[WikiEN-l] Insight on banning from a Horse Whisperer

Poor, Edmund W Edmund.W.Poor at abc.com
Wed Feb 18 21:20:45 UTC 2004


Roberts made his discovery about negotiations in at age thirteen. He was
hired to keep a herd of feral horses, mustangs, under observation and to
report their location to his employers from time to time. So he had no
duties other than to watch the horses. One day he observed that after a
yearling colt had made a major pest of himself by biting and kicking
other members of the herd without provocation, the alpha (lead) mare
reached the limits of her tolerance for such misbehavior and drove the
colt out. Once away from the protection of the herd, the colt felt
insecure and wanted to get back among the other horses, but the lead
mare kept a threatening eye on him and every time he tried to sneak back
in she would forcefully drive him off again. 

Finally, the colt that had been ostracized for insubordination seemed to
realize that he could not sneak back in and that his position became
progressively more perilous the longer he remained outside the
protection of the herd. At that point he dropped his head close to the
ground and moved along periodically sticking his tongue out to lick
around his mouth and clashing his teeth together. The sound created by
striking a horse's large teeth together is rather like the sound
produced by hitting one fist-sized stone with another, and is quite
audible at some distance. Once the lead mare perceived this message of
submission being given by the colt, she signalled that she would allow
him to reenter the herd by changing her body language from challenging
to placid acceptance. After readmitting him to the herd she spent a
great deal of time grooming him. 



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