Evergreen Stables

Evergreen Stables Lesson Programs (4+ yrs), Training, Showing , Sales, Leasing , Hunters/Jumpers/Ponies. 30+ yrs. Professional Horsemen. Member: USEF USHJA

04/28/2026
04/15/2026

So you rode a couple horses for your friend as a favor, and you had a lot of fun doing it…You even fixed some minor “bucking” issues while you were riding those horses.

And now you think to yourself….

I want to be a HORSE TRAINER! 🐴

I can do it right? I mean how hard could it be?

I’m QUALIFIED. ✅

So you put an AD out and say you have 10-20+ years of experience working with horses!

When in reality those years were spent going to play dates, gymkanas, having a couple lessons here and there….But…Experience is experience right?

I mean you’ve always been around horses…

And so you sucker some people into sending you a few horses for training, and at first it was great, you liked this whole horse trainer thing, and you thought you were GOOD at it.

Until…

You realized that being a horse trainer means that you have to do the same tiring and REPETITIVE work even in the bad weather, even when you’re sick, even when you’re upset, even when you want to go out with your friends, and before you know it…

You fall behind on those horses, but it’s ok, the client won’t notice because you will just play catch up!

Until…

You DON’T have those good results to show the clients, and they want UPDATES, what do you do now?!

You did everything right, so you thought…

You put a little time on the horses and rode them around some obstacles. You even gave a lesson on one of them!

Except….One of them is rearing now.. ❌

The other is bucking…. ❌

And well…you can’t even saddle the other one without it pulling back and freaking out. ❌

These horses didn’t come to you with these issues, soooo how did that happen?

Surely it wasn’t you right?

But it was.

It was your lack of knowledge, true experience, and consistency.

That made it all come crashing down.

And now your clients are upset.

What will you do?

You will say they just “need” more time…

When in reality, YOU are the one who needs more time…(And LOTS of lessons).

Before you know it, those horses you “trained” have been taken out of your program and sent to another trainer…

To clean up the mess YOU made…

But it’s ok, it wasn’t your fault, they were just BAD horses you say.

You’ll get some more horses to “train” in no time. 🤠

This is a situation that I see very often in the horse world, and I can say this has happened several times almost word for word in just my local area alone, and I’ve had these horses SENT to me to fix after they have been previously messed up by a “trainer”, it gets TIRING to fix horses after someone who was supposed to do it right failed due to their own ego and ignorance, and that is why many GOOD trainers are pickier than ever about the horses they will accept into their program.

It’s not worth it to us to get hurt from another trainers mistakes when we are worth much more than that.

Think twice about calling yourself a horse trainer just because you’ve been around horses. It’s not worth ruining horses to suit your ego. 🙏

04/11/2026

💕💕

02/23/2026

On a weekday afternoon at Belleame Farm, lessons begin in the aisle.

Kids head out to the field to catch their horses. They groom. They tack. They adjust stirrups. When lessons are over, they untack, wash down, clean tack, and put horses away. None of it is rushed. None of it is optional.

Jennifer Edwards has been an equine professional for over 40 years. Along with her husband, Rob, she has developed many highly ranked horses and students, bringing home local and national championships. Jennifer and Rob personally instruct every student, and that hands-on approach allows them to shape the experience and success that is Belleame Farm.

For Edwards, that daily routine matters just as much as what happens once a rider picks up the reins.

“I have from day one, my kids will come in the barn and their horses might be outside in the paddock,” Edwards says. “They will go get ’em. They will get ’em already brushed. Ready to go for their lesson. They do it all.”

In an era of increasingly streamlined barn operations, Edwards has held firm to a more comprehensive view of education. Riding, in her program, is only one piece of learning how to be a horseman.

Learning That Takes Time
It’s easy to say riders should groom and tack their own horses. It’s much harder to build the time into a program to let them do it imperfectly.

