MaeBree Ranch, LLC

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MaeBree Ranch, LLC MaeBree Ranch is a full service boutique eventing barn at a fantastic location! Home to CHA certified instructor, Mary Hjelmstad.

25/02/2026

Right. A gentle reality check for late-February brains. 🌤️

Your horse has had a wobbly winter.
Maybe less work than you planned.
Maybe more standing in mud than you’d like to admit.
Maybe you’re only just finding your rhythm again.

And now the light is changing.

You feel that twitch in your chest.
The “we should be doing more” itch.
The quiet comparison creeping in as other people start posting sunny arena shots.

Pause.

They are horses. Not productivity projects. 🐴

They are not tracking their step count.
They are not panicking about their spring body.
They are not in the field thinking, “I’ve absolutely wasted Q1.”

What they care about is this:

Are they fed.
Do they have forage.
Are they safe.
Can they move.
Do they have friends.
Are they allowed to just… be horses.

A slower winter does not erase your partnership.
A few weeks of lighter work does not dissolve muscle into thin air.
Bodies remember. Tendons adapt. Cardiovascular fitness returns steadily when brought back with sense.

Research in equine physiology consistently shows that gradual reconditioning restores aerobic fitness and muscle tone far quicker than people fear. What causes problems is panic training. Not patience.

The pressure you feel right now is seasonal human urgency. It is not an equine emergency.

You do not need to sprint into March.
You do not need a dramatic “we’re back” montage.
You do not need to apologise for winter.

Start where you are.

Hack if hacking feels good.
Stretch if stretching feels good.
Hand-graze in the longer light if that is all you have energy for.

Let winter loosen its grip without forcing spring to arrive early. 🌱

Your horse is fine.
You’re allowed to be too.









16/02/2026

🔥 CONTROVERSIAL OPINION INCOMING… 🔥

When life gives you lemons… apparently some people think you’re supposed to buy a better tree. 🍋

But let’s talk about horses for a second.

Not the flashy £50k mover.
Not the 70% regular.
Not the “made for it” combination everyone whispers about at the side of the arena.

I’m talking about the ordinary ones.
The ones people politely overlook.
The ones you get told are “limited.”

You might not be a world-beating rider.
You might not have the flashiest horse.
But you have a goal. So you graft.

Hours and hours.
Early mornings.
Late nights.
Different coaches.
Dents in your bank account.

Slowly… the scores creep up. 61%. 63%. 65%.
Not headline-worthy.
But progress.

Meanwhile, social media is screaming 70%+ like that’s the only thing that counts and the sidelines?
“Oh… that’s ambitious.”
“Is that horse really capable?”
“Interesting choice of test…”

Here’s the controversial bit:

🚨 Not everyone winning at 70% built it from scratch.
Some did and that’s incredible but some started ten steps ahead.

There is NOTHING more powerful than building something people said you couldn’t.

Then one day… you ride that test.
Not first place.
Not a sash.
But a solid score.
Qualification points.
Proof.

But to you and your village?
You’ve won. 🏆

Because you didn’t just beat other combinations.
You beat doubt.
You beat opinion.
You beat the narrative.

So here’s the takeaway:

✨ Stay true to yourself.
✨ Build your village carefully.
✨ Take constructive criticism, ignore the noise.
✨ And if you and your horse aren’t enjoying it… what’s the point?

Dressage (and life) isn’t about looking the part.
It’s about becoming it.

If you’re out there grinding with your “ordinary” horse trying to do extraordinary things… this is your sign to keep going.
Drop a 🐴 and picture in the comments if you’re building, not buying.
Tag your village.
Share this if you resonate with it and also with someone who needs to hear it today. 💛

Picture: This rider is Lauren Bennett and horse Luna and work their socks off to get where they have 😍😍😍

18/01/2026
08/12/2025

❄️ 𝐇𝐨𝐭 𝐓𝐚𝐤𝐞𝐬 𝐨𝐧 𝐂𝐨𝐥𝐝 𝐖𝐞𝐚𝐭𝐡𝐞𝐫 𝐄𝐱𝐞𝐫𝐜𝐢𝐬𝐞 𝐟𝐨𝐫 𝐇𝐨𝐫𝐬𝐞𝐬 ❄️

Unfortunately, I come from a long line of Minnesotans which means I am deeply rooted in the arctic tundra of the upper Midwest. And up here, our winter is about as long as our sunmer so we need to rely on some cold weather conditioning to optimize our competition season.

