doprinese svoj kos znanja...v glavnem Thal je poln novosti :D

21/05/2018

GOING IN CIRCLES

When horses roamed the plains, they did exactly that: they roamed. They drifted along, grazing and mostly walking in straight lines. When horses worked for a living, they continued to walk those straight lines, pulling a plow from one end of the field to the other, pulling a milk wagon from one end of town to the other, or pushing cattle from one end of Texas to the other. As they transitioned from work animals to recreation vehicles, they generally continued walking, jogging, or cantering in reasonably straight lines, going from one end of a trail to the other.

Of course, not all work or recreation involved strict, straight line movement. They were asked to cut cattle, which often required them to work laterally, with sudden starts and stops and jolts and jerks. They were asked to perform military/dressage maneuvers, with significant lateral movement and transitions. They were asked to foxhunt, which required them to work over fences and around obstacles. They were asked to participate in sport, such as polo, which again required stops, starts, bursts of speed and lateral work. And, of course, they were asked to race, which required speed, but generally on straight line tracks or long ovals.

As they transitioned into show and competition arenas, however, they shifted away from straight line activity. We changed the game and asked them to become focused athletes and runway models. In doing so, we put them into smaller and smaller spaces and asked them to perform more and more patterned behaviors. Basically, we put them into patterned, repetitive movements—mostly in circles... little, tight circles. And they started to fall apart, experiencing more and more issues with joint problems, soft tissue injuries, and general lameness concerns.

We blamed their failures and breakdowns on bad breeding practices and poor genetics; we blamed their failures on bad farriers and inadequate veterinarians; we blamed their breakdowns on poor training and conditioning, poor horse keeping practices, bad nutritional practices, and any number of other things. And, while none of these should be disallowed, the fact remains that we changed the game and put them into those little, tiny circles and repetitive activities. So, let’s look at equine anatomy, and specifically, let’s look at that in relation to athletic maneuvers and activities.

First and foremost, the horse is designed to be heavy on the forehand. We fight against that concept, asking them to engage their hindquarters, to “collect,” and to give us impulsion. And they’re capable of doing so… but they’re not designed or “programmed” to sustain such activity for any length of time. When they do this in “natural” settings and situations, they’re playing, they’re being startled or frightened, or they’re showing off. None of these are sustained activities.

Likewise, when they do engage, they’re generally bolting forward, jumping sideways, or leaping upwards. And they're typically doing that with a burst of speed and energy, not in slow motion. Ultimately, their design is simply not conducive to circular work. Each joint, from the shoulder to the ground is designed for flexion and extension—for forward motion, not lateral motion. In fact, these joints are designed to minimize and restrict lateral or side-to-side movement.

So it's not always about animals ;) We love plants too!
08/05/2018

So it's not always about animals ;) We love plants too!

‍‌Researchers discover trees have a “heartbeat,” it’s just so slow we’ve never noticed before Until now, scientists thought water moved through trees by osmosis, in a somewhat continuous manner. Now they’ve discovered the trunks and branches of trees are actually contracting and expand...

26/03/2018

We are so close to launching Separation Anxiety- Mission: Possible, our very first online course for guardians and we could not be more excited!

This extremely comprehensive course includes lessons designed to help guardians better understand separation anxiety and how to carefully implement their dog’s treatment. We've included a manual to help students get started on building their daily training exercises as well as detailed information about the desensitization process, how technology has allowed us to make great strides in assessing anxiety thresholds and writing training plans, along with expert interviews and so much more!

Stay tuned in the coming days or sign up for the newsletter here: https://lorinanan.com/dog-separation-anxiety/ for more information! To kick things off, here's a graphic we had made by the one and only Doggie Drawings by Lili Chin to get the ball rolling! Please feel free to share far and wide!

Should be understood by all! Great tips!
26/01/2018

Should be understood by all! Great tips!

This week's Tellington TTouch® Tip comes from Kathy Cascade, the Queen of working with reactive dogs!

Kathy Cascade’s four keys to success in her Reactivity Reduction Exercises are:

Remove pressure from the neck. Getting pressure off the dog’s neck is a vital step in helping the dog feel safe. The last thing that a reactive or fearful dog needs is constriction of his airway or anything that promotes feeling trapped. Using two points of connection is also useful as a safety measure for dogs that tend to slip out of their harnesses or for dogs that redirect onto their handlers.

