Baby following human at 10 hours! Amazing! You can tell mom trusts you too... "go ahead, hug my baby, I'm just gonna grab some chow here." Beautiful!!! Your farm looks amazing too.
Bonita yegua.y preciosa cria. La cria va a tener tremendo color paso y tremendo temperamento.eso es lo mas esencial del verdadero caballo de paso fino. Sigan mi consejo y veran un futuro campeon. Suerte desde ponce puerto Rico🇵🇷
This guy is doing it right getting the filly used to interacting with humans and accepting being touched on day one. There will be a lot fewer problems later on!
A cowboy buys a horse from the town pastor. The pastor explains, “To make the horse go, you gotta yell, ‘Thank God!’ And to make it stop, yell, ‘Hallelujah.’” The cowboy rides away. He rides all day and starts to nod off in the saddle when he notices he is about to ride straight over a cliff. Searching his memory, he yells to the horse, “Hallelujah! Hallelujah!” The horse grinds to a stop just at the edge of the cliff. The cowboy wipes the sweat off his forehead. “Phew!” the cowboy sighs. “Thank God!”
Why poor mother? She is not under stress or anxious. Foaling sometimes takes hours and she was with her baby in a peaceful environment until we had to pull her into the barn to have the vet come and look her over. This is just video of her being natural and inquisitive. If moms and babies are “just left alone “ and not watched, they can deteriorate quickly and if something is wrong they need medical attention. So I realize you know nothing about foaling out mares but don’t assume stuff by short videos you don’t understand. It’s also very good practice to imprint the foal within a few hours of being born. This video is very old and that filly grew up to love being around people because her 1 interaction with humans was with love.
Ordinary? My sister had Paso Finos. They are a beautiful and graceful horse, EXCELLENT trail horses, VERY sure-footed, good endurance, mild mannered, easily desensitized to any surroundings... I've never had one: take off, spook at anything, buck/rear up, trip/stumble, be unwilling to any rider request. They don't always gait... they do what you ask of them. IMO, if they are not used as a "show" horse, and become accustomed to good old-fashioned trail riding, they will do a normal ground-covering walk. If you "collect" their head, they will gait when you ask. They will trot. They have a fast smooth gallop. We began a tradition of one race per ride... they are fun as hell to ride and pretty darn fast too for a smaller horse.