Whitegate Farm Equestrian Hub

Whitegate Farm Equestrian Hub Welcome to the hub! Whitegate Farm (LL12 9RW) is blessed with wonderful facilities and a centre of equestrian coaching excellence.

All levels are welcome - offering development opportunities for riders, owners, coaches and other equestrian professionals.

📢 Attention Dressage Riders! Following the success of our first unaffiliated dressage competition last month, we’re deli...
03/06/2026

📢 Attention Dressage Riders!

Following the success of our first unaffiliated dressage competition last month, we’re delighted to announce two more dates for your diary:

📅 19th July
📅 16th August

Entries for our 19th July competition are now open and available to book on Horse Monkey. We can’t wait to welcome both familiar faces and new competitors for another fantastic day of dressage.

Secure your place now and join us for another great event! 🏅🐎

02/06/2026

After yesterday sadness at Whitegate Farm with Forever’s passing, I’ve been digging out videos and reminiscing.

This was Mr Forever, dancing at our final Regionals at Bishop Burton in 2019.
He’d got wound up at detecting lots of pig and cattle smells (!) and then decided he really didn’t like the look of Judge Andrea Smith at C… so it took a fair bit of persuading to get him to the bottom of the arena - causing havoc to our floor plan and timing.

After his car crash entry, he did try to listen … a bit… and we loved our Lone Ranger music - really suited him! Thanks Tom Hunt !

Just goes to show, even when it all goes wrong in the white boards, if you are dancing with the horse you love, you’ll always be winning.

God love Forever, he was such a character.
Miss him greatly. RIP my boy…

29/05/2026

This is GOLD

25 Dressage Training Tips from Kyra Kyrklund!

Five-time Olympian Kyra Kyrklund shares her dressage training secrets at a Kentucky symposium.

1. A good rider lives on the small number of good steps and he builds on them. He forgets about the bad things. Inexperienced riders think mostly about the bad things.

2. There are many roads to the top of the mountain, but the view is the same from the top.

3. With transitions, horses find their balance by themselves.

4. A horse has a memory shorter than a dog-which might be three seconds. You must reward immediately.

5. In a proper pirouette, there is no suspension and it is bound to be four beat.

6. Even a foal can do one-tempi changes.

7. I have had to work to get flying changes because I didn't have a schoolmaster when I was learning. I count the steps: 1, 2, 3. Here is what I do:

I check that my horse is listening to me by doing a big half halt. If he is not listening I don't ask for the change until he is sharper.
I take my new outside leg back.
I ask for the change.
8. A horse only works for 45 minutes. He can carry us for that 45 minutes.

9. Never work a horse until he is sour ... especially young horses in the arena.

10. Don't bother with shoulder-in or any other movements if you are not able to influence the length of the horse's steps. There is no hope in hell until you can.

11. When you train at home, do one thing at a time-pirouette one day and half pass another, so you have time to do each thing with quality. You might choose canter work on one day and trot work on another.

12. Using the Fillis method of holding the reins of a double bridle, you take the bridoon as if you were driving. It will make the muscles of the lower arm soft and it is easier to use each bit separately.

13. Horse-and rider-combinations are a bit like a marriage. You have to find the horse you can work with. I like energetic, hot horses for myself.

14. In training you have to be very honest. You cannot lie to your horse or your trainer or the dressage judges. If you only can do something one out of 10 times at home, then you know you have to be lucky at the show--and we know we're not always dead lucky.

15. There are two ways of riding. At home you have to be very aware of your problems but you can't be too picky at the show.

16. If I don't have control in walk I won't get it in trot or canter either.

17. At shows, we see many poor pirouettes in Fourth Level and Prix St. Georges. The collection in pirouette must be as great as it is in piaffe. For that reason, I teach the piaffe first [even though the pirouette appears much earlier in the tests.]

18. Many horses and riders get stuck at Prix St. Georges. You can still carry a horse around in Prix St. Georges, but when you start Intermediaire II and Grand Prix, the horse must carry himself.

19. Every time the rider uses a hand or a leg aid, the horse must respond. Even a bad response is better than no response at all.

20. Keep the good things good and don't nag about the bad things but don't ignore them either.

21. Work on the more difficult things on a basic level so the horse feels that he has succeeded.

22. For some horses, I am as happy with a score of 6 as I would be for a 10 on another horse. Continue with a strong 6 until the judges start to give a small 7 for it-instead of trying to overpower the horse to improve the movement and end up getting a 4. If you go from a strong 6 to a weak 7 in every movement you have gone from a 60 percent to a 70 percent.

23. When you have had a good ride, be sure to find time to write down some notes about how it felt. Often after you have won, everyone wants to have a champagne and there's no time to remember how it felt. When you do poorly, no one wants to come talk to you and there's plenty of time to reflect upon how it felt.

24. Riding uses 80% seat, 10% leg, 10% hand.

25. If you always do what you always did, you'll always get what you always got. If you are not happy with what you are getting, you have to change what you are doi

29/05/2026

BD judge Claire Ballantyne clinic
Sun 5 July
Book direct with Claire
07788 188720
Limited places

☀️Half term fun in the sun! 🐴 Flossie and her pony Sali did a great job today doing their  Rider Skill Test in the outdo...
27/05/2026

☀️Half term fun in the sun!

🐴 Flossie and her pony Sali did a great job today doing their Rider Skill Test in the outdoor arena with onsite BD Youth Coach and Assessor Stephanie Bradley

🙏🏻 Thank you Meg for allowing us to use your bright pink car 🩷to desensitise Sali from the scary judge’s car at C! She totally bossed it today! 👌🏻

British Dressage Wales British Dressage BD Youth

Francesca had a busy day yesterday riding 4 tests on three horses!😅 A great show! Thank you Maisie Sturge for organising...
25/05/2026

Francesca had a busy day yesterday riding 4 tests on three horses!
😅
A great show! Thank you Maisie Sturge for organising a wonderful day of relaxed dressage!

21/05/2026

Useful information - please watch

Delighted to receive the British Dressage coach logo today. What is the difference between Accredited and Recognised BD ...
20/05/2026

Delighted to receive the British Dressage coach logo today.

What is the difference between Accredited and Recognised BD Coach?

“Accredited” BD coaches are a minimum UKCC Level 3, who are coaches who have been assessed as competent to coach up to PSG level.

“Recognised” BD coaches are a UKCC Level 2, assessed as competent to coach up to Elementary level.

Our onsite coach is a UKCC Level 4 coach!

With all BD coaches you can be assured of assessed competence including regular CPD, first aid training, insurance to coach, and for Youth Coaches full safeguarding training and DBS checks.



British Dressage Wales

Address

Wrexham

Telephone

+447584991995

Website

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