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No Bucks Given HoofCamp

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Horses Remember Human Faces !
📚 What the Science Shows - A study by University of Sussex and University of Portsmouth found that horses not only recognise human facial expressions (happy vs. angry), but can remember a person’s previous emotional expression and change their behaviour accordingly when they meet the person later. - In another study, horses were trained to identify photographs of their keepers’ faces, including keepers they hadn’t seen in six months, and they performed significantly better than chance — showing long-term memory of human faces. - Research also shows horses can match a human’s facial expression with their voice in cross-modal tests (face + voice), indicating they likely recognise individuals and their emotional states through multiple cues. 💬 Quote from the research “What we’ve found is that horses can not only read human facial expressions but they can also remember a person’s previous emotional state when they meet them later … Essentially horses have a memory for emotion.” — Professor Karen McComb, University of Sussex 🧠 Why This Matters for Us & Our Horses - When your horse remembers you, they’re also remembering your energy, your tone, your past interactions. That means every approach, training session or grooming moment adds up. - It highlights the importance of consistency, kindness and clarity in how we engage with them — because they notice, they remember. - For horsemanship: this isn’t just “the horse knows me” — it’s “the horse chooses how to respond to me based on what they remember.” That opens up power for connection and trust-building. - It offers a lens to evaluate our habits: if a horse seems wary or unengaged, maybe the memory trail we’ve built with them needs attention. 📝 Post Prompt for Your Community 🧮 Question time: - Think about your horse: how do they react when they see you after a day off, or someone new comes into the barn? - Have you ever noticed their body-language change depending on how you were feeling or behaving previously? - This week: try entering their space with calm energy, note how they look at you (ears, eye gaze, posture) and post what you observed. - Drop a short story: “That time my horse remembered me after ___ days/weeks and did ___”.
1 like • Nov 5
A perfect example of “there’s a soul in their - connect with it and it will change your life”. Sadly, there are still a great many trainers and owners who still believe “you are a horse and I am a human and you will do as I say”. Technically yes that is true. The horse came into this physical body as a horse and the human came in as human but the souls are the same. Not meaning that their souls are identical just meaning that each one is a soul in a different physical body. So looking at the horse as one soul to another is what they always seek and we need to give that. In many of the horses I have worked with over the years who have been imported, they love music from their countries. If the barn staff listens to Latin music while working, the horses will resonate with it and enjoy it. Because they understand words, when they come to our country our language is very different to them so they are often confused. In my book Lordy, In His Own Words which is the first book ever written entirely in the words of a racehorse (he just allowed me to interpret it for him) his whole premise is “there a soul in there.” He did an amazing job helping humans to understand that. Thank you for sharing this!
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Shirley Merrill
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@shirley-merrill-1218
Animal Communicator gives animals the gift of speech globally. Teaching Animal Communication Classes. Also lost pets & pets who have passed.

Active 32d ago
Joined Nov 2, 2025