Garland Farm & Stables

Garland Farm & Stables Garland Farm & Stables is located in scenic, Milton,NH and sits on 12 beautiful acres with miles of accessible trails from the property. in Equestrian Science.

Wild and domestic Horse Training, emphasizing connection and solid foundations, that will help elevate your relationship with your equine🐴 Facility is BLM approved for wild horses✨ Owner, instructor, trainer, Chelsea Miller is a William Woods University graduate with a B.S. She has ridden with several top Morgan trainers throughout her extensive show career, competed in the Extreme Mustang Makeove

r in 2015, 2016, 2017 and has fostered and trained several horses for the NHSPCA, increasing their potential for adoption. With the many years of riding instruction, successful training & competing, Chelsea offers her clients the expertise to reach their full potential with their domestic or wild equine partner.

05/20/2026

We need your help! 🐴💙

GSA is fundraising for Horses for Mental Health during Mental Health Awareness Month, and we’re working hard to reach our goal. Every donation helps us continue providing impactful equine-assisted programming for individuals, Veterans, and families in our community.

As of now we have $3,624.99 raised toward our $5,000 team goal!

Your support makes a difference ⬇️
https://horsesformentalhealth.org/campaigns/granite-state-adaptive/

05/12/2026

I'm sure one of my friends is destined to have this Mustang 😆

I have room for gentling/training next month, if you are looking to buy a mustang! BLM approved facility in milton, NH. ...
05/11/2026

I have room for gentling/training next month, if you are looking to buy a mustang!

BLM approved facility in milton, NH. 😁🐴

These horses are gorgeous and clearly friendly!

05/11/2026

HORSES DO NOT LEARN BETTER OR NEED TO BE PUSHED OVERTHRESHOLD TO LEARN ☺️

In fact research shows that OPPOSITE.

And this applies across ALL good training.

Regardless of method, discipline, or philosophy, learning is most effective when the horse is able to stay regulated, process information, and respond without entering survival mode.

Once a horse is pushed over threshold, the brain prioritizes survival, not skill development.

My brain is cooked so here is a repost of my infographic from 2021:

————-

Let’s Talk About Thresholds

The more you understand your horse’s thresholds, the better you can keep them comfortable, safe, and ready to learn. Working with horses is as much about reading their emotional state as it is about teaching skills. This awareness is key to preventing stress from escalating and turning into dangerous behaviour.

If you look at the chart above, you can see how quickly stress levels spike when the yellow zone signs are missed. I break thresholds into three simple colour zones.

🟢 Green Zone:

The horse feels safe and relaxed, showing no signs of fear or anxiety. This is the best zone for learning. Memory, focus, and problem-solving are all functioning at their highest. Training here builds trust, speeds progress, and reduces the need for retraining later.

🟡 Yellow Zone:

Subtle signs of stress, fear, or anxiety appear. This is the caution zone. Without intervention, stress levels can escalate into the red zone quickly. The goal here is to de-escalate and bring the horse back to green.

🔴 Red Zone:

The sympathetic nervous system takes over and the horse enters flight, fight, or freeze mode.

Flight: Primary defence, bolting, often with no regard for safety.

Fight: Secondary defence, kicking, striking, rearing, or turning the hindquarters toward the threat.

Freeze: Immobility with a rigid neck, raised head, fixed gaze, slowed heart rate, and sometimes explosive reactions when coming out of it.

❓Why the red zone is so dangerous:

When a horse crosses into this zone, their body floods with stress chemicals such as adrenaline, norepinephrine, and cortisol, all of which have been widely documented in equine stress research.

These chemicals prepare the body for survival, not learning, and they create a chain reaction in the brain and body that impacts both safety and training:

• The prefrontal cortex (responsible for decision-making, focus, and memory) is impaired.

• Memory formation and recall drop sharply.

• The horse’s reactions become faster, less thoughtful, and far more unpredictable.

• Human safety risk skyrockets, handling a horse in this state greatly increases the chance of injury to both horse and handler.

The skill every horse person must have:

• Read stress signals before they become obvious.

• Recognise calming signals and displacement behaviours.

• Understand equine body language well enough to measure thresholds in real time.

This takes careful observation, practice, and education. If you are unsure whether you could confidently recognise these zones in your own horse, that is your starting point. The more you practice, the more natural it becomes and the safer, calmer, and more effective your work will be.

05/08/2026

When can my horse and I be considered advanced at R+ training?

Lots of criteria here... but some we consider to be quite important are the following and these are the things we are teaching quite a lot these days. I'll put a link in comments if you want to find out where we teach these things and where we make sure you are getting them solidly.

1) Do you have duration on multiple behaviors, starting with the default position (standing still AND relaxed at your side) and stationary target? Then can you take this to many other behaviors? In other words, does your horse understand that whatever behavior they're asked for does continue until they hear the click?

2) Can your horse liberty lead beside you, even while changing direction and speed? Do they respond right away to your cues or is there lag time?

3) Can your horse discriminate between cues? Obviously the first thing you would need to have for this is multiple behaviors.

4) Do you have the ability to chain together behaviors? Can you back chain?

5) Are you competent at deciphering your horse's emotional state? Can you tell when it's time to forge ahead and take a step back?

6) Do you regularly utilize secondary reinforcers in your training?

These are just some of the ones that are priority to us. Where do you think you and your horse are at with these?

05/01/2026

Follow The Mustang Collective!

Address

252 Hare Road
Milton, NH
03851

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 6:30pm
Tuesday 9am - 6:30pm
Wednesday 9am - 6:30pm
Thursday 9am - 6:30pm
Friday 9am - 6:30pm

Telephone

+16034910777

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Garland Farm & Stables posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share