London: Everett & Co, 1904. — 198 p. The Author has been tempted to write this work because he has often experienced the want of a small yet practical guide 'dealing with the subject, reliable information being chiefly contained in more expensive manuals. Of course, each Horse-breaker naturally advocates some particular system — which he chooses to call his own — and it is just...
New York: E.P. Button & Co, 1913. — 118 p. Lancers, Cavalry School. Mach has already been written on this subject, and I do not claim to propound any new theories. There are innumerable books about horse-training, many of which are excellent, but there is a general tendency amongst the readers of such books to become too bigoted in their views, accepting in its entirety the...
Revised and Updated edition — Skyhorse, 2019. — 225 p. In A Good Horse Is Never a Bad Color, Mark Rashid continues to share his talent for training horses through communication rather than force. Rashid uses humorous, feel-good stories to relate his techniques of teaching horses by examining their view of the world. These stories deal with many aspects of buying, owning, and...
Howell Book House, 2008. — 272 p. — (Howell Equestrian Library). — ISBN: 978-0470192290. This guide helps horse owners, riders, and trainers at all levels learn how to assess any horse's fitness, strengths, and weaknesses. If you're buying a horse, this will help you pre-assess prospects before getting the complete veterinary examination. If you own a horse, these techniques...
Skyhorse Publishing, 2015. — 240 p. In Horses Never Lie , renowned horse trainer Mark Rashid introduces us to his revolutionary method for training horses. He emphasizes the importance of balance: “It has always been my contention that working with horses is, or at least should be, a delicate balancing act between finding how much or how little direction it will take to help...
Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009. — 208 p. ISBN13: 978-1405191647. If you understand how your horse learns and why your training is effective, you can train faster, more ethically, and more sympathetically. Emma Lethbridge thoroughly but simply explains learning theory, and how to apply it in a way that is both efficient for training and holds the horse's welfare paramount....