LT Equine Services

LT Equine Services I am offering teaching, riding and grooming on a fully insured freelance basis, in Bradford on Avon and the surrounding areas. Contact me for more info

12/12/2022

SHARING FOR A FRIEND....

Grazing/Stables Available

Stables and all year grazing for 1 or 2 horses has become available just before Christmas in quiet attractive purpose built 4 horse yard (DIY) at South Wraxall, between Corsham and Bradford on Avon, with two other horses. Use of tack room and barn. Good hacking. 20 x 40m arena being built in the New Year. Space for trailer/small horse box. Handy for West Wilts, Stonar, Wadswick!

Tel: 07973758178

*Please note comments or FB messages will not be monitored please call only.*

12/11/2022

Hello everyone!!

I am just sharing this for a friend, and can personally recommend this lovely little yard, I spent many happy years there with my two!

Grazing/Stables
Stables and all year grazing for 1 or 2 horses has become available just before Christmas in quiet attractive purpose built 4 horse yard (DIY) at South Wraxall, between Corsham and Bradford on Avon, with two other horses. Use of tack room and barn. Good hacking. 20 x 40m arena being built in the New Year. Space for trailer/small horse box. Handy for West Wilts, Stonar, Wadswick!

Tel: 07973758178

PLEASE NOTE, COMMENTS OR FB MESSAGES WILL NOT BE MONITORED, PLEASE CALL ONLY.

Good morning everyone!!!Whilst I'm sure you're all aware that I'm no longer working with horses, I was really hoping tha...
19/09/2022

Good morning everyone!!!

Whilst I'm sure you're all aware that I'm no longer working with horses, I was really hoping that this wonderful community might help me out?

Please, please, please could you all share this post, and help to get this much loved family member back home where he belongs?

He's been missing almost 24 hours now, which is totally out character, he was wearing a collar with all his contact details, address etc. when he went missing, but obviously this may have come off before someone has found him. He is also microchipped, so if taken to the vets they will be able to contact owners.

I would really appreciate all the shares possible, he is already very much missed, and his family are worried sick about him 😢

Thank you 🙏

So, yesterday was officially the end of an era for Rose, Fundador and myself, and the beginning of a new chapter as we m...
13/12/2020

So, yesterday was officially the end of an era for Rose, Fundador and myself, and the beginning of a new chapter as we moved to our new yard and a different pace of life.
The most stressful part of the day was loading Fundador (standard!), so in preparation, the vet was booked for sedation, an hour and 20, plus 4 lots of sedation later and we were on our way. 🥴🤦‍♀️
Never let it be said that I am a weakling, as I literally had to lift the the back end of him in (which is roughly 300kg for those that don't know how much he'd weigh!).🏋️‍♀️💪💪💪 (thanks Chloe for capturing this 🙄🤣)
Huge huge thanks to Elise Richardson (and of course star assistant Freddie) , and Chloe Hiscock for their help and endless patience in the process of getting him there!!
They have been very chilled so far, I had hoped that having "accidentally " forgotten to have packed , we might have lost him, but alas he has swiftly located us!!
Please please DON'T ask me where we've gone, its nothing personal, I'm not telling anyone except for those that need to know (and they are also sworn to secrecy so don't ask them either!), but for now we are just hoping for some time to ourselves to adjust to our new lives and situations.
Don't worry though, I'm sure there will still be lots of updates, and we are extremely lucky to have found such a brilliant yard with amazingly lovely owners and neighbours.
Thanks everyone, I shall miss my mad ladies at Ellbridge, and I'm sure I'll still see you all lots #########

*DUE TO TIMEWASTERS*I am still looking for a sole use yard/barn/shelter for me and my horses.As near to Bradford on Avon...
21/11/2020

*DUE TO TIMEWASTERS*
I am still looking for a sole use yard/barn/shelter for me and my horses.

