Horse Training Tips and Techniques, Helpful Hints for Health Care; Plus Business
Advice on Making Your Career With Horses a Financial Success |
Don Blazer is an author, a teacher, a trainer and a trader.
For more than 40 years he's helped thousands of horses and horse owners
enjoy the best of relationships based on knowledge, understanding and actions
which are mutually beneficial. The author of eight How-To books on training performance horses and horse health care, he also writes the syndicated column A Horse, Of Course, which is must reading for thousands of fans across the nation. As a teacher, he's traveled from Alaska to Australia demonstrating training techniques and he's taught a variety of horsemanship courses for seven colleges and universities. Show horses or race horses, he's trained world class winners at both ends of the spectrum. His show horses have competed at world championship events and his race horses have won both Quarter Horse and Thoroughbred Stake races. Making Money With Horses is not only the title of one of his books, it is a way of life for him. He began his career as an author, trainer, teacher and trader at 19, and he's still at it-a syndicated column, clinics and lectures, young horses ridden daily, and occasionally he sells a horse. Contact Don to speak at your event Click here..... |
A Horse, Of Course, by Don Blazer Slowing and softening your horse's gaits begin with the mind and are reinforced with lateral movement. The first step is to slow yourself down. You must start thinking "slow" instead of thinking about getting things done now. So much of daily life today is multi-tasking, instant results and moving forward. It may work for you, but it doesn't for your horse. Click here to read more.... |
The Information Team Of course you want to do all the right things for your horse! Now it's easy to find answers. Whether you want to know about protein for a
senior horse or supplements for a foal, hoof balancing, training, bits or conformation,
our "Information Team" is a FREE service to you. Just Ask! Click here to submit question. |
Okay, so the economy is bad….bad mostly for
the “bigs”, but not so bad for the nimble small horse business. The nice thing about being small is that you can easily and quickly get to know what your customers are thinking…even if they are thinking they can’t or don’t want to spend money right now. No matter what they are thinking, you can... Click here to read more.... |
How-To Books And Videos From Success Is Easy Whether you want a horse-training book or a horse-care book, you'll find all the
books on this site have been selected because they are direct, to the point, and
offer advice proven to be beneficial to the horse.
MAKE MONEY WITH HORSES, , NINE SECRETS OF PERFECT HORSEMANSHIP E-BOOKS: Natural Western Riding, Training Performance Horses, Feeding the Senior Horse, Supplements - Yes or No, Simple Bookkeeping and Nine Secrets of Perfect Horsemanship. Click here to order books.... |
AUDIO |
Here's how you get slow, soft winning gaits... A Monthly Series of How -To Training Tips Horse training isn’t complicated; it’s simply a matter of knowing how to communicate with your horse. Maybe you want to slow down his gaits. The first step to slowing a horse down is to slow down yourself. Don’t get in a hurry. Move slowly when working around your horse, and ask him to move slowly when you lead him. |
FREE OFFER! Inventory Reduction Make Money with Horses CD or Cassette Tape Read by the author: Don Blazer Tells in detail how you can profit with weanlings, yearlings, broodmares, stallions, and as a trainer doing what you like best with the breed you like best. You can cash in on horses by starting your own business. Only For A Limited Time |
Did You Know....... |
To back a horse, you don't want to pull the reins backward...that
causes the horse to open his mouth and throw his head upward, hollowing his
back. Keep your body in an upright position as you shorten the reins, until you feel the horse shift his weight to his hindquarters. While holding the horse in that frame, begin to squeeze with both legs...the horse will back because his weight has shifted rearward. |