“Most barns don’t do that because they don’t have time to stand around while the kids do it wrong,” Edwards acknowledges. But for her, that patience is non-negotiable.

At Belleame Farm, riders are expected to take responsibility for the full routine at home. That expectation is for their understanding. Riders learn how horses feel on different days, how they respond to handling, and how care choices affect performance later on.

“I really think that is an important part of connecting with the animal,” Edwards says.

📎 Continue reading this article at https://www.theplaidhorse.com/2026/02/23/teaching-the-whole-rider-why-horsemanship-doesnt-stop-at-the-mounting-block/
📸 © Lauren Mauldin

01/24/2026

The Cazenovia Children's House Chilly Chili 5k Run is this Sunday! It could not be possible without the support of many local businesses. A special Shout-Out to these businesses that answered the call when I asked for their support.
Schoolhouse Dog Grooming, Boarding, and Daycare, The Nicki Donlin Team at Howard Hanna Real Estate, Evergreen Stables, Momma Boo’s Homestead, Farmstead1868, Syracuse Mets and Morse Kayak Rentals.

Support these small businesses that give back to their community to make it a better place to live.

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👇🙌
12/15/2025

👇🙌

Many riders make steady progress in their lessons at home, and some never feel the need to show. Geoff Teall understands that “many students who never show” and simply enjoy the process of learning. For these riders, competition is not a requirement. But Teall also makes clear that horse shows provide learning opportunities that riders cannot fully recreate in a controlled schooling environment. Competition adds challenges, variety, and perspective that help broaden a rider’s skills and understanding.

Showing is not the only path forward, but it offers a distinct form of education that complements regular instruction rather than replaces it.

At home, most riders ride in familiar patterns without realizing it. They school in the same ring, over the same jumps, and within a routine that becomes predictable. Teall explains that when riders practice on their own, they “inevitably tend toward a particular consistent pattern or program.” While this consistency can help reinforce skills, it can also limit exposure to new questions.

A horse show disrupts that predictability. Teall notes that “other course designers are never going to build a course exactly as you would,” and that a show ring “won’t be exactly the same size as you’re used to.” These changes require riders to adapt, think, and respond in real time. Even the layout of the warm-up ring, the placement of jumps, and the feel of the footing introduce variables that cannot be replicated in a home environment.

This new setting encourages riders to expand beyond familiar habits and routines.

Teall emphasizes that one of the great values of competition is that it places riders “in a situation that you did not create yourself.” At home, riders have significant control over their schooling environment. They set when they ride, what exercises they use, and how they structure their work. In the show ring, those decisions belong to others.

Riding in a situation shaped by someone else forces riders to adjust rather than default to comfortable choices. It encourages them to rely on the skills they have practiced piece by piece, using them to navigate questions they did not choose. Teall explains that this experience helps “perfect skills that won’t bloom in a tamer environment,” underscoring the role of competition in sharpening a rider’s abilities.

One of the most immediate differences in competition is the course itself. At home, even varied schooling sessions carry elements of familiarity. At a show, the course designer’s decisions determine the track, the questions, and the flow. Teall stresses that these challenges broaden a rider’s education and expose them to lines, approaches, and turns they may not choose for themselves.

This diversity allows riders to experience how their horses respond to different types of questions. Over time, riders become more aware of how each element—whether a forward line, a long approach, or a turn off the rail—changes the balance, pace, and feel of the ride. That awareness helps them refine their skills at home and prepares them for future courses.

📎 Continue reading this article at https://www.theplaidhorse.com/2025/12/15/what-competition-teaches-you-that-schooling-at-home-never-will/
📸 © The Plaid Horse

Address

2140 Oran Delphi Road
Delphi Falls, NY
13104

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 7pm
Tuesday 8am - 7pm
Wednesday 8am - 7pm
Thursday 8am - 7pm
Friday 8am - 7pm
Sunday 11am - 4pm

Telephone

+13154301030

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