If you are referring to their actual "talking" to each other, it is difficult to get a horse to whinny on cue unless you have a horse that will whinny for its pasture mates when taken to the barn or vice versa, you can also use feed, I know my horses will whinny any time they see me with the feed pans. However, if you are talking about making a horse look like it is talking, as done in the old Mr Ed tv show, a little peanut butter on the inside lips will work.
In horse talk TB means thoroughbred.
Horses don't ever really talk like a human, but they communicate with each other by neighing!
Answer"You can lead a horse to water, but not make it drink" is just a saying for trying to talk to someone but you cant make them do something
to make a horse sound effect you would talk into it while doing it up and down the scale into your flute and play this note:3rd octave bflat
We talk about their jumping references.
He could have but I have yet to find that account in the Bible and I've read all the Gospels.
legs
It has legs
legs
just relax. horses sense fear. you can talk to them which is relaxing for both you and the horse. Standing far away will often leead to bad habits so just stay a safe distance. HAVE FUNNN! being with a horse should not be a chore, it is a privilage. :]
How do you act around a horse? Be calm: a horse can sense if you are calm, scared or nervous, so if you were nervous the horse would be too, so make sure that you are calm. First meeting: hold out your hand so that the horse can sniff it, and if it seems to trust you it is safe to pat it. Make sure it knows where you are: the horse must know where you are at all times. If you walk around behind it, for example, make sure you have your hand resting on its back so that the horse knows where you are. Otherwise it might kick you. Pat firmly: make sure you pat the horse firmly, not too hard as to push it but not so soft as to tickle it. A horse loves a scratch behind the ears and on the neck. On a horse you have just met, try not to pat it's head. And make sure you never pat just above his back legs - that spot is very ticklish! Talking: talk calmly and sensibly, and don't shout around them. When you want to talk to it, make sure you let the horse know you are friendly, and you aren't angry or upset with it - talk to the horse in a friendly calm voice. A few tips: if you are nervous, make sure you have someone that knows about horses, so you can ask them questions and advice. If you don't think the horse is going to be friendly, don't chance it. Stand back and ask someone to help. Hope the advice helped!
Pretend it is just practice. Talk to your horse. It'll calm you and the horse down..