Oct. 11, 2019 Observer

Page 1

FROM FARM, COMMERCIAL TO TOWN OR RESORT - CALL

NEW 33 Aspen Cres, YEAR ROUND MMPP

RAY 306-575-8575 • MANDY 306-452-8256 VIEW ALL LISTINGS ON WWW.REALTOR.CA

NEW 320-5th St W., Carlyle SK788285

$219,500

REDUCED Van Rybroek Acreage, Manor SK785236

$235,000

$209,000

16 Aspen Cres, MMPP

2 Carlyle Place

SOLD

SOLD PM40011904

OBSERVER

VOLUME 83 • NO. 22 | FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11TH, 2019

THE

October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month -

WWW.CARLYLEOBSERVER.COM

INSIDE THIS WEEK:

Creative Tables 2019 PAGE 3

RCMP report Page 7

on the outskirts of town – 1.15 acres

STUNNING, FULLY UPDATED BUNGALOW

$348,000

MLSÒ SK765826 | royal lepage premier realty

FACEBOOK.COM/CARLYLEOBSERVER

Hockey season has arrived PAGE 10

4 BED | 3 BATH | 1600 SQFT

r

carmen e

a

l

e

s

t

a

t

See pages 12 & 13

Chase The Ace is back PAGE 11

Fleury Brothers face-off PAGE 24

3 BED | 3 BATH | 2000 SQFT LARGE, updated Home with attached garage

BEAUTIFUL MASTER BEDROOM! e

306-452-8198

$236,000

royal lepage premier realty | MLSÒ SK788425

Johnston shares her horse sense By Mary Moffat

marymoffat@sasktel.net

Photo submitted

A student leads her horse blindfolded while her teammate gives direction during an Equine Assisted Learning course.

TRUNK SHOW! Saturday Oct. 19th details inside

The English Language Learners Dictionary describes horse sense as the “ability to make good judgments or decisions; common sense”. For Teresa Johnston, there is so much more. With over 30 years of experience with horses, her love of horses has shaped the person she is today. Recently she has taken that passion, the things she has learned herself working with them, and the desire to share that knowledge with others. Horses are a prey animal, their very survival relying upon physical traits. Their ears move independently of each other, one can face forward, listening to whatever is going on there, while the other could face off to the side or to the rear of the animal, listening for danger behind them. Their eyes are located on the sides of their heads, rather than in the middle, allowing them to see a much larger angle, and their necks can increase that field of vision even more. Horses are honest communicators, using their ears, tail and body to let you know how

they are feeling. They are also very sensitive to emotions, so a handler’s frustration will be echoed in the horse itself. In 2002, Johnston was working as a school bus driver and noticed how much the children on that bus loved their horses, and how many of them needed more in their lives. In 2008 she took an Equine Assisted Learning course through Cartier Farms in Prince Albert SK, but because she was struggling with some health issues and raising young children, she was unable to make her dream happen. She took more courses in 2009, 2012 and in 2018 she recertified, wanting to make use of the new indoor arena at Rising Hope Ranch just outside of Arcola, SK. Since then she has collected props for the obstacle courses, planned youth programs, corporate workshops, and Kids Day Camp. Working with the horses is an experiential learning experience, where two or three people work with the horse, learning to work together, using only their hands, or their voices depending on the task set before

them. The Youth Program spans 12 weeks, and each lesson builds on the previous lesson. The participants learn to feel comfortable with the animal; brushing them, moving the horse using their hands, the reins, the lead rope. For a student who is fearful in the beginning, this is empowering, and the skills used in the arena can be applied to real life. For many people it is an entirely new learning experience, working in a barn with an animal much larger than themselves. Students learn that if you pull the reins too hard, too often, or take their frustration out on the animal, there are consequences. The horse will eventually forgive the actions, if they are followed with new behaviours. The student learns new behaviours, empathy through discovering how the horse reacts to the different situations, and can then take that new skill set into their personal life. Horses don’t take offense, teaching students that when you are patient and kind things go well, but if you react in anger, the animal is confused and things don’t go well at all.

Cont’d. on page 3

DAYS 15%off

October 12- 19th Carlyle

all TAXI Boots

Win 1 of 3 Pairs Entry with purchase


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Oct. 11, 2019 Observer by Carlyle Observer - Issuu