And while there really isn’t enough research to set strict, evidence-based rules about what counts as ‘safe’ winter riding weather, it is important to consider due to potential health implications of exercising our horses in the cold. So I pulled together some research from published studies on how cold weather can impact horse health and I turned that information into the general guidelines I personally follow to guide my winter riding decisions. Since a lot of people are navigating the same questions this time of year, I figured I’d share them here!

🫁 𝐑𝐞𝐬𝐩𝐢𝐫𝐚𝐭𝐨𝐫𝐲 𝐇𝐞𝐚𝐥𝐭𝐡
A study evaluating cold weather exercise in horses (Davis et al., 2005) used eight healthy adult horses in a cross-over design and had them exercise at either 77°F (warm; 25°C) or 23°F (cold; -5°C). The exercise performed in this test included 5 minutes walking, 5 minutes trotting, and 5 minutes cantering three times each week. This study found that breathing cold, dry air during moderate–high intensity exercise caused measurable airway irritation and can produce bronchoconstriction and inflammatory changes in otherwise healthy horses. Additionally, repeated exposure is believed to contribute toward chronic airway conditions such as equine asthma.

🛡️ 𝐈𝐦𝐦𝐮𝐧𝐞 𝐏𝐫𝐨𝐭𝐞𝐜𝐭𝐢𝐨𝐧
The previous study (Davis et al., 2005) also demonstrated a likely mechanism for immune suppression following strenuous exercise in a cold environment. Further research (Davis et al., 2007) evaluating horses exercising at similar temperatures supported this research and found an altered immunological response for at least 48 hours following exercise in cold weather. Both of these studies found that exercising in the cold amplified the expression of cytokines that suppress cell-mediated immunity. The concept of immune suppression following strenuous exercise is not new and could predispose these athletes to viral infections of the respiratory tract.

💪 𝐌𝐮𝐬𝐜𝐥𝐞𝐬 & 𝐉𝐨𝐢𝐧𝐭𝐬
Cold weather can also impact the muscles and joints of the horse. While the work has yet to be done in horses, research in other animals and humans has shown that when muscles and nerves get cold, they don’t fire as quickly or efficiently (Racinais et al., 2017). Horses may also tighten around their joints or ‘brace’ with opposing muscle groups as a natural way to protect cold tissues. This is why a slow, progressive warm-up is so important in winter. Getting the horse’s body temperature up helps their muscles move more freely, improves coordination, and reduces the risk of strains or awkward, compensatory movement - especially during more technical maneuvers or intense work.

This is supported by a study (Dixon et al. ,2010) which found that humans who immersed their legs in cold water (54°F/12°C) for 45 minutes had decreased power on a vertical jump. However, this decline in performance could be negated by a 15-minute dynamic warm-up. These findings stress the importance of an intentional and lengthy warm-up prior to cold winter exercise.

✅ 𝐏𝐫𝐚𝐜𝐭𝐢𝐜𝐚𝐥 𝐀𝐩𝐩𝐫𝐨𝐚𝐜𝐡
These are just a few examples of how cold weather can impact our horses, but they are important to consider when determining how to safely but effectively condition them this winter.

🔥 Warm-up is key. Walk at least 15–20 minutes before trotting or cantering.

🌡️ Monitor the temperature. Reduce intensity as temperatures drop to minimize immune and respiratory stress or risk of injury.

🐴 Observe your horse. Watch for coughing, stiffness, or changes in performance.

I hope this information helps to guide your equine exercise practices this winter! Stay warm out there!

