• Dolores [love/loves]@hexbear.net
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    2 months ago

    A well seasoned solider isn’t one who’s covered in cumin and tarragon and a well seasoned meal hadn’t fought many battles

    this is the core of a fantastic joke with a lil set up

    So one is teaching a behavior that is for your convenience but doesn’t harm the animal and the other harms the animal

    this is where the trouble is. from a human perspective i recognize a distinct similarity, but i am not veterinarian enough to make a judgement on how true that is from a biological standpoint. does the weight of people/cargo on an equine make it so? is pulling a wagon as damaging as putting things on their back? how often are these activities done, does that matter?

    i don’t expect you to answer those, i just have a bit of skepticism around this from studying people with very fundamental relationships with horses on the steppe. it’s hard to imagine that horses have had a place below and less care than other animals in societies that prised them so much, y’know?

    • miz [any, any]@hexbear.net
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      2 months ago

      I’m gonna be workshopping this seasoned soldier joke for a while. I feel like maybe we could tie it in with Biden’s fabulisms about his uncle being eaten by cannibals

    • GalaxyBrain [they/them]@hexbear.net
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      2 months ago

      Care is irrelevant here, riding horses is really bad for them, same with making them pull stuff. Plain and simple. For riding, it’s a lot of weight constantly on their spine and for hauling carts and stuff, that’s physical labor a horse was never meant to do. I was gonna say we don’t industrialized dogs, but we do and did even more in the past but the majority of dogs that people have now are mostly just there to be pals, that evolution never happened when cars replaced horses, we stopped needing dogs as useful hunting and gathering pals but we still enjoyed their company where it seems any attachment to a horse is based mostly around the riding of it. And like, I raised huskies and have had them lead a sled and had the youngest one we raised learn to haul me around on a skateboard when we moved into town, so I’m not totally innocent here, but well and this is my personal observation here, the huskies really really wanted to do it and the horses I’ve seen have seemed less enthusiastic

      • Dolores [love/loves]@hexbear.net
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        2 months ago

        for hauling carts and stuff, that’s physical labor a horse was never meant to do

        this is super fascinating because what about those draught horses, which brings in the whole can of worms about selective breeding. but they can definitely handle pulling modern day shit (but were bred for a lot of heavier, more dangerous tasks in the 19th century)

        we still enjoyed their company where it seems any attachment to a horse is based mostly around the riding of it

        i wonder if ‘early’ relationships with dogs were viewed the same way. is there space for pet-like conditions for horses? and like dogs would that be accompanied with some labor uses (herding dogs, watch dogs) while most of them were just companions? i think donkeys are a total shoo-in for pets but horses are awful big

        • GalaxyBrain [they/them]@hexbear.net
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          2 months ago

          Yes, most dogs were generally kept for their labor use and smaller lap dog types were generally bred by royalty as a status symbol. And generally speaking your working dogs are in a bit of a symbiotic relationship, dogs sorta followed people eating leftovers and also had the benefit for people of having packs of dogs watching their backs and keeping other scary stuff more nervous and that turned from a mutually beneficial relationship to us using dogs as tools and companions at the same time. However as utility shrank the angle of companionship stayed and became.e more important and thar was also to the detriment of dogs, look at pugs etc. Also this is starting to cross into the territory of I think we also have historically mistreated dogs, there are differences in how and I fo think dogs and people are more set up to coexist than horses and humans because of how the relationship developed, there is a pretty old symbiosis with dogs and people, horses were pure animal exploitation.

          • Dolores [love/loves]@hexbear.net
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            2 months ago

            horses were pure animal exploitation

            dogs are a bit older than other domestic animals but i hesitate to put too much meaning in dates that can vary 1,000 years in a period where the biggest advancements are in ways to put stone-headed sticks into things. i’m a firm believer in animal agriculture being after plant agriculture ofc but that hypothesis does imply some symbiosis with the progenitors of domestic species, so it’s hard to say how different that is.

            • GalaxyBrain [they/them]@hexbear.net
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              2 months ago

              Dogs were domesticated prior to agriculture and there’s evidence of that. You maybe just don’t know shit about anthropology and when and how different animals were domesticated.

              • Dolores [love/loves]@hexbear.net
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                2 months ago

                i know that, but how little we know about domestication and stone age shit shouldn’t give one confidence in making huge character differences between how different animals were domesticated originally. nobody wrote down that dogs are friends but cow-aurochs are food. could aurochs or horses be a benefit to have around the agricultural community before domestication? we don’t know

                  • There are wild populations descended from the same ancestors as horses and dogs, those are not the same thing as wild horses and dogs. They have fundamental biological and behavioral differences.

                    Yes, domesticated horses and dogs can interbreed with their wild counterparts, but at that point you’re getting into the “What is a species?” question. Polar bears and grizzly bears can interbreed just fine if they’re in the same place, same for chimps and bonobos.

                    And for horses there aren’t even really still wild horses. There’s Przewalski’s horse, but they separated from the ancestors of domestic horses long before domestication. They have a different number of chromosomes. Whatever wild horse populations we originally took the first horses from are long extinct.