The Merging of Horses and Humans
Convergent social and communicative
characteristics drew humans and horses together. In a sophisticated blending of
group survival, a curious and social clade of horses merged into humankind's social structure ten to twenty thousand
years ago or so.
Our contemporary relationship with horses as companions and
performers can be aptly appreciated through an understanding of the
evolutionary processes that impelled horses and humans to merge together in the
first place. The shared social traits and communication abilities continue to
facilitate a mutually beneficial existence. These days horses sustain our
dreams, and maintain man's connection with nature. To better understand the
social sphere of horses is to better understand one's relationship with horses.
Horsemanship remains slipping into a horse's social circle, to pair bond with the horse. The domestication process began tens of thousands of years ago when groups of horses and Neolithic people began sharing the grasslands of northern Eurasia. Before merging their groups together, horses and humans and dogs independently developed the communication and social skills to enhance group survival. Similar social goals facilitated a merging of the three species. Group survival became shared group survival. Dogs provided protection. Dogs and people cleared the grasslands of predators. Interested horses came closer, and became more tolerant, reaping the grazing safety. The hunting of horses shifted to the herding of horses, and in time this led to milking and stabling, breeding and riding, the most delightful animal pairing imaginable.
To grasp how man and horse societies may have
merged long ago is to appreciatethe contemporary horse/rider relationship. To
develop positive relationships with the horse, one must come into an awareness
of the long evolved social nature of horses. Horsemanship merges human nature
with the nature of the horse. The language of horsemanship allows horses and
humans to achieve pairings that achieve far greater accomplishments than the
sum of horse and rider would allow.
The social nature of horses is one of constant
awareness. Constant awareness is essential for group survival. The landscape
must be surveyed as the group grazes collectively connected. The horseperson is
best served to blend into the survival construct of the horse to achieve willing
partnerships. Willing partnerships form the basis of the cooperative survival
construct of the horse. Cooperative partnerships facilitate survival of horse
and rider. Horses know to work together with other horses—provided they were
taught to be a horse by other horses (appropriate socialization)—and can be
taught to work together with a rider or handler.
Horses living in harems in natural settings remain
constantly aware of all the other horses in the herd, behavior learned and
taught within the herd. Socialization teaches survival behaviors to growing
horses. Mankind capitalizes on the horse's survival behaviors to train and pair
with horses. Successful horsetrainers train horses as the mare trains the foal.
Horses are all about learning and awareness. Horses are born to learn. Horses
are born to be aware of others to facilitate their learning. Horses learn to be
horses from the mare and herd, the same learning and teaching emulated in
horsetraining.
Awareness is essential for learning, and also for
surveillance. Except for brief spells of sleep and play, horses constantly
observe their surroundings for any unwelcome developments, such as the approach
of predators. Predators include anything with which the horse is unfamiliar.
All unfamiliar creatures, places, and things are considered suspect and
possible dangers. Neophobia is the term used to describe this survival trait.
Most horses are innately fearful of all new
things. This is normal and expected behavior. Horses constantly survey their
surroundings with their stellar vision. They see by day or night, and nearly
360°. Eyes set high in their head, horses graze and gaze, they watch. The
grazing nipping and chewing motion rotates their head enough to see behind them
on a periodic basis. When not grazing or dozing, horses focus on watching. When
dozing or sleeping, others horses watch for them. All horses need other horses
for behavioral health. Foals raised by the mare and herd in a grazing setting
develop into easily trainable animals. It is the herd of mares and foals that
teaches thoroughbreds and other breeds to run at speed in close company,
horseslong evolved flight strategy, flight in numbers. The mares and cohorts
give growing horses the confidence to run by and through other horses at speed.
Horses learn how to move from other horses. They learn how to see and graze,
and perhaps most importantly, how to communicate with others as taught by other
horses. This is socialization. Please appreciate the necessity of socialization
in the development of normal equine behaviour, please.
Dr Gustafson is an equine veterinarian, veterinary behaviorist, and novelist. He helps refine horse and dog training methods to accommodate the inherent nature and behavior of horses and dogs. Applied veterinary behavior enhances optimum health, performance, soundness, contentment, and longevity in animal athletes.
Natural approaches to development, training, nutrition, and conditioning sustain equine health and enhance performance. Behavioral and nutritional enrichment strategies enhance the lives of stabled horses. Training and husbandry from the horse's perspective result in content, cooperative horses. DrSid provides equine behavior consultations to help recreate the needs and preferences of horses in training and competition.
2 comments:
Love your integration of thought !
Very informative post. Thank you so much for sharing.
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