Horse Trust rescue residents, Ernie and Sam, grazing in the Chilterns. Photo credits: Natalie, Senior…
The Horse Trust Webinar
Join The Horse Trust for the first in our new Clinical Animal Behaviour webinar series!
Are you working towards becoming a registered equine Clinical Animal Behaviourist? Would you like to learn more about how registered Clinical Animal Behaviourists deal with equine behaviour cases? Are you interested in equine behaviour and approaches used to manage behaviour problems?
If the answer is yes, then The Horse’s Trust’s equine Clinical Animal Behaviour webinars are for you!
Join us for a fantastic webinar with registered Clinical Animal Behaviourist, Jenni Nellist, who will be delving into the nitty gritty of how she dealt with a case of inter-horse aggression.
Jenni will explore all aspects of the case, from initial contact with the client and vet to history taking, the first consult, differential diagnoses, how she dealt with the client, the behaviour modification programme and how it was delivered, whether it needed to be changed as the case progressed/in subsequent consults, and what the ultimate outcome of the case was.
Date: Wednesday 25th November
Time: 7.30pm to 8.30pm plus 30 minutes Q&A
Cost: £10 per ticket
SIGN UP HERE
If you can’t attend live, the webinar will be recorded and delegates will have 30 days to watch the recording. You will also have the opportunity to send in questions for a week after the webinar for Jenni to answer.
About Jenni
Jenni Nellist is an Animal Behaviour and Training Council (ABTC) Registered Clinical Animal Behaviourist (horses and dogs) and a full member of the Association of Pet Behaviour Counsellors (APBC). Jenni has been practicing as an animal behaviourist since establishing her South Wales business in 2005, helping dog and horse owners towards better animal behaviour and more satisfying human-animal relationships. She gained the postgraduate diploma in Companion Animal Behaviour Counselling from the University of Southampton in 2006 and achieved the Masters in 2011 after conducting an in-depth study on the impact of training method on horse welfare and the horse-human relationship. Jenni also has an Equine Science degree (BSc Hons) from the University of Wales, Aberystwyth where she focused on behaviour and welfare issues including a field study on Welsh hill pony behaviour.
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