Below is our latest announcement that can be emailed to your hiker, biker, and rider friends.
Or just copy the following into an email:
Hi - Great info on meeting horses and riders on the trail, so everybody stays safe and happy. Check it out before your next hike or ride - 
www.HorseSees.com
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Announcement
WHAT A HORSE SEES!
Meeting a Horse and Rider On the Trail
 Website and Film
Hello, folks!
Here’s a great new resource for info on sharing trails with horses, mountain bikers, and hikers: “What a Horse Sees!” – a short film illustrating safe ways of passing horse and rider on the trail – as seen on 
www.HorseSees.com.
Here’s the nutshell version:
When you meet a horse on the trail, make sure it knows you’re a mountain biker, not a mountain lion.
Here’s how:
- STOP — Horses spook easily, and may perceive movement, especially quiet movement, as a predator — and bolt.  
- TALK Human speech is reassuring and comforting for the horse. Continue to talk until the horse has passed.
- MOVE DOWN to the low side of the trail. If horse gets   spooked, you don’t want it going off the steep side or horse and rider   can be injured.  
This trail   etiquette — stop, talk, and move down - to the low side of  the trail —  is based on the experiences  of hikers, mountain bikers,  and horse  riders over many years, and is  illustrated in our film 
What a Horse Sees!
Happy trails!
Everett Lewis, Producer of the 
film and 
website - What a Horse Sees!
Hiker, Mountain Biker, Horse Rider
Everett  Lewis is a horse rider, a mountain biker, and a hiker. A  member of Back  Country Horsemen, he helps maintain trails in the North  Cascades Tree  Farm, and helped create the 1,200-mile Pacific Northwest  Trail from  Glacier National Park in Montana to the Pacific Ocean.  Everett and his  wife, Karen, live in Arlington, Washington, with four  horses and three  barn cats.