About the author

This blog is written by Sandra Poppema, B.Sc.

\"KONICASandra studied Animal Management in The Netherlands, Europe. She graduated in 1999.

Animal Management
The key focus of this Bachelor program is the management of human-animal relationships and animal welfare. Ethics, animal welfare, behaviour and human-animal relationships were key topics of this curriculum, along with biology and management. She continues to study these topics with a focus on the communication between horses and humans.

Instruction
Giving riding and groundwork lessons and training animals were always Sandra\’s biggest passions. After completing her degree she worked as an editor at a publishing house which was specialized in animal books. Sandra has co-written and authored three animal books. She has published several articles about pets & horses in magazines.

During this time she also continued her education as a teacher and became a certified riding instructor with the Royal Dutch Equestrian Sports Bond. At this point she stopped her full-time job as editor and became a full-time riding instructor and gave private riding lessons and horse training sessions in the Netherlands.

Centered Riding
Sandra discovered Centered Riding in 2010 and in 2011 she became a level 1 Centered Riding instructor. She followed riding lessons with her own instructor who taught her the benefits of NLP (Neuro Linguistic Programming) techniques. Sandra uses NLP in her lessons to communicate effectively with her pupils and really knows how to find someone\’s goals, divide them into achievable building blocks and motivate both people and horses to achieve them.

Building a lifelong bond with your horse
She loves to help horse enthusiasts improve their relationship with their horse in the saddle and on the ground. She prefers teaching private lessons because she feels riding is also \’teaching the horse\’ at the same time. In private lessons she has more time to explain not only the bio-mechanics of the rider, but also to explain the point of view of the horse and how he learns best (learning theory).

Canada
Sandra emigrated in 2012 with her husband, baby, two cats and her horse Kyra to Canada. Kyra was born in a nature reserve in The Netherlands and was feral when Sandra got her. She tamed Kyra with clicker training and started this blog. Initially this blog was to share her training methods and the process of taming her 11 month old filly and has grown into a repository of knowledge.

Now Sandra lives in Burnaby, BC, Vancouver and Kyra is boarded in a nearby stable in Delta. She is still passionate about sharing her knowledge about horse training and riding.

Websites:
HippoLogic
Clicker Training
Happy Herd

\"\"

19 thoughts on “About the author”

  1. Pingback: 10 funny horse cartoons | Hippologic's Horse Training

  2. Pingback: New Uses for ‘Old’ Tools in Clicker Training, part III | Hippologic's Horse Training

  3. Pingback: I wish I had … | Hippologic's Horse Training

  4. Pingback: Training your horse with rewards | Hippologic's Horse Training

  5. Pingback: Safety in Winter: DIY reflection halter | Hippologic's Horse Training

  6. Pingback: Interpretation of behaviour | Hippologic's Horse Training

  7. Pingback: Table Manners for Horses | Hippologic's Horse Training

  8. Pingback: DIY horse wreath | Hippologic's Horse Training

  9. Pingback: Horse book reviews | Hippologic's Horse Training

  10. Pingback: Book review: Horse Trick Training | Hippologic's Horse Training

  11. Pingback: ‘Clickertraining werkt niet bij mijn paard’ | Hippologic's Horse Training

  12. Pingback: Technieken om gedrag te verkrijgen: Luring en Moulding | Hippologic's Horse Training

  13. Pingback: Technieken om gedrag te verkrijgen: shaping, targeting en capturing | Hippologic's Horse Training

  14. Pingback: Snacks voor Valentijnsdag | Hippologic's Horse Training

  15. Pingback: Snacks voor Valentijnsdag – HippoLogic's Nederlandse blog

  16. Pingback: Technieken om gedrag te verkrijgen: shaping, targeting en capturing – HippoLogic's Nederlandse blog

  17. Pingback: ‘Clickertraining werkt niet bij mijn paard’ – HippoLogic's Nederlandse blog

  18. Pingback: Technieken om gedrag te verkrijgen: Luring en Moulding – HippoLogic's Nederlandse blog

  19. Pingback: NB: Natural Horsemanship: Guest Blog - HippoLogic

Comments are closed.

Scroll to Top