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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Best Guide to Ground Work
I own a challenging horse, and have tried many different systems of ground work with her - Parelli, Lyons, Centered Riding, etc. All of them had some effect, but none have really changed her exciteable nature and dominant attitude.
After using some of the exercises in Dancing With Horses, my mare has a totally different attitude. She is much more submissive, much...
Published on Jan 11 2002 by K. Havis

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12 of 17 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Everything you know is wrong
In defense of the book, the author has the right attitude in natural training through a sense of patience, understanding and fun.

However, please consider the following before purchase:

- This book is practically an infomercial for the small, baroque spanish horse. The writer quite openly states that the average rider should only ride a horse between 14.1 and 15.1...

Published on Dec 7 2003 by Sam Masterson


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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Best Guide to Ground Work, Jan 11 2002
By 
K. Havis "avid reader" (Sandy Ridge, NC USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Dancing with Horses: The Art of Body Language (Hardcover)
I own a challenging horse, and have tried many different systems of ground work with her - Parelli, Lyons, Centered Riding, etc. All of them had some effect, but none have really changed her exciteable nature and dominant attitude.
After using some of the exercises in Dancing With Horses, my mare has a totally different attitude. She is much more submissive, much more trusting. It is remarkable.
The book is visually beautiful. The photographs are very helpful in demonstrating the exercises, and are very pretty. The instructions in the text are clear. The horses - and the author - are very handsome, so there are aesthetic benefits as well.
The author describes a certain exercise, and says it will have a profound effect on the horse. I'm accustomed to marketing hyperbole, so I read it, but took it with a grain of salt. And what he wrote was true. Doing that one exercise made an immediate difference in my horse's attitude.
I can't say enough good things about this book. I hope you'll buy it and reap the benefits.
...
Happy trails.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars awesome..., Oct 3 2002
This review is from: Dancing with Horses: The Art of Body Language (Hardcover)
Ok, the content can seem very 'spiritual'...but, this is the best book I ever readed about communicating with horses...Because it helps us to see the horse like a miror of us...READ IT!
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Be willing and open to new ideas!!, April 30 2004
By 
This review is from: Dancing with Horses: The Art of Body Language (Hardcover)
Dancing with Horses was a beautiful book and easy to implement during my training sessions, which were formally traditional. Although the wording could get a little hard for a beginner to follow... just do as he says and read the whole thing cover to cover before you start, then read it again upon starting a horse.
I have only just started using Klaus' teachings during my training of a 2 yr old Draft Horse gelding who was not only very nervous and untrusting of people, but also had no respect for fences or personal space. Obviously a very large and dangerous combination. Klaus has opened my eyes to my own errors during training. And the gelding is comming along nicely now. In retrospect I wish I had read Klaus' book before I began training a pushy Clydesdale mare using more traditional methods.She has proven to be more of a challenge than I had bargained for. However, it is interesting to see the diffrent results that have been achieved while training two diffrent horses at the same time, using two diffrent methods. Klaus' lessons are very versatile, straightforward and holistic. Every trainer has a diffrent method of training, that he learned from various other trainers. Klaus has an old world style that can be emplemented for *ANY* type or breed of horse.

Although I would like to hold my tounge regarding the marginal review given by one reader, I simply can't! Klaus doesn't state in his book that "hollow back" horses are useless and untrainable, nor does he pick on any particular breed in itself. He simply states the obvious. If your horse has a longer back, than his hieght allows,(like many english style horses have) then he'd better have VERY good muscle tone in order to avoid a "nose up, legs out" way of carrying himself. Obviously there are going to be bad apples in every bunch, and of course a shorter legged, shorter bodied horse can collect better than a longer more supple bodied horse, thats why quarter horses are built that way... (sometimes also to a disgusting extreeme), so that they can "get down on a cow." However, if your horse is too short to look over a jump, then lower your jump!! Or open your mind to other eventing avenues!! Quit thinking of "How YOU look", and consider for once your horses health. Open your mind... broaden your horizons. Implement the teachings of someone who obviously has success with something DIFFRENT.
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12 of 17 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Everything you know is wrong, Dec 7 2003
This review is from: Dancing with Horses: The Art of Body Language (Hardcover)
In defense of the book, the author has the right attitude in natural training through a sense of patience, understanding and fun.

However, please consider the following before purchase:

- This book is practically an infomercial for the small, baroque spanish horse. The writer quite openly states that the average rider should only ride a horse between 14.1 and 15.1. He "does not know of any reason they should be bred any larger." Um.. Eventing? Jumping? Hard to get a horse to jump anything they can't see over.

- Modern dressage is "monotinous" and "robotic." Basically pointless to study. The elements of riding a larger horse--unfit because their backs are too long, 17 instead of 15 vertebrae--are completely ignored. Huh? Modern dressage teaches self carriage and strengthens the back and abdominal muscles. All the author sees is someone pulling the horses head into a frame.

Admittedly, many riders ride in a false frame--in error--because it looks like a frame and with draw-reins (or just pulling) it is easy to do. But all of modern dressage is dismissed out of hand, because they use contact with the mouth and this is cruel. Well hello--he's using a curved bit and not a French snaffle--of course you can't take up contact in a curved bit! Western riders get collection on a curved bit without contact too! A friend of mine is an event rider and has full control of her horse in a rubber snaffle. If he wasn't happy, he wouldn't be the performing athlete he is!