As near to Bradford on Avon, Wiltshire as possible, but could travel (within reason) for right yard

Must have;
• undercover space for 2 (separated or potential to separate)
• a grass free area/yard/pen or space to make one
• running water
• minimum of a couple acres of turnout
• storage space for hay/bedding/essentials

Would like if possible (but not 100% essential);
• electricity
• lockable secure tackroom
• free access between one enclosure/stable and paddocks/field
• soft or sanded area for turn out
• someone living onsite or nearby for security reasons

Extremely open to suggestions, please contact with any ideas!!

Experienced, reliable tenant, with well behaved , barefoot horses, references for all of us available 😊

This is such a well written explanation of our role in training horses.My philosophy is always that the horse must alway...
17/09/2020

This is such a well written explanation of our role in training horses.

My philosophy is always that the horse must always have the choice, as otherwise, it will never create a willing response, and if it is not a willing response, it can easily, and rapidly, escalate in to a very dangerous situation.

Choose your training methods wisely 😉💗

Like most children, I learned to tell lies early in life because I learned lying was one way of avoiding trouble. When I was an annoying and disobedient kid I learned how to behave well enough to avoid getting into too much trouble with mum and dad. When I was a teenager I learned how to just apply enough effort to my schoolwork to avoid getting into trouble with the teachers. When I was in my first year at university and away from home I learned how to plan my driving route from a night of drinking at the pub back to avoid getting into trouble with the police.

I learned all those strategies as a way of avoiding trouble. But I only learned them because people allowed me to get away with it. In effect, they taught me how to avoid trouble by just doing enough right things to keep them happy. I didn’t necessarily learn to do the right thing as much as I learned to avoid doing or being caught doing the wrong thing.

We do this with our horses too.

People teach horses evasion behaviours rather than yielding behaviours.

What do I mean by evading and yielding? You may have your own definition, but for the sake of clarity, this is how I think of those two concepts in terms of my horse training.

Evasion is an escape from trouble. Evasion incorporates enough anxiety in a horse to motivate it to flee from something. The flee might be very small or very big, but it is nonetheless an escape strategy. Evasion involves a horse mentally creating distance between it, the pressure, and the source of the pressure (human).

Yielding is not escaping from trouble, but moving towards comfort. Yielding involves a horse moving towards a thought the human is suggesting, not fleeing from pressure.

I see so many horses that are very obedient but carry inner turmoil because so much of what they do carries the burden of anxiety. Their obedience only exists as a means of escaping trouble.

Recently, a woman at a clinic brought along a very nice pony that was very obedient. She had followed the teachings of some well-known trainers and taught her horse a lot of fancy exercises. I believe many people would be pretty impressed by the work the pony displayed. Yet, in almost everything it did the pony carried a level of anxiety that made the movements rushed and tight. There was very little flow or quietness about the work. It was a good example of a horse that lived to escape the trouble that pressure brought to its life. The pony saw its choices as life and death decisions.

In another example, I saw a horse that kept offering responses to questions that had not yet been asked. It was so troubled by what might happen that it tried to throw out the answer even before the handler had time to ask for something.

In both these cases, the horse had learned to evade pressure, rather than yield to it.

How does this happen? I believe there are a few factors that create the mindset in a horse that it should try to escape pressure.

First, there is the adage that people quote over and over again, “make the right thing easy and the wrong thing difficult.” For many people, the emphasis is on making the wrong thing difficult and the “right thing easy” is merely a matter of removing the pressure. This attitude is too simplistic and guaranteed to cause problems along the line.

If removing the pressure was the best way to “make the right thing easy”, then a horse would always choose the “right thing.” But of course, that doesn’t happen. We need to appreciate that in a horse’s mind the right thing is not easy, otherwise, it would always choose it by itself and without us having to ask. But because we don’t make the effort to make the right thing a sweet spot that the horse would choose on its own, we focus on making the wrong thing difficult. In doing that we teach our horse to flee or escape the wrong thing.

