LadySunshine
Vagabond FlowerChild
This is a question that has interested me for some time now, and I do believe that sometimes there is a mental connection between some people and some animals.
I read an amazing book called "Talking With Horses" by a man named Henry Blake. He was an Englishman, and during the 1940's and 50's he had horses, and he did basic experiments with them , searching for telepathic connection between horses, and also between horses and people.
Besides the obvious communication signs that horses have (ears, teeth, tail, etc,) he discovered that some horses had a greater affinity for each other than some other horses did. Horse A communicated with horse B, but not with horse C, and so on. He had about 10 horses, and when he fed horse A, that horse would "tell" horse B that breakfast was coming, and so on down the line. he discovered that if he took one horse out of the line of communication, the rest of the horses didn't know the first ones had their morning oats.
He did other little experiments, and also used mental imaging to tell the horse what he wanted it to do when he was riding it.
I had a Tennessee Walker that seemed to understand me, and when we came to a fork in the trail, I could visualize the direction I wanted to go, and she usually made the right choice.
I read an amazing book called "Talking With Horses" by a man named Henry Blake. He was an Englishman, and during the 1940's and 50's he had horses, and he did basic experiments with them , searching for telepathic connection between horses, and also between horses and people.
Besides the obvious communication signs that horses have (ears, teeth, tail, etc,) he discovered that some horses had a greater affinity for each other than some other horses did. Horse A communicated with horse B, but not with horse C, and so on. He had about 10 horses, and when he fed horse A, that horse would "tell" horse B that breakfast was coming, and so on down the line. he discovered that if he took one horse out of the line of communication, the rest of the horses didn't know the first ones had their morning oats.
He did other little experiments, and also used mental imaging to tell the horse what he wanted it to do when he was riding it.
I had a Tennessee Walker that seemed to understand me, and when we came to a fork in the trail, I could visualize the direction I wanted to go, and she usually made the right choice.