Ticket #5891 (new)

Opened 8 days ago

THIS African trick kills toenail fungus COMPLETELY

Reported by: "Nail Infection" <ToenailsFungus@…> Owned by:
Priority: normal Milestone: 2.11
Component: none Version: 3.8.0
Severity: medium Keywords:
Cc: Language:
Patch status: Platform:

Description

THIS African trick kills toenail fungus COMPLETELY

http://fungusfix.biz/3uvTHhB2GR-cdhk473idauXiBEgVnCk_34icsLrm4oCpCAGLpg

http://fungusfix.biz/7z8VGSnd275QmBqBrn75wgVss-QRcYQgHhhvJhRAz6isJ58Fmw

dies have indicated that horses perform a number of cognitive tasks on a daily basis, meeting mental challenges that include food procurement and identification of individuals within a social system. They also have good spatial discrimination abilities. They are naturally curious and apt to investigate things they have not seen before. Studies have assessed equine intelligence in areas such as problem solving, speed of learning, and memory. Horses excel at simple learning, but also are able to use more advanced cognitive abilities that involve categorization and concept learning. They can learn using habituation, desensitization, classical conditioning, and operant conditioning, and positive and negative reinforcement. One study has indicated that horses can differentiate between "more or less" if the quantity involved is less than four.

Domesticated horses may face greater mental challenges than wild horses, because they live in artificial environments that prevent instinctive behavior whilst also learning tasks that are not natural. Horses are animals of habit that respond well to regimentation, and respond best when the same routines and techniques are used consistently. One trainer believes that "intelligent" horses are reflections of intelligent trainers who effectively use response conditioning techniques and positive reinforcement to train in the style that best fits with an individual animal's natural inclinations.

Temperament
Main articles: Draft horse, Warmblood, and Oriental horse
Horses are mammals, and as such are warm-blooded, or endothermic creatures, as opposed to cold-blooded, or poikilothermic animals. However, these words have developed a separate meaning in the context of equine terminology, used to describe temperament, not body temperature. For example, the "hot-bloods", such as many race horses, exhibit more sensitivity and energy, while the "cold-bloods", such as most draft breeds, are quieter and calmer. Sometimes "hot-bloods" are classified as "light horses" or "riding horses", with the "cold-bloods" classified as "draft hors

untitled-part.html Download

Attachments

untitled-part.html Download (6.1 KB) - added by ToenailsFungus@… 8 days ago.
Added by email2trac

Change History

Changed 8 days ago by ToenailsFungus@…

Added by email2trac

Changed 8 days ago by ToenailsFungus@…

This message has 1 attachment(s)

Changed 8 days ago by ToenailsFungus@…

Note: See TracTickets for help on using tickets.