This leads me to the second cause of horses learning obedience through evasion of pressure, rather than yielding to pressure; “controlling horses is about controlling the feet.”

This is one of my biggest peeves. If we think of training just in terms of training the feet to go where we want and the body posture to shape in the way we want, we are merely training obedience. As the lady with the pony I mentioned had done, training the feet alone can only teach a horse to flee from pressure. There can be no yielding or possibility of the horse and human going together.

A natural follow on from this concept is directing versus driving a horse. People who teach horses evasion behaviours almost always rely on using driving methods to instil obedience.

For those who have not read “The Essence Of Good Horsemanship”, driving a horse is sending a horse away from something, eg swinging the tail end of a lead rope at a horse to send it somewhere is driving a horse’s feet away. In contrast, directing a horse is directing its mind to think of going somewhere and the feet will follow the thought. Driving is sending a horse away from something and directing is sending a horse towards something.

When you direct a horse, you are asking it to yield to an idea because the feet follow the horse’s thought. However, when you drive a horse you separate the feet from the thought in that its mind is focused on the source of the pressure and its feet try to escape that pressure. So driving teaches evasion behaviours.

And finally, the other factor that contributes to training that teaches evasions rather than yielding is our sense of superiority. I feel that we so often think of training as something we do to a horse. We own them. We are smarter than them. We feed and care for them. We are their boss and our job as trainers is to teach them to live by the rules.

But in my view, training and working with a horse should not be something we impose on them. It is something we do together. In everything we do with a horse we need to offer them a feel to follow and go with, which presents as the right thing being easy. When we perform groundwork, we offer them a feel to follow that makes the right thing easy for them. When we ride, we offer them a feel to go with that makes the right thing feel easy. When they are struggling, we need to see it as our failing and not theirs. Working with horses should be a team pursuit and not an activity where we issue a command and watch the horse perform its magic.

All these factors play a part in whether a horse yields to a good idea or escapes from a bad one. But probably the biggest factor that determines which it is that we teach our horse is our attitude as to what training and working with horses means to us. If we view horses as our dear friends who need our help to understand the world, we take a very different attitude to the arena than a person who sees horses as their chattel that needs to be taught the rules.

Photo: This horse is evading the reins.

So, after yesterday's bombshell, I'm hoping that someone may be able to point me in the right direction, towards finding...
22/08/2020

So, after yesterday's bombshell, I'm hoping that someone may be able to point me in the right direction, towards finding a new residence to rent for my two lovely horses.

I am searching for what I fear may well be the impossible, I only need very basic facilities, but have quite specific needs for the set up, so here goes....

MUST HAVES

• Mains Water
• Minimum 2-3 acres grazing (preferably no, or very little Rye Grass if possible)
• Stabling/Shelters/Barn with room for 2/3 horses.
• Hardstanding directly outside of stabling area, or option to add hardstanding area.
• Self-contained/Sole use
• Storage area for Hay/bedding/essentials
• No public footpaths through land (sadly really cannot risk a well intentioned member of the public feeding them anything!)
• Good hacking (on or off road), no arena required, as will only be hacking in the future

BONUS IF HAS

• Electricity
• Occupied property onsite or nearby for security reasons
• Away from main roads
• Pen area with soft surface near buildings
• Secure storage area

I am basically looking for a yard where my gelding has the free choice to get outside a little and wonder around without going on grass (health issues prevent him from having any grass), and whereby my mare can choose to either be inside, or outside, as she pleases.

They are both very well behaved, barefoot (so less churning up of land) and quiet horses, in their mid to late teens, that I am trying to enrich the lives of, to the best of my ability.
References availabile for both myself and my horses.

Location is ideally within 5 miles of Bradford on Avon, Wiltshire, but I am open to all suggestions with regards to area, and type of building for stabling (ie. Open barn building split in to two areas, field shelters on hardstanding, stables etc).

