If you are standing next to your horse and he looks away, do you think he’s 
distracted or even disrespectful? When your horse yawns, is he sleepy or bored? 
If he moves slowly, is he lazy? These are important cues from your horse, are 
you hearing him correctly?
 When it comes to communicating with horses, some humans are a bit like a 
self-obsessed rock star who throws a temper tantrum and trashes the room, but 
then assumes everyone wants his autograph. By equine standards, we ignore those 
around us and begin by screaming bloody-murder and escalate from there. Part of 
respecting a horse is remembering that their senses are much keener than ours. 
We can whisper.
 It is just like man’s vanity and impertinence to call an animal dumb because 
it is dumb to his dull perceptions.  ~Mark Twain.  

 Horses give us calming signals, just like dogs. Norwegian dog trainer and 
behaviorist Turid Rugaas wrote about it in 2005. She coined the phrase calming 
signals to describe the social skills, or body language, that dogs use to avoid 
conflict, invite play, and communicate a wide range of information to other 
dogs.
 Calming signals in horses are somewhat similar and include looking away, 
having lateral ears, yawning, stretching down, licking lips or eating to calm 
themselves. Can you recognize them? Calming cues communicate stress, and at the 
same time, release stress. It is modeling behavior for us; they want us to drop 
our stress level, or aggressiveness as well.
 When a horse looks away, either with his eyes or whole head and neck, it is a 
calming cue. He uses a signal like this when he feels pressured and wants the 
rider to know he senses the person’s agitation or aggression, but that person 
can calm down because he is no threat to the human. In the horse’s mind, he is 
communicating clearly and with respect.
 Do you pull his head back and force his position? It’s human nature to turn up 
our volume if we think we aren’t being heard and maybe the hardest thing about 
listening to calming signals is that they kind of poke our dominant parts. So 
when the horse signals us to be less aggressive, but we mistakenly hear it as 
boredom or distraction or even disobedience, and then follow that up with a 
larger cue, we’re starting a fight. We’re letting the horse know we choose 
aggression over peace. Is that what you meant to say? Or is the appropriate 
positive response from a good leader to de-escalate the situation?
 It is just like man’s vanity and impertinence to call an animal dumb because 
it is dumb to his dull perceptions.  ~Mark Twain.  (It deserves repeating.)
 If riders want to understand the language of horses, we need stop seeing our 
horses in our own worst image (lazy or distracted) and begin a conversation 
where we listen more openly, more honestly. It’s much too simplistic to lump 
everything a horse does into either dominant or submissive behavior. Herd life 
has much more nuance than that. As social animals, they work to get along, 
encouraging others to cooperate. Even dominant boss mares give calming cues.
 We can build trust with the horse if we learn to respect calming signals, and 
even reward them. In my training, the best calming signal I have is my breath. 
I can slow it down, emphasize the exhale, and just be still at the end. Using 
our breath is a huge aid that horses pay attention to, so much more than humans 
realize.
 Each time I start work with a horse, I ask for his eye, using my eye. I want 
him to volunteer. If my horse looks away, I take a deep breath, acknowledge the 
moment, and go slow. Usually on my second or third breath, he’ll look back and 
tell me he’s ready. It’s a short wait, compared to putting fear or resistance 
in that eye.
 Reading horse body language takes some quiet time to learn, and they aren’t 
all exactly alike. Some horses are so shut down, so overwhelmed by us pounding 
on them in the past, that they have no calming cues at all, but you can remind 
him. Calming is a good thing, no matter who cues it.
 If you are thinking of tuning up your communication skills with your horse, I 
really recommend ground work. It’s my favorite thing about the Horse Agility we 
do here at Infinity Farm in the summer. Obstacles are great conversation 
starters with a horse, and if the human can get past needing to dominate the 
obstacle, communication can be eloquent, with understanding and a healthy 
give-and-take reasoning. And it all translates to the saddle later.
 Now that I think about it, when I meet someone who is loud or aggressive, I 
tend to look away, too. Sometimes I turn my shoulders sideways and don’t make 
eye contact. I notice I don’t like aggressive people crowding me and talking 
loud either. This is about the time I become aware that I do groundwork with 
humans as often as I do horses. Maybe the real reason we shouldn’t humanize 
horses is because they had it right in the first place.
 
 Anna Blake, Infinity Farm. http://annablaketraining.com/

Reply via email to