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Finding the Missed Path

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“Horses are a lot like people,” says renowned horseman Mark Rashid. “When there are gaps in understanding, confusion, and thus frustration, worry, and even anger are sure to follow.”Horses often grow up with these “gaps” in their training and education. When this happens, it can be difficult for the horse to be a willing partner to a human, and he may need to be “restarted”-that is, given a second chance to learn what is expected of him and how he can find a place where he is confident and comfortable both beside a handler and beneath a rider.In order to restart a horse successfully, we need to know how to retrace the steps the horse’s education has taken and find the path missed the first time around. In this book, the first of the expansive library of books penned by Rashid to include full-color photographs, readers are guided through practical steps for restarting horses, using Rashid’s simple yet impactful concepts derived from years of study of martial arts. We walk along with him as he proceeds with the quiet sorting of experience that provides the insight we need to give any horse the new beginning he deserves.

202 pages, Kindle Edition

Published February 13, 2017

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About the author

Mark Rashid

46 books131 followers
Mark Rashid (pronounced RASH-id) is an internationally acclaimed horse trainer known for his ability to understand the horse’s point of view and solve difficult problems with communication rather than force. He began working with horses at age ten, when he met the “old man,” who taught him to work with horses, not against them, and to listen to what the horse is trying to say. Mark’s clinics center on one-on-one work with horse and rider and are immensely popular with people around the world.

When Mark decided to study the martial art of aikido as a way to improve his horsemanship, he brought the same quiet determination to it that he exhibits in his work with horses. After years of practice, he has earned a second degree black belt in Yoshinkan aikido and now teaches the “way of harmony” in the local dojo.

Mark worked full time on ranches for many years gathering herds, managing stock, and training horses. When time permits, he still enjoys working on ranches near his home in Estes Park, Colorado.

Mark has been a guest on NPR’s The Horse Show and was featured on the Nature series on PBS. He is the author of nine books - Considering the Horse, A Good Horse is Never a Bad Color; Horses Never Lie; Life Lessons from a Ranch Horse; Horsemanship Through Life; Big Horses, Good Dogs, & Straight Fences; A Life With Horses; Whole Heart, Whole Horse; and his latest, a novel, Out of the Wild. He also has a solo music CD Song of the Prairie and enjoys singing and playing guitar with a local band The Elktones.

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for fruitbatwoman.
343 reviews16 followers
April 16, 2018
Another great book my Mark Rashid, with less practical tips this time, and more food for thought and developing our interaction with horses in different situations. I enjoyed the parallels he drew with martial arts, and how we have to work first on ourselves and our own emotions, before we can expect to horse to follow - opposite to just "obey". One sentence stuck with me especially: "When it comes to working with horses, it is achieving that internal balance that turns worry into confidence, nervousness into trust, and the seemingly impossible into the possible."
Profile Image for Colleen.
178 reviews39 followers
January 9, 2018
I enjoy Mark's books. They are more philosophical than instructional, but my horsemanship understanding advances after reading each of Mark's books.
3 reviews
October 31, 2017
Informative read

Excellent information. Things I would not have thought of after reading other natural horsemanship reads. Thanks look forward to reading other books.
Profile Image for Loni.
336 reviews3 followers
January 17, 2022
I really enjoy Rashid's theories of working with horses.
2 reviews
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February 10, 2017
Mark does a fantastic job of passing on some of his vast knowledge about horses and how we humans can work on ourselves to improve our raport with horses while incorporating the practice of softness in our daily lives. All this while keeping the narrative entertaining and engaging.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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