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E-raamat: Scentwork for Horses

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 09-Dec-2020
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000286588
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 09-Dec-2020
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000286588

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Scentwork for Horses is the first practical guide on how to implement scentwork into the lives of domesticated horses, enhancing behaviour, welfare, and the human-animal bond. Scentwork is a new discipline in the field for horse and handler, and expert author Rachaël Draaisma arms the reader with a palette of information to enable them to put this technique into action. As well as theoretical background information on the nose of the horse and biomechanics, Draaisma discusses how scentwork improves horses learning abilities, development, socialisation, and their bond with the handler. Readers will learn how to have their horses explore their environment, participate in scentwork games and follow a footstep track to find a missing person or food bag.

Easily accessible for anybody working with horses at any level, scentwork can be done in small areas as well as in larger spaces on various surfaces. Whether veterinarian, behaviourist, trainer, animal-assisted therapist, equine physiotherapist, osteopath, or interested horse owner, this book promises to bring both you and the horse enormous benefits, strengthening the human-animal bond.

Rachaël Draaisma has always lived with and had a passion for dogs and horses. In 2002, she decided to make it her profession. Achieving several diplomas, she started to work full time as a trainer and behavioural consultant, first with dogs, later with horses. Her best-selling book Language Signs and Calming Signals of Horses, published by CRC Press in 2017, has been translated into several languages. Another pillar of Draaismas working life with horses revolves around equine mental stimulation and scentwork, and she has developed an extensive method to undertake scent tracking with horses, a new tool in enriching the human-equine relationship. Draaisma travels throughout Europe and the globe to provide workshops and lectures on calming signals of horses, equine mental stimulation, and scentwork.

You can purchase scent bags to aid your scentwork practice at the author's personal website: www.scentworkforhorses.com or www.calmingsignalsofhorses.com

Arvustused

"This book represents a major step forward for the human-horse relationship. Working within the horse's natural olfactory world to encourage exploration and reciprocal relationship, Rachaël Draaisma provides a well-researched and thoroughly conceptualized approach that is certain to be both enriching and enjoyable for horses and their people alike. Everyone who loves, lives, and works with horses will benefit greatly from reading this important addition to the literature. I have already made it required reading for our Equine Assisted Play Therapy® program. Highly recommended."

Risë VanFleet, PhD, CAEBC-I, Psychologist; Certified Animal Ethology & Behavior Consultant-Instructor, Coauthor of the award-winning book Animal Assisted Play Therapy®, Principal, International Institute for Animal Assisted Play Therapy®

"My training has been given a whole new dimension, and the effect of the training has been mind-blowing with each of the highly sensitive competition horses (of various disciplines) I am working with."

Susan Kjærgård, Director Blue Berry Hill, Equine Instructor and former Grand Prix rider, Denmark

"Giving horses the opportunity to use their scenting ability restores natural behaviours and anatomical functional movement. It also bestows autonomy, facilitating positive confidence through freedom of movement and thought."

Julia Robertson, Director and Founder of Galen Myotherapy, UK

"Another eye- and brain-opener from this author. Turig Rugaas calls it a mental stimulation book for horses, but also it must surely stimulate the brain of any animal lover who likes reading and especially about horses. One of the great gifts of this book is that, apart from explaining the importance of giving the horse fulfilment, education and entertainment by using his sense of smell and helping him develop a new but natural element to his domestic life, it gives readers clear instructions and ideas for how to devise games and tasks to challenge their own horses, having first explained how the sense of smell works, how informative and useful it is to horses and its importance to the horse, so being a great relationship-builder."

Susan McBane, in Tracking-up magazine, May 2022 "This book represents a major step forward for the human-horse relationship. Working within the horse's natural olfactory world to encourage exploration and reciprocal relationship, Rachaël Draaisma provides a well-researched and thoroughly conceptualized approach that is certain to be both enriching and enjoyable for horses and their people alike. Everyone who loves, lives, and works with horses will benefit greatly from reading this important addition to the literature. I have already made it required reading for our Equine Assisted Play Therapy® program. Highly recommended."

Risë VanFleet, PhD, CAEBC-I, Psychologist; Certified Animal Ethology & Behavior Consultant-Instructor, Coauthor of the award-winning book Animal Assisted Play Therapy®, Principal, International Institute for Animal Assisted Play Therapy®

"My training has been given a whole new dimension, and the effect of the training has been mind-blowing with each of the highly sensitive competition horses (of various disciplines) I am working with."

Susan Kjærgård, Director Blue Berry Hill, Equine Instructor and former Grand Prix rider, Denmark

"Giving horses the opportunity to use their scenting ability restores natural behaviours and anatomical functional movement. It also bestows autonomy, facilitating positive confidence through freedom of movement and thought."

Julia Robertson, Director and Founder of Galen Myotherapy, UK

"Another eye- and brain-opener from this author. Turig Rugaas calls it a mental stimulation book for horses, but also it must surely stimulate the brain of any animal lover who likes reading and especially about horses. One of the great gifts of this book is that, apart from explaining the importance of giving the horse fulfilment, education and entertainment by using his sense of smell and helping him develop a new but natural element to his domestic life, it gives readers clear instructions and ideas for how to devise games and tasks to challenge their own horses, having first explained how the sense of smell works, how informative and useful it is to horses and its importance to the horse, so being a great relationship-builder."

