Media- Breakfast Television
“We’re going to be on TV!”
This is my friend, Toby James. When I first met Toby in 2007, he wanted me to tell his owners that he was a performing horse. That he was going to be famous and be on TV! He was soooooo sure of himself, that he wanted his owners to research agents for performing animals on the internet. I passed on the information with some amusement and a bit of a shake of my head.
Privately, he suggested that I buy a red turtleneck, some lipstick, go get my hair cut and shape my eyebrows because we were going to be on TV! Every time I saw Tobs, he would say ” your hair isn’t cut yet, did you get the lipstick? The turtleneck? We’re going to be on TV! You HAVE to be ready and look your best.” He was so insistent, that I actually did buy the items and got my hair cut and shaped my eyebrows.
Then, 3 weeks later, there we stood, Toby and I, in front of the Breakfast Television cameras. I was very glad that I had done everything he had suggested! My very favourite moment was when I was telling the interviewer Toby’s story, pointing out him posing and adjusting his best side for the camera, I caught Toby’s eye and with great excitement and glee he said “We ARE on TV! We’re on TV!” Since then, Toby has appeared on TV several times!
It’s been a few years now since I’ve seen Toby, but funnily enough in the past few weeks I’ve been hearing his voice. He’s urging me to get ready, because I’m going to be on TV again… His lovely recommendations to prepare this time are to laugh a lot, smile, stretch and drink lots of water, so that I look my very best! Will keep y’all posted on the air date! In the meantime here we are on Breakfast TV!
Su Burnett, Horse Whisperer on Breakfast Television 2007
Media-horse canada
September/October 2010
Su Burnett, animal communicator on Lonely Planet Six Degrees Hong Kong
Horse Whisperer Su Burnett on Lonely Planet Six Degrees Hong Kong
Media- The Lonely Planet Six Degrees Hong Kong
February, 2001, Nova Scotia, Canada.
It’s winter. Very cold, very icy, very snowy, with a frigid wind chill in the air. I have created a warm lair in a cozy warm basement and find myself watching travel programs as I plan an escape to warmer climates. One of my favourite shows in The Lonely Planet Guide. While, I visit interesting cultures and get glimpses of exotic views along with the host, I start to dream of being on Lonely Planet. ‘Here I am, stuck inside because of all this snow and this freezing weather, watching TV, doing my best to remain inspired…’ I mused to myself. ‘ Wouldn’t it be cool if there was a kid, somewhere stuck inside like me, who is lying on the couch, watching TV with his dog, craving something to amuse himself, something to make him curious and think about something interesting and new…Then he saw me on TV, talking to animals, thought maybe he could do it, tried it on his german shepard, and realized it was possible!’
Hong Kong, 2003
And then there I was filming an episode of Lonely Planet Six Degrees Series 2 Hong Kong. What an excellent experience, the crew was fantastic and although it didn’t make it onto the series, filming at Ocean Park with the dolphins was wonderful!
South China Morning Post -2004-04-25
SCMP- Chris Oliver, April, 25, 2004
Some of Hong Kong’s wealthy racehorse owners are using an animal psychic to “talk” to their thoroughbreds- a form of post-career stress counselling as the animals make the transition into retirement.
Self-proclaimed animal communicator Su Burnett said she makes stable calls to retired racehorses at the invitation of their owners, to talk through problems ranging from anger management to cultural dislocation- and sometimes the paltry size of the female thoroughbred community.
In December she met retired horse Smiling Knight at the Fanling stables after the owner contacted her to help resolve its ” mean” disposition.
“These racehorses are like retired rock stars in a way because they are used to being in the limelight,” she said.”Sometimes they don’t understand why they are there in a retirement home. Sometimes they have been worked really hard in training and are feeling stressed out.”
Ms Burnett has discovered many horses suffer mood and temperament problems while trying to acclimatise to the summer heat as well as a lack of grass and open spaces.
By speaking with the horses she said she has been able to relay important information about what may be impeding their career development-issues that can range from diet, undiagnosed racing injuries, cramped and humid stable conditions, or lack of sex.
Ms Burnett, who moved to Hong Kong in 1980, says she recently worked with an American-bred horse that was undergoing culture shock, largely because he could not understand the trainers’ Chinese commands.
She said the animals were usually happy to see her, but that did not always guarantee an ill-tempered horse would behave. While meeting Smiling Knight, the horse reared and bit her forearm-although Ms Burnett said the animal had been polite enough to forewarn her.
“Every time I walked past that horse he said, ‘Come here, I want to tell you something, I want to talk to you’, “Ms Burnett said. “I was leaning forward to get away from him, it was so quick, he said, ‘You are slow today’, and I said, ‘I know’.”
Ms Burnett said she first discovered her ability to psychically communicate with animals as a child growing up in Canada.
She credited her grandmother- also a psychic healer- with recognising and supporting her ability, something which she said most children were born with but tended to lose as they faced the scepticism of adulthood.
She said she tends to hear the animals speaking in English but the process does not necessarily entail linguistic communication. Sometimes she understands what what they are saying through a form of telepathy-either by seeing pictures or, if an animal is injured, by physically feeling the pain in her own body.
“It is not like Dr Dolittle where their mouths move or anything like that,: she said.
Last week she made a house call to meet a nervous for-year-old golden retriever. The owners contacted her after the dog began refusing to go outside, a problem that slowly manifested during the past three months.
By speaking with the dog she discovered the animal had suffered a blown eardrum caused by a way-ward firecracker while the family watched Lunar New year celebrations.
The animal was also distressed by the family’s financial problems.
“Dogs understand everything you say to them,” Ms Burnett said. ” A lot of people in the household were very worried about money, so he wasn’t eating enough because he was trying to leave food behind for them.”
Apart from house calls, Ms Burnett said she can also communicate with animals by speaking over the telephone and has chatted with hundreds of pets in the past few months.
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