- According to the book, leading a horse should only be done from the front because it is the dominant position. Leading from the shoulder is wrong because it is a submissive position to the horse. Well, leading a sporthorse from the front is a bad idea, because if they spook, you can get run over. Horses are flight animals! If you've established a good relationship with your horse, he is submissive no matter where you are around him. It's called ground manners.

But this book is myopically scoped to the small baroque and therefore not very hotblooded horse. If you get run away with on one of these guys, you're going maybe 20 mph. Not 40 mph like on a thoroughbred, and most everyone I know rides off-the-track thoroughbreds. And why not? They are cheap, available, sensitive, intelligent, athletically adaptable to lots of disciplines, have a work ethic, and a desire to please. So please read John Lyons, do a google search on horse rescue, and don't let these wonderful animals be eaten by the French because baroque horses are the new fashionable accessory.

Thoroughbreds are NOT "unrideable, concave" horses as this author implies. The average rider "is in no way equipped to train these horses properly." So you have to learn a correct seat and leg to stop them because they are forward and train self-carriage. Oh my heavens. But isn't that what horsemanship is about? Schooling advancement, building communication, suppleness, acceptance of the bit? Not in the small world of this book.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Great book, but..., Nov 12 2003
By 
Serina (So-Cal, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dancing with Horses: The Art of Body Language (Hardcover)
This is an awesome book, but I had a hard time applying it. Maybe those with more experience can use it more. I don't think it's for beginners.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars subtitled - Get control of your body language, Nov 9 2003
By 
Vivien Dostine "Viv" (Auckland New Zealand) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Dancing with Horses: The Art of Body Language (Hardcover)
On initial browse though this book you may be put off by the very flowery language and some of the interesting but not terribly helpful info (like which peasant saddles KFH likes) but do perservere. Many if not all of the principles are the same as other 'Natural Horsemen' however the difference with this book is the effort that KFH goes to explaining and showing with precise photos HOW to use your body to communicate with your horse.

I found that it took a couple of readings to get the best out of this book and have returned to it many times since then. KFH himself states that you should not begin ANY of the exercises until you have read the book from cover to cover and then begun to read it again. I have to agree despite my initial dismissal of this (huh? he thinks I'm simple )

The layout of the book is a little difficult to follow, there are examples of Klaus' work with young feral horses interspersed with clinics that he runs (providing illustrations of the communication techniques that the book is all about) exercises to perform and 'how to ride' chapters.

However, despite all of these foibles I found this book to be very useful. The clarity and detail in both text and photos of specific exercises - such as leading, working on a lunge or liberty work makes up for its shortcomings. For the first time an author details HOW to use your body in groundwork with a horse - the use of mimcry, the positions and 'zones of dominance or subservience' when working with a horse, what signals and actions will get a horse's attention and how to specifically communication such ideas as 'stop', bring your hind end under (collection), turn or come past.

If you wish to improve your communication skills this is an excellent guide.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars forcefree horsetraining, Oct 13 2003
This review is from: Dancing with Horses: The Art of Body Language (Hardcover)
A must, a great book if you want to train your horse without using force or sharp bits or things like this. Accompanied by a lot of pictures it is written for every rider (beginner to very advanced !), really easy to follow and even my "stubborn" 20year old mare seemed to like it ;-) we really improved our performance!
If you want to know more about communicating with your horse: buy it!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A must have for the equestrian!, Dec 4 2002
By 
Sandra Dunn "kilja" (Silverado, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Dancing with Horses: The Art of Body Language (Hardcover)
Very clear and concise. Easy to follow and apply the principles. I highly recommend this as an edition to your horse library!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Dancing With Horses, May 10 2001
By 
Kim Walnes (Milford Square, PA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Dancing with Horses: The Art of Body Language (Hardcover)
I am a former member of the USET 3-Day Team with my horse, The Gray Goose. This book is phenomenal, and is the missing link between natural horsemanship and classical dressage.. Klaus's techniques were learned from Spanish monks who kept alive the traditions of training from the Knights Templar. He emphasizes the person's responsibility in training their horses, and gives clear, consise instructions about how to achieve leadership with horses while maintaining their wonderful spirit and personality. Exercises for both horse and rider are given to achieve oneness in handling and riding, and the spiritual aspect of training is also covered. I have started my own horse over using these techniques, and the effects have been profound and dramatic. I highly recommend this book, and also his video tape of the same name.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Really fantastic magical book for true horse lovers, Dec 30 2002
This review is from: Dancing with Horses: The Art of Body Language (Hardcover)
This book held me absolutely transfixed. It is the best horse instruction book that I have ever seen without doubt. I have recently become the owner of a 4 year old thoroughbred gelding who has been taken out of race training. I spent a long time playing with and getting to known this horse in his paddock before I owned him, and this book has given me superb instruction on how to continue with his development and continue to strengthen our bond day by day.
I was becoming very disillusioned with traditional horse training books, which were totally focused on pleasing the rider without any concern for the horse whatsoever. This book is wonderfully visual, very easy to read, very uncluttered and I would recommend it to anyone who wants to understand horses, because these methods really do work.
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Dancing with Horses: The Art of Body Language
Dancing with Horses: The Art of Body Language by Klaus Ferdinand Hempfling (Hardcover - Sep 1 2001)
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