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Course Criteria
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0.00 Credits
No course description available.
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3.00 Credits
Advanced Horsemanship. Three semester hours. (1 lecture, 4 lab) May be taken concurrently or after EqSc 141. Refinement of equitation skills. Students will enroll in sections based on equitation skills as determined by a riding test. Class size limited to 15 per section. Animal use fee: $40.%
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1.00 - 4.00 Credits
No course description available.
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3.00 Credits
Yearling Training - Three semester hours This class is designed to help students learn the objectives for putting further training on yearling colts. The students will be doing ground work with the horses that is past the point of halter breaking the colts. The students will work on getting them ready for the many aspects involved in being saddle horses. The students will need to teach the colts how to walk, trot, and lope in both directions on a longe line, load into a trailer on their own, listen to verbal commands, come up to people in the pasture for catching, stand correctly and still for purposes of show, obedience, and future farrier needs, as well as many other aspects of getting a young horse trained.%
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3.00 Credits
Two Year Old Horse Training - Three semester hours This class is designed to help teach students how to break horses to ride. These horses are 2 years old and have had all of their groundwork done in previous classes. Now, it is time for them to be broke. The objectives of the class are for the students to learn how to break the horses to ride which includes exercising the horse extensively, teaching the horse to ground drive, saddling the horse for the first time, and teaching the horse to accept a bit in its mouth. Once all this is accomplished, the students shall teach the horses how to accept the students on their backs and ask the horses to move out. The students will have to learn to teach the horses how to walk, jog, lope, back and turn all while the students are on them. The final goal of the class will be for all of the horses to be broke and for all of the students to now know how to break a horse and what all work and training goes into the process. %
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3.00 Credits
Equine Nutrition. Three semester hours. (2 lecture, 2 lab) Nutrition of the horse with emphasis on ration formulation, forage and hay quality and digestive disorders. Prerequisite: AnS 307, PlS 326. Lab fee: $15.%
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3.00 Credits
Equine Reproduction. Three semester hours. (2 lecture, 2 lab) Management of reproduction in the mare and stallion to include puberty management, estrous cycles, mare and stallion reproductive management, artificial insemination, ultrasound and palpation, foaling care and rebreeding. Prerequisite: AnS 311. Lab fee: $15.%
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3.00 Credits
Veterinary Techniques in the Equine. Three semester hours. (2 lecture, 2 lab) Diseases, parasites and common ailments specific to the horse. Treatment of colic, laminitis, proper hoof care will be among the topics covered. Occasional field trips required. Lab fee: $15.%
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4.00 Credits
Horse Training. Four semester hours. (1 lecture, 6 lab) Techniques of horse training. Students will be responsible for developing a twoyear old for riding. Emphasis on behavior modification, imprinting, and techniques involved in finishing a young horse. Prerequisite: EqSc 341. Class limited to 15 students. Animal use fee: $40.%
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3.00 Credits
Stable Management. Three semester hours. (2 lecture, 3 lab) Principles of stable management to include stable design, records and reports, equine law, labor management, customer relations, marketing and equine care in confinement. Field trips required. Prerequisites: AEc 219, AMc 315 or 425; EqSc 341.%
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