Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Research Assign.

Research Assignment



Back home seeing Horses around was and still is normal. Their presence made the town more countryside. Growing up seeing this animals made it so adventures. Watching their movements, so smooth and delicate, as they move so natural always caught my attention. The way they behave its more than just being an animal that doesn't have any knowledge. Seeing them walk close by confident, hearing the sound their steps close by or from a few steps away would excite me. It would make me feel like I was riding them. The most exciting thing to watch was, seeing them run so fast. Their hair moving from left to right, making their jumps natural. Running like they were free in the fields, showing this attitude of them being independent. It makes someone feel attached and liberal to them as they go in the moment.




Horses are known by being confident and intelligent. How they carry themselves in the fields when they run free. Every horse has about the same characteristics since there are more than fifty breeds.
Although, there are different type of Horses, they all seem to be a confident and intelligent animal. Fran Lynghaug’s  book of Horse Breeds, shows they type of horses that there are are and their history. For instance, Kiger Monteno  and the Foundation Quarter Horse have a  similarity of having a great intelligence and they are considered to be confident.

Fran Lynghaug
Horse Breeds Standards Guide
First published in 2009 by Voyageur Press, an imprint of MBI Publishing Company
Pg (84-87)



"but the horse and rider cutting clear and free
and strong as the thunderhead that drives them on
or the lightning flashing the rider's cheek, his body
flashed with hail, hail branding the horse's flanks"

Robert Flages 
Crazy Horse (Poem)
Sewanee Review, 00373052, Winter 92, Vol. 100, issue 1.
Database: Academic Search Complete





"they each develop strength and fitness and a working attitude." "strengthening the tendons and liga- ments with lots of walking and trot- ting, and it means strengthening
the muscles in the horse's top line
 John Strassburger
Longeing : More than just " Getting The Bucks Out"
Source: Horse J 18 no1 Ja2011 p.10-13
ISSN: 1097-6949
Publisher: Active Interest Media 




No comments:

Post a Comment