Tataaaaaa!
Alsof  de  duvel er  mee  speelt. Ze  heeft    vast en zeker deze  lijn  hier meegelezen toen ze  ideetjes  zocht  voor  haar  allernieuwste DVD 

Alexandra  Kurland, een van de  bekendste  (beste? )  clikkertrainsters ter wereld  schrijft bij het  uitbrengen ervan  het  volgende:
So the DVD focuses on what is really a very common situation. You 
have a horse that is afraid of ________. You fill in the blank. In 
this case it was saddles, but it could also have been clippers, or 
shots, or plastic tarps, etc. The question is what do you do about it?
The lesson begins with a review of head lowering. I showed Muska 
that she could control the saddle by dropping her head. Click and 
treat. So what we gave her was a way to signal to us when she was 
comfortable with each small step in the training. 
(de stressthermometer !!! :)  ) 
We transformed the  saddle from an object that sent her scooting off, into a cue to stand quietly and drop her head. 
We took an object she was afraid of and 
let it become a cue for a behavior that leads to a calm, relaxed 
mental state. Very neat. In the DVD you get to watch how quickly an 
action evolves into a cue, and how you can then use that cue to 
change a horse's response to something it was previously afraid of.
The lesson itself is a very simple one, or at least it looks simple 
until you try it. In the first part of the DVD I'm working Muska. 
In the second half I turn her over to her owner As always we learn 
so much watching someone else putting the pieces together. And we 
learn that details matter. I am always so appreciative of the people 
who participate in these DVDs because I know how much others learn 
from watching them. It's so much easier to see all the little pieces 
that matter when someone is learning them step-by-step. You get to 
see Muska's concerns reawaken when the pieces aren't flowing together 
smoothly. And then you see her relax again as Nick masters each 
stage of the lesson.
One of the things that I highlight in this DVD is Muska's body 
language. She's so expressive. She shows us her worry, her 
concern. And we can see how little things - moving through steps too 
fast, getting the hand in the treat pocket before the click, etc. - 
effect her. All those little details matter so much to the horses. 
We may not be aware of them, but they certainly are!
This will be a very useful lesson for those of you who are struggling 
a bit with your horses. Watching Muska may help you to see all the 
places where you may be rushing through things, jumping steps a bit, 
or just not reading your horse well enough. This DVD contains the 
answer to many of the why-is-my-horse-so-frustrated-with-me? posts.
To help train your eye to the little details that are so important I 
made extensive use of freeze frames. When I want you to see some 
detail in the handling, or Muska's body language, I freeze the video 
at that spot. That's what took so long in the production. It's a 
very labor intensive, time consuming process, but it is well worth 
it. I think you'll find that this is a wonderful DVD to learn from. 
You'll see details in the handling and in Muska's reactions that I 
know will transfer directly to your own horses.
So what's on this DVD?
* a reminder yet again of the power of the foundation lessons.
* the importance of mechanical skills and good timing.
* the chunking down of lessons into small steps, and the teaching 
process for learning that fundamental skill.
* the reading of body language - so important.
* the power of cues - their use in changing a horse's reaction to 
something it was previously afraid of.
Tot  zover-- er staat  nog  meer, maar  ik  wil  niet  overdrijven  in  mijn gelijk krijgen 
 
 Verander  zadel eens  in  gewicht, hoewel, ook zadel  hebben we  zo  gedaan. We  zijn gewoon  een aantal  stappen  verder. 

Mevrouw  Kurland  heeft  ook  het beste van clikkeren  gecombineerd  met  het  beste  van SubtielTrainen  zeker?
Mijn  dag  kan niet  meer  stuk!
Piet
The opposite of  positive reinforcement is no reinforcement, not correction