Allow the dog to have enough space. A larger space gives the dog more options than a confined space. There must be enough space to allow the dog to feel safe.

Start with a neutral dog. It is especially important to work with a dog that can remain calm and non-reactive to another dog that may bark or lunge.

Check your own emotions. Handlers must be able to remain unemotional and calm, no matter how their dogs react.

Kathy believes that we give the reactive dog new choices by not making him feel trapped by a tight leash or a confined space. By giving him new experiences of feeling both safe and balanced in the presence of other dogs we can begin “building trust, one experience at a time”.

In cela flota je še takih, ki se promovirajo kot konjem prijazni trenerji ali jahači, pa se brez slabe vesti še vedno sp...
18/11/2017

In cela flota je še takih, ki se promovirajo kot konjem prijazni trenerji ali jahači, pa se brez slabe vesti še vedno spravijo na 2 ali 3 letnika v imenu dobre vzgoje :(

This is an absolute must read for every horse owner and especially those with younger horses!
People can certainly debate and argue over different training techniques and styles but we can not argue the science.

"Owners and trainers need to realize there's a definite, easy-to-remember schedule of fusion - and then make their decision as to when to ride the horse based on that rather than on the external appearance of the horse.
For there are some breeds of horse - the Quarter Horse is the premier among these - which have been bred in such a manner as to LOOK mature long before they actually ARE mature. This puts these horses in jeopardy from people who are either ignorant of the closure schedule, or more interested in their own schedule (for futurities or other competitions) than they are in the welfare of the animal.

The process of fusion goes from the bottom up. In other words, the
lower down toward the hoofs you look, the earlier the growth plates will have fused; and the higher up toward the animal's back you look, the later. The growth plate at the top of the coffin bone (the most distal bone of the limb) is fused at birth. What this means is that the coffin bones get no TALLER after birth (they get much larger around, though, by another mechanism). That's the first one. In order after that:

2. Short pastern - top & bottom between birth and 6 mos.
3. Long pastern - top & bottom between 6 mos. And 1 yr.
4. Cannon bone - top & bottom between 8 mos. And 1.5 yrs.
5. Small bones of knee - top & bottom on each, between 1.5 and 2.5 yrs.
6. Bottom of radius-ulna - between 2 and 2.5 yrs.
7. Weight-bearing portion of glenoid notch at top of radius - between 2.5 and 3 yrs.
8. Humerus - top & bottom, between 3 and 3.5 yrs.
9. Scapula - glenoid or bottom (weight-bearing) portion - between 3.5 and 4 yrs.
10. Hindlimb - lower portions same as forelimb
11. Hock - this joint is "late" for as low down as it is; growth plates on the tibial & fibular tarsals don't fuse until the animal is four (so
the hocks are a known "weak point" - even the 18th-century literature warns against driving young horses in plow or other deep or sticky footing, or jumping them up into a heavy load, for danger of spraining their hocks)
12. Tibia - top & bottom, between 2.5 and 3 yrs.
13. Femur - bottom, between 3 and 3.5 yrs.; neck, between 3.5 and 4 yrs.; major and 3rd trochanters, between 3 and 3.5 yrs.
14. Pelvis - growth plates on the points of hip, peak of croup (tubera sacrale), and points of buttock (tuber ischii), between 3 and 4 yrs.

and what do you think is last? The vertebral column, of course. A
normal horse has 32 vertebrae between the back of the skull and the root of the dock, and there are several growth plates on each one, the most important of which is the one capping the centrum.

These do not fuse until the horse is at least 5 1/2 years old (and this figure applies to a small-sized, scrubby, range-raised mare. The taller your horse and the longer its neck, the later full fusion will occur. And for a male - is this a surprise? -- You add six months. So, for example, a 17-hand TB or Saddlebred or WB gelding may not be fully mature until his 8th year - something that
owners of such individuals have often told me that they "suspected" ).

The lateness of vertebral "closure" is most significant for two
reasons.
One: in no limb are there 32 growth plates!
Two: The growth plates in the limbs are (more or less) oriented perpendicular to the stress of the load passing through them, while those of the vertebral chain are oriented parallel to weight placed upon the horse's back.

Bottom line: you can sprain a horse's back (i.e., displace the
vertebral growth plates) a lot more easily than you can sprain those located in the limbs.

