Good horses find good homes.

Good horses find good homes.

It’s our responsibility to set our young horses up for a good life. They need to be easy to handle, to load, to care for and be good at their ‘job’. This way we can be sure they will have the best chance at having a good home. Whether you plan to sell a horse or not, if something happened to you, where would your horse end up?
In a young horses education, get the right help, from the right people, as and when needed to make sure there aren’t any gaps in your horses education. From a sound foundation we can build a ‘good’ horse.
Difficult horses are difficult because a human made an error along the way, or, due to unresolved pain somewhere. It’s never the horses fault.
Sherbert is now 28, he looked after my three boys. They gave up riding 10 years ago, but I have no qualms about caring for him into his old age, he’s earned it.