Susan McBane, in Tracking-up magazine, May 2022

Foreword ix
Acknowledgements xi
About the author xiii
Credits xv
Introduction xvii
Part 1 Exploration
1(72)
1 Introducing Exploration
3(12)
1.1 The comfort map
4(4)
1.2 Exploration and empowerment
8(3)
1.3 The benefits of exploration and empowerment
11(4)
References
13(2)
2 Brain And Biology: What Explains These Changes?
15(12)
2.1 About the brain and neurotransmitters
15(2)
2.2 Stress hormones
17(2)
2.3 Exploration and empowerment from a biological perspective
19(3)
2.4 A closer look at tension
22(5)
References
25(2)
3 How To Implement Exploration In Daily Life
27(24)
3.1 Enriched environments
27(18)
3.2 Choices
45(4)
3.3 When does it take longer to see results?
49(2)
4 How To Use Exploration To Address Problems
51(22)
4.1 The enriched environment as an assessment tool
51(2)
4.2 The enriched environment as a tool within a behaviour adjustment plan
53(13)
A Case Study: Separation Anxiety
55(11)
4.3 The enriched environment as a means to bring the horse into balance mentally and physically
66(1)
4.4 The enriched environment as stand-alone exercises
66(7)
Part 2 Scent tracking for horses
73(166)
5 Introducing Scent Tracking For Horses
75(2)
5.1 Using scent is vital for a horse
75(2)
6 Anatomy And Physiology
77(18)
6.1 The initial smelling system: From scent to electrical signal in the brain
77(9)
6.2 The unique characteristics of `smelling'
86(1)
6.3 Are there also horses who cannot smell?
87(1)
6.4 What does the second smelling system do? The VNO/Jacobsen organ
88(1)
6.5 What does it sound like?
89(1)
6.6 What does this mean for everyday life?
90(5)
References
93(2)
7 Biomechanics
95(14)
7.1 Study objectives
95(1)
7.2 What happens to the body when tracking?
96(6)
7.3 The differences between tracking and grazing
102(1)
7.4 Biomechanical advantages for the horse
103(4)
7.5 Contraindications with regard to biomechanics
107(2)
8 Background Information
109(4)
8.1 The exploring phase for scent tracking and the differences between dogs and horses
109(4)
9 The Advantages Of Scent Tracking
113(6)
9.1 Healthy homeostasis is stimulated and maintained
113(1)
9.2 Scent tracking is possible in a stimulus-poor environment
114(1)
9.3 Horses love scent tracking
115(1)
9.4 The role switch between the horse and the handler
115(4)
Reference
118(1)
10 Practicalities: What You Need To Know
119(6)
10.1 What scents does a horse follow?
119(2)
10.2 Air scenting
121(1)
10.3 Scenting on different surfaces and in different weather conditions
122(3)
References
124(1)
11 The Four Pillars Of This Method
125(6)
Pillar 1 From the start, the horse works only with his nose
125(1)
Pillar 2 Seeing the cloth, the smeller, means starting the scenting There is a reward to be had
126(2)
Pillar 3 Association with the footsteps on the cloth helps the horse to get there
128(1)
Pillar 4 The horse first learns to follow the scent trail to the bag, and then you move to tracking missing persons
129(2)
12 What Materials Do You Need?
131(10)
12.1 The food reward
131(3)
12.2 The scent bag
134(2)
12.3 The smeller
136(1)
12.4 A long lead rope
137(2)
12.5 A halter
139(1)
12.6 Water
140(1)
Reference
140(1)
13 Laying A Track
141(16)
13.1 Tips for beginners
141(9)
13.2 Is your horse socialised to the scent bag?
150(6)
13.3 Is your horse socialised to the smeller?
156(1)
14 Tracking: Step 1: The Beginning
157(40)
14.1 What do you need to make the first try a success?
161(1)
14.2 The horse is socialised to the scent bag
161(1)
14.3 The horse is used to the handler and the positions he takes while following
161(2)
14.4 The horse is socialised to the location
163(1)
14.5 Handler skills
164(8)
14.6 First challenges you may encounter
172(9)
14.7 Different walking patterns when the horse is tracking
181(2)
14.8 The horse has found the scent bag
183(1)
14.9 How you can tell that the horse has lost the track
183(8)
14.10 Using scent tracking to assess homeostasis
191(1)
14.11 How often do you train?
192(5)
References
195(2)
15 How To Make Tracking More Difficult
197(12)
15.1 Ideas to make the tracking more challenging
198(11)
16 Scent Tracking While Riding
209(2)
17 From Finding A Scent Bag To Finding Missing Persons
211(16)
17.1 Additional socialisation to `missing' persons
212(6)
17.2 Have missing persons give calming signals
218(3)
17.3 Who opens the bag?
221(1)
17.4 Further development
221(6)
18 Treat Search
227(12)
18.1 What to do first: tracking or treat search?
237(2)
Note
237(2)
A1 Organising stimuli into zones: Four zones and two ladders 239(4)
A2 Zone worksheet 243(2)
A3 The haystack exercise 245(2)
A4 Checklist 1 247(2)
A5 Checklist 2 249(2)
Bibliography 251(6)
Index 257
Rachaël Draaisma graduated from the Radboud University in Nijmegen, the Netherlands. She has always lived with and had a passion for dogs and horses. In 2002, she decided to make it her profession. Rachaël obtained several diplomas and then started working as a trainer and behavioural consultant, first with dogs and later with horses. In 2013, she completed the TR (Turid Rugaas) International Dog Trainers Education course. Under Turids supervision, she began studying the calming signals of horses, filming domesticated horses, and analysing the resulting material. The study grew, is ongoing, and led to a complete focus shift from dogs to horses. It also led to the worldwide publication of the book Language Signs and Calming Signals of Horses by CRC Press.