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Horse & Pet Supplies in Maryland |
City-by-city listings of pet shops in your area |
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Colora
Colora Mill Outlet; phone: (410) 658-8111; 1059 Colora Rd; Colora, MD |
J P Animal Supply; phone: (410) 658-5795; 2497 Tome Hwy; Colora, MD |
Columbia
Columbia Pet Supplies; phone: (410) 730-5511; 10790 Hickory Ridge Rd; Columbia, MD |
Dogs & Company; phone: (410) 997-5888; 8895 Centre Park Dr Ste C; Columbia, MD |
Pet Value Intl Incorporated; phone: (410) 290-9066; 7079 Oakland Mills Rd; Columbia, MD |
PETCO Animal Supplies; phone: (410) 290-1313; 6181 Old Dobbin Ln Ste 800; Columbia, MD |
PetSmart; phone: (410) 312-4890; 9041 Snowden Square Dr; Columbia, MD |
Today Pets; phone: (410) 730-1893; 10300 Little Patuxent Pkwy; Columbia, MD |
Wild Bird Center; phone: (410) 381-4351; 6955 Oakland Mills Rd Ste F; Columbia, MD |
Crisfield
Dogs R US; phone: (410) 968-0899; 26241 W Pear St; Crisfield, MD |
Crofton
Crunchies Incorporated; phone: (410) 721-5432; 2421 Crofton Ln Ste 11; Crofton, MD |
Invisible Fencing of The Bay Area; phone: (410) 721-7799; 2411 Crofton Ln; Crofton, MD |
Cumberland
4 Pets; phone: (301) 729-3917; 12101 Winchester Rd Ste 21; Cumberland, MD |
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© 2008 copyright Keith Hosman and horsemanship101.com
Horse & Pet Supplies in Maryland
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Sample My Newsletter
From "How Do I Get My Horse's Attention?," Issue 1, part 2 of our FREE monthly newsletter
Re: new horse owner
"I could walk by my horse all day and he doesn't have to even recognize that I'm here - and it would be a waste of my time to ask him to do anything. But if I took a stick and started poking him, then all of a sudden it becomes a whole lot more important to the horse that "I'm here." When you ask a horse to do something, a lot of other things are going to draw his attention and it's important that you become more important, no matter what it takes. The horse has to fully recognize that you're there. That's important, otherwise, you can't get to the next step: You can't get him to respond in a certain way.
"You've all heard that you want to get your horse's attention first. That's nonsense. We don't care about the horse's attention; we really don't. I don't expect the horse to think about me before he does something. Have you ever been on a trail ride with your horse when the horse did everything you wanted him to do? What were you doing? You were looking around, talking to people, enjoying the ride. Did you care for even one moment what your horse was thinking? No, you didn't, because he was doing exactly what you were asking him to do. You didn't care what he was thinking because."
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