Please get in contact if you have anything which may be suitable, and feel free to share 😊

*****IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT*****(Sorry, it's quite  long one!)I am writing to all of my lovely followers, to inform you ...
20/08/2020

*****IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT*****
(Sorry, it's quite long one!)

I am writing to all of my lovely followers, to inform you of some big changes I am making to my life.

As most of you already know, I have been experiencing a somewhat difficult time in my personal life for the last 18 months or so, for a variety of reasons.

These difficulties have lead me to make a very hard, and rather huge decision.

I have decided that I no longer wish to work with horses full time, which has been an incredibly difficult conclusion to come to, but, for many reasons, I feel that this is the right decision for me, at this time in my life.

One of these reasons, as most of you are aware, is that, although we were not married, I was basically widowed last year at only 36 years old, so I need to now figure out how to navigate my way through the rest of my life without him, which is a fairly daunting prospect, if I'm being completely honest.

Sadly, this does mean that I will be ceasing to offer livery services at my lovely little yard, and will be looking for somewhere else for my 2 lovely horses to live.

I will still be happy to offer tuition, training/groundwork for your horse, and I have already spoken to a few clients that I am continuing to help as usual on their yards. Please don't worry if you have a voucher for lessons with me, these will still be valid, and I am remaining fully insured for all activities.

This a big and rather scary step for me, mainly because I have never really wanted to do anything else with my life, even when I was severely crippled for many years, I don't think I ever truly accepted that I wouldn't be able to work with horses, I managed to claw my way back to fitness to be able to, so this is a totally new feeling for me!
I don't really have any idea of what I really want to do in life, but I am a firm believer that when the time is right, I will figure it out.

I would like to thank everyone for their support over the last few years, I truly appreciate it, you are all wonderful, especially my lovely liveries and yard owner, who have all been so understanding and supportive of my change of direction.

Life will throw you many curve balls, and sometimes you need to stretch in an unplanned direction to catch them.

12/07/2020

I have some friends, who aren't on Facebook, looking for their new best friend......

13.3hh min. but would need to be stocky
15.3hh max.
Preferably gelding but would consider a nice mare
Either:
7-10 year old approx. that’s a safe hack but could do a bit of everything if we wanted. Not worried if it needs schooling. Quiet to handle, good to catch, box, shoe etc.
Maximum budget £3000

OR

2/3/4 year old that’s been well handled but just needs backing. Again needs to be fairly quiet and good to catch.
Maximum budget £1500

Cob types preferred as would need to live out 24/7. No laminitics etc.

NO DEALERS PLEASE, WILL CONSIDER LOANING

Loving home awaits, please contact me and I can pass on any details 😊

When you find a good spot of light that hits your horse perfectly for a beautiful photo, you get his feet right, he then...
11/07/2020

When you find a good spot of light that hits your horse perfectly for a beautiful photo, you get his feet right, he then turns his head and flops his ears around.
So, I simply request that he straightens his neck, and pops his ears forwards, for just a moment.
This, was his response, stood there for quite a while getting goofier and goofier, and of course the more I laughed the more he did it..... 🙄🙈💁🙆😂😂😎😍😍😍

These really are incredibly good forks!!!I treated myself to one at the beginning of lockdown, and the difference I've n...
10/07/2020

These really are incredibly good forks!!!
I treated myself to one at the beginning of lockdown, and the difference I've noticed is huge!!
So much easier in your back, elbows, wrists and hands , admittedly took a few days to get used to the longer handle with a curve in it, but I love it and wouldn't swap it now!
Worth every penny, and in my opinion all yards should provide these for their staff to help prolong a groom's working life!!
Herbie's Yard Supplies are a fantastic company to deal with as well, Emma is lovely and really cares about all of her customers and their horses 😊

Address

Bradford On Avon
Bradford-on-Avon
15

Telephone

07894059681

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