And here's another little fact: within the chain of vertebrae, the
last to fully "close" are those at the base of the animal's neck
(that's why the long-necked individual may go past 6 yrs. to achieve
full maturity). So you also have to be careful - very careful - not to
yank the neck around on your young horse, or get him in any situation where he strains his neck."

Dr. Deb Bennett

ABOUT DR. DEB: Deb Bennett, Ph.D., is a 1984 graduate of the University of Kansas, and until 1992 was with the Smithsonian Institution. She is known as an authority on the classification, evolution, anatomy, and biomechanics of fossil and living horses. Her research interests include the history of domestication and world bloodlines and breeds. She teaches unique anatomy short-courses and horsemanship clinics designed to be enjoyable to riders of all breeds and disciplines, and all levels of skill.

Internationally known for her scientific approach to conformation analysis, "Dr. Deb" has made a career out of conveying a kind of "X-ray vision" for bone structure to breeders and buyers. Her background in biomechanics helps her clearly explain how conformation relates to performance ability. Dr. Deb's clinics often feature real bones and interesting biomechanical models.

02/10/2017

Punishment doesn’t fix any problem, because it exclusively focus on removing something desirable or adding something undesirable following an unwanted behaviour. It doesn’t address the cause for the unwanted behaviour or the reinforcement for the behaviour. It merely superposes a punishment, which if lucky may mask the “symptom” but will never cure the “disease”. It’s like covering an open, bleeding wound with a cloth, rather than cleaning it, closing it and applying proper dressing. Eventually the blood will stain the cloth because the person only took care of hiding the blood rather than to address the source of the bleeding.

If your animal bites, kicks, escapes, damages property, refuse to do [insert thing you want him to do] etc. punishment isn’t the ethical long-term solution you are looking for.

To find out more reasons not to punish animals watch this animated video: https://youtu.be/MwfnG8ckzKY (English subtitles are available by clicking the CC icon)

Also a quick reminder that tonight and tomorrow are the last days to order your copy of our book from our website with 10% going to the Empowered Equines charity: https://www.fairhorsemanship.com/our-books/

Če kdo še vedno ugiba zakaj sem tako zagreta za Connected riding in zakaj ga s takim veseljem delim naprej!
25/08/2017

Če kdo še vedno ugiba zakaj sem tako zagreta za Connected riding in zakaj ga s takim veseljem delim naprej!

Why Connected Riding? Because, it will transform you and your horse!!

I think I should post some photos of ppl leading ppl on beeline and then how they led horses after that :) lots of fun!
23/05/2017

I think I should post some photos of ppl leading ppl on beeline and then how they led horses after that :) lots of fun!

Tellington Method Groundwork - The Beeline and Labyrinth with Robyn Hood, International Instructor

!!! a must look for all my riders !!!
06/04/2017

!!! a must look for all my riders !!!

Biomechanically the pelvis and shoulder are linked. This is what is referred to as a Myofascial sling.

The hamstrings starting from the tibia then insert into the Ischial tuberosity. This then continues along as the Sacro-tuberous ligament and then through the thoraco-Lumbar fascia. This then continues to the Latissimus dorsi which then inserts into the opposite scapula and humerus.

Therefore your Hamstrings actually attach to your arms!!!

So....if there is tension through this sling caused from a rotated pelvis, then the infraspinatus (a muscle on the scapula) can go into spasm and so prevents the biomechanical function of the shoulder. This is a common cause of shoulder injuries.

In order to reduce risk of shoulder injuries the pelvis must be in good biomechanical shape.

Therefore if you have shoulder pain, then you will need to have your pelvis assessed.

I'm really not going crazy if I assess your pelvis before looking at your shoulder!

Image: Thomas Myers Anatomy Trains

Great article! Even more reasons why TTEAM and Connected riding exercises along with different modalities of mindful bod...
06/04/2017

Great article! Even more reasons why TTEAM and Connected riding exercises along with different modalities of mindful bodywork is so important.
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Super članek! Še več razlogov, zakaj sta TTEAM in Connected riding delo na tleh skupaj s smiselnimi metodami bodyworka tako zelo pomembni.

The goal of changing a horse’s postural habits to help him move better often derails in the first few minutes of a ride. Why? In the horse’s body, different muscles serve different purposes, and often dressage riders fail to activate the right muscle

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