This can take time, lots of it. If you are trying to approach a wild or feral horse in the wilderness don't do it, they are not there for you to play around with. If however you have adopted a mustang or other feral type of horse then you'll have to spend the necessary time with it. The horse will most likely be in a pen of sorts. To get it used to you, you should try to spend as much time as possible just sitting close to the enclosure to allow the horse to adjust to you. Once the horse accepts your presence you may star trying to approach the horse from outside the pen by extending your hand. Never offer food, this creates problems later on and can result in lost fingers. If the horse is calm enough after this you can enter the enclosure and stand or sit quietly until the horse accepts you being inside his 'safe zone'. Once this happens you may approach the horse and attempt to touch it like before.
Talk to the person standing next to the horse. He or she will tell you if you can tame him, you can have him. You then get on the horse, and keep your mouse in the circle for a while. When the horse stops, you have earned the horse, and his trust.
Wild horses tend to be a lot faster and stronger. They were born and raised in the wild so they have to be strong to protect itself. A wild horse will have some extra senses that a farm horse may not. Farm horses trust you, but a wild horse, not so much.
They can be. It depends on the horse. any horse including mustangs can be depending on the way they act and on how much they trust a person can be a one person horse.
The person who 'discovered' wild horses would have been cavemen and Neanderthals .The name of the first person to ever see a wild horse is lost to time.
some where in the wild if its a wild horse... other wise its a barn and its not a wild horse.......
The Horse Trust was created in 1886.
well it is not smart to ride a wild horse but wild horse rehab
a "semi-wild" horse.
In "The Horse Breaker" by Javier de Viana, the climax occurs when the horse breaker finally breaks the wild horse and gains its trust. This moment represents the culmination of the horse breaker's efforts, skill, and patience in taming the untamed animal.
Not if your inexperienced with handling and training horses. If you were an experienced horse-person or have done your research on what it takes to tame a wild horse you wouldn't need to ask this question. If you're a newbie and want a horse, get a horse that has seen it all and done it all that you can do anything with without being scared of getting hurt or worse.
Wild Horse Pass is located in Chandler, Arizona. The full physical address for Wild Horse Pass is I-10 and Wild Horse Pass Blvd., Chandler, AZ 85226.
The only true wild horse is the Przewalski's horse.