Cheers,
Dr. DeBoer

Davis MS, Malayer JR, Vandeventer L, Royer CM, McKenzie EC, Williamson KK. Cold weather exercise and airway cytokine expression. Journal of Applied Physiology. 2005 Jun;98(6):2132-6.

Davis MS, Williams CC, Meinkoth JH, Malayer JR, Royer CM, Williamson KK, McKenzie EC. Influx of neutrophils and persistence of cytokine expression in airways of horses after performing exercise while breathing cold air. American journal of veterinary research. 2007 Feb 1;68(2):185-9.

Racinais S, Cocking S, Périard JD. Sports and environmental temperature: from warming-up to heating-up. Temperature. 2017 Jul 3;4(3):227-57.

Dixon PG, Kraemer WJ, Volek JS, Howard RL, Gomez AL, Comstock BA, Dunn-Lewis C, Fragala MS, Hooper DR, Häkkinen K, Maresh CM. The impact of cold-water immersion on power production in the vertical jump and the benefits of a dynamic exercise warm-up. The Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research. 2010 Dec 1;24(12):3313-7.

09/10/2025

It can really be a game changer.

09/10/2025

Our divine mirrors 🪞🐴

Very exciting!
23/09/2025

Very exciting!

USEA and USEF Roll Out New and Improved Dressage Tests for 2026 Eventing Season

So unbelievably proud of how all three MaeBree girls did yesterday at the Pendragon Stud Equestrian Center Beginner even...
15/06/2025

So unbelievably proud of how all three MaeBree girls did yesterday at the Pendragon Stud Equestrian Center Beginner event!!!

🌟 Jocelyn and Belle participated in their very first ever 3 phase event after they started riding with me a few short months ago! Coming from a show jumping background they already had a pretty strong foundation but we’ve been able to really build their confidence together as a team and they absolutely rocked it safely and confidently around all three phases ending in 5th place! Im so proud of the progress they’ve made in such a short amount of time.

🌟 Kenslee skillfully and tactfully rode Paveon around his official retirement show at the ripe age of 28, and they were absolutely beautiful in all three phases ♥️ Kenslee has worked so hard to move up to a more difficult horse this past year and she made every right decision in Paveons best interest yesterday, which was an honor to watch. Paveon has ALWAYS been a very unsure horse and needs the right ride to make it over some of the scarier obstacles (as Rebecca Crook could tell us all about 🤣) and Kenslee was there for him the entire day and made it a huge success! We talked about making the right choices for our horses in lieu of what that does to our scores on the way home, and I’m so proud of the rider she’s becoming ♥️ Thank you for riding my special boy so amazingly at his retirement show and getting him over the intro course for a fun schooling at the end!! I couldn’t imagine anyone better ♥️

🌟 Kira and Sven made the best comeback EVER this show after the last two years of trying to show at the Spring Gulch CT and Sven jumping out of the ring — winning the lowest score of all the pony’s and winning the Mystical Magic Pony Trophy!! Kira has put in sooooo much time, effort, blood, sweat and tears over the past few years. She’s showed up to every lesson rain, snow, or shine and has dedicated herself to learning things correctly and slowly. I am so unbelievably proud at her grit and determination to keep at it and it paid off in a huge way yesterday! We got goosebumps watching her do dressage and to finish on your score of 23 is astounding. Oh the places you’ll go my dear!!

Well done ladies and congratulations on all your accomplishments!!! I’m so blessed to be apart of your lives and your journeys ♥️🐎♥️

Huge thank you to Pendragon for offering such a lovely and well run show with the best people and prizes!! Such a great way to get riders into the eventing world in the best way possible.

Address

CO

Opening Hours

Monday 09:00 - 19:00
Tuesday 09:00 - 19:00
Wednesday 09:00 - 19:00
Thursday 09:00 - 19:00
Friday 09:00 - 19:00
Saturday 09:00 - 19:00
Sunday 09:00 - 19:00

Telephone

+17194667318

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