It was only a matter of time!

WE all knew th![](s would happen, didn’t we?
http://www.horsechannel.com/horse-exclusives/weg-parelli.aspx Pat Parelli at the World Equestrian Games

               [B] Parelli is one of several famous clinicians you'll find in the Equine Village[/B]

     By Lesley Ward

September 29, 2010

[IMG]http://www.horsechannel.com/images/horse-community/weg-parelli-demo.jpg)Tucked away behind the International Museum of the Horse at the Kentucky Horse Park is the Clinician Corral where a variety of equine clinicians are holding clinics during the Alltech FEI World Equestrian Games. Some of the biggest names in the horse business are scheduled to appear in the Clinician Corral during the Games, including Stacy Westfall, Lynn Palm, Richard Shrake, John Lyons and Clinton Anderson.
On Tuesday, I snuck away from the Horse Illustrated booth to watch one of the pioneers of natural horsemanship in action—Pat Parelli. Pat is the ultimate entertainer; completely comfortable in front of a crowd.
“I’m a horse hugger, folks,” he said as he rode into the corral on his trusty partner Magic. “There are two kinds of people in the world–horse lovers and those other people!”
At first Pat talked about why horses can be scared of humans.
“We’re predators. Horses shouldn’t trust us,” explained Pat. “Too many horses are turned into slaves and robots because of overtraining.” Pat invited three of his students into the arena to work with their horses with long ropes and carrot sticks. They immediately started playing several of Pat’s famous Seven Games. They started with the Friendly Game and began rubbing their ropes all over their horses and swinging their ropes around in the air to desensitize their equine partners.
“We have to show the horse that we mean him no harm,” explained Pat.
Pat feels that doing groundwork is an important part of training a horse.
“You start off by having little conversations with your horse on the ground. Work on behavioral problems from the ground, not in the saddle,” he says.
“I believe in foundation before specialization,” explained Pat.
Pat believes that every horse needs to know the basics and then they can go on to any discipline and be successful. Whether you intend to do dressage with your horse or cut cattle, your horse needs to know how to move away from a slight nudge of your leg or react to a tiny shift in your body weight.
Pat then showed off a bit by demonstrating piaffe, a top-level dressage move, on Magic!
Pat’s students hopped in their saddles and we were given a demonstration on how patterns feature strongly in his teaching. His students worke

Did she mentions if PP blew her socks off?:winkgrin:

[QUOTE=Bluey;5148333]
Did she mentions if PP blew her socks off?:winkgrin:[/QUOTE]

See, that’s something I haven’t seen headline reports of yet: “Kentucky Horse Park Littered With Thousands of Stray Socks”.:lol::lol::lol:

[QUOTE=Mara;5150001]
See, that’s something I haven’t seen headline reports of yet: “Kentucky Horse Park Littered With Thousands of Stray Socks”.:lol::lol::lol:[/QUOTE]

:lol: :lol: :lol:

Now, raining socks would have made the news quicker than any new kind of horsemanship, I think.:stuck_out_tongue: