horse tack and supply: Hawaii

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Dogs in Hawaii
Dog lovers, our sister site, DogTipping.com, helps you find your local breeder, trainer and more plus it offers discount prices on every dog product you can imagine:

Dog Adoption Hawaii

Dog DayCare Centers in Hawaii

Dog Trainers in Hawaii

Find Dog Breeders in Hawaii

Hawaii Kennel Club(s)

Local Pet Shops in Hawaii

Vets for Dogs in Hawaii

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Western Tack Stores in Hawaii

 

Also includes listings for Horse Feed and Apparel, Riding English or Western

 

Horse Tack and Supply in Hawaii, Listed by City


KULA
PONY EXPRESS TOURS, PO BOX 535; KULA, HI 96761; phone: 808-667-2200

MILILANI
PANIOLO OUTFITTERS, 95-124 KAUAMEA PLACE; MILILANI, HI 96789; phone: 808-623-4143

WAIALUA
FEED TROUGH INC, 67292 GOODALE AVE.; WAIALUA, HI 96791; phone: 808-637-5600

WAIMANALO
V.O. RANCH PRODUCTS, 41-849 KAKAINA ST; WAIMANALO, HI 96795; phone: 808-259-5495

 
   
   
         
 
 
 
 


Horse Tack And Supply: Hawaii, a nationwide listing of local tack stores from John Lyons Trainer Keith Hosman

© 2008 copyright Keith Hosman and horsemanship101.com

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Newsletter Sample
From Issue 14 of my FREE monthly newsletter

"Biting Horses"

"Did your horse tell you today that he's going to bite you next week? Will you bet your finger on that? Or your daughter's arm? Do you even know the signals? When you cinch up your horse and he pins his ears or you ask him to move away and he "purses up" his lips like he's mad, he's sending you a message. The message is simple and it's one of two things. It's either "I am the boss. Who are you, mortal, to ask me to do a dang thing?" or "I'm planning on taking over; expect a coup next Thursday."

"Biting is the single-most dangerous vice your horse can have. It's more dangerous than bucking, than rearing, kicking - or anything else you can name. A horse can take off a finger, an ear or objects I can't mention in this article in an instant. If your horse has developed that habit (or you fear that it might be about to), then nip it in the bud. Establish a tough zero tolerance policy and act aggressively.

"But if your horse drops an ear – is he firing a first shot or flicking a fly? Should we haul off and belt him regardless, just to be sure?"

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