Elverta Boarding Stables

Elverta Boarding Stables Elverta Boarding Stables is a family owned boarding facility that offers single horse pens, double horse pens, or stall options.

Family owned horse boarding conveniently located just 15 minutes from downtown Sacramento. Rates include large paddocks with covered shelters, 2x daily feeding and cleaning, two large arenas and one lighted covered sand arena; riding trails around the 35+ acre ranch and a great family atmosphere. Stop by and ask for Jo or call for more info.

November 7th our lives change.
10/28/2021

November 7th our lives change.

10/27/2021
10/18/2021

Why We Should Consider
the Whorls on Our Horses

Looking at whorls is a time-honored method of judging a horse’s temperament.
Long-held as superstition, there is science to back it up. Hair and brain are formed from the same fetal cell layer. Because they form at the same time it makes sense that as a fetus develops the hair growing over the brain and body, can shows signs of what is going on underneath.

The placement of a whorl on a horse’s face can tell us a lot about its personality.
If it is up high, above eye level, the horse will be very smart, energetic, and outgoing. An extrovert.

To the right, our right as we face them that is, shows a right-brained horse, reactive, emotional, nervous, defensive.

A whorl placed below eye level should be an introvert, sometimes considered lazy or stubborn they are smart, easily bored, and can be distrustful. I’m not sure I’ve ever seen a mule that didn’t have a low whorl.

A whorl that sits on the left side of the face, again our left, means a left-brain horse. One who is confident and willful. The farther a whorl is from the center the more pronounced the effect will be.

A center whorl is the most common and doesn’t tell us a whole lot. With that type of whorl, we need to look at the shape of the head, ear, eyes, all the other clues we are given.
When we get into two or more whorls it gets even more complicated. They can show tendencies from two very different brain types. Whorls that are stacked, one above the other, show a horse that is an introvert and an extrovert. Side by side whorls will be right-brain, reactive, and hot, as well as left-brain, unreactive, and confident.

The more whorls the more interesting the horse. The people I’ve talked to who have horses with three or four or more whorls have loved them.

Whorls can pop up in some unexpected places across the body of the horse too. All horses have whorls on the neck that will tell us where they prefer to flex or what direction they like to turn towards.

Whorls on the body can tell us if they will be sensitive to the cinch or girth, or possibly even to the saddle. Whorls on the legs and belly can tell us how the horse will move. There are many whorls that we don’t yet know the meaning of but all whorls have a message for us if we will listen.

All horses are individuals. With careful thought and effort, we can find the best ways to work with them no matter what whorls they have. A whorl is not a way to see if a horse is ‘bad’ instead, checking whorls is one way for us to gather clues. Those clues can help us figure out a horse’s temperament and suitability for both us and whatever discipline we are hoping to pursue.


By Noche Miller

Noche Miller is an Instructor with Horse Tricks 101and the
author of Understanding Horse Whorls, available on Amazon

Other horses..
09/23/2021

Other horses..

06/24/2021

Address

7751 Sorento Road
Elverta, CA
95626

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