He or she would be lying down or seem different
The horse has to know you really well and love you.
Well, a simple answer is, "A person who sits on a horse and rides it"But a detailed answer is this:(When I say it, I mean He/She)A true horse rider has a good relationship with the horses it rides. It might not necessarily have a horse of its own, but it must understand the horse nature. It should know what the horse is feeling, and how to treat it well, when to praise the horse, or when to scold the horse. It must be able to ride all sorts of horses. Or perhaps, it just rides horse because it is simply their pleasure.
well if you don't know how to answer that question you probably shouldn't have a horse yet sorry
Ask yourself which horse look calm and well trained.
Well the worlds smallest horse breed is a falabella but i don't know what you mean by where?
noone well feel you because you are feeling not her
Well no not really. The horse won't know what he won, but the do tend to know that they won. This is due to the difference in the way the winning horse is handled or treated after a show, they know they won or did good and are being rewarded for it.
Yes it can be. I know a horse named Apache and the name fits him very well.
i don't bloody well know go measure it
The horse wasn't feeling well because of... answer: HAY FEVER (koala, event, feisty, hairdo)
It is important to learn how a horse shows emotion as they talk with their bodies, if a horse is angry and getting ready to kick, you will want to be able to interpret these signals and either avoid the kick or stop it altogether. This applies to anything involving a horse, you need to know when they do or don't like something so that you can figure out how to make the horse happy and avoid conflict and possibly abusive handling that can come from not understanding a horses body language. The funny thing about horses--though there is no humor involved here--is that a horse will readily act out what you are feeling at that moment around that particular horse, no matter if you are aware of what you're feeling at that moment or not. The same horse can show different "emotions" when in contact with different people. A horse does not know any different form of communication than to react according to what others--human or animal--are feeling at that moment. The fact that a horse will readily act as a mirror to what you're feeling is probably the most important thing you must know in understanding how horses show their feelings.
Well a dingle tingle is a feeling you get when you dont know what the tingle is.