Heritage Stables

Heritage Stables Heritage Stables is a family owned and operated boarding and training facility for over 50 years in beautiful Oconomowoc, WI. We welcome all disciplines.

06/01/2026
Party in the big opened up  grass field🎉🦄🦄🦄🦄
05/31/2026

Party in the big opened up grass field🎉🦄🦄🦄🦄

05/27/2026

It is wonderful to see the tides starting to turn, it may be slow but at least it is happening... This is why we share what we do.

05/26/2026

A Barn is a Sanctuary...

05/24/2026

Do you ever look at a dressage score sheet and feel a massive sense of disconnect?

You ride a test where your horse feels soft, relaxed, and genuinely balanced, but the scores are mediocre. Meanwhile, a flashy, tense, hyper-flexed performance walks away with the high marks. It’s one of the hardest pills to swallow for the conscientious rider, but it brings to mind the profound warnings in Charles de Kunffy’s "The Ethics and Passions of Dressage." Charles reminds us that classical dressage is a sacred art designed to liberate and elevate the horse, and yet the modern show ring all often enough commercializes the horse, rewarding superficial spectacle over true structural harmony.

When the mainstream standard shifts from classical artistry to a circus-like exhibition, modern judging criteria inevitably clash with long-term soundness. If a particular judge is looking for a forced, artificial frame and explosive, tense movement, then a lower score from that viewpoint isn't a failure. It’s a badge of honor. It means you refused to sacrifice your horse's physical and psychological well-being on the altar of competitive vanity. You chose your horse over a ribbon.

To be fair, this isn’t an indictment of the entire judging system. We are fortunate to still have many conscientious, deeply educated judges sitting a C. True keepers of the flame who recognize self-carriage, appreciate genuine relaxation, and will absolutely reward correct classical work when it crosses their path. The real test for us as riders is to remain steadfast regardless of who is sitting in the booth that day. We must be entirely willing to risk scoring poorly under a judge who rewards tension, while remaining deeply grateful when we encounter a judge who still protects the classical standard.

Don't let the score change your mind. It is the rider's absolute ethical duty to preserve the horse's health, longevity, and dignity. When you look across the warm-up arena, you know the truth... you wouldn't want to trade horses, or the inevitable long-term physical outcomes, with the rider on that high-scoring, "flashical" horse. So don't hope to trade scores with them, either. Not on that day, at least. Not under that particular judge.

We have to stay anchored in the passion and the principles that brought us to this form of horsemanship in the first place. Stick to your principles. Trust your process. And remember, as we strive to honor the classical traditions, that the horse is not just the object in this sport - he is the objective.

When the afternoon light starts coming in it's magical 🌞 Clara is always close by too 🩷
05/16/2026

When the afternoon light starts coming in it's magical 🌞 Clara is always close by too 🩷

Just 4 girls enjoying some Friday afternoon therapy 🩷🩷🩷🩷
05/15/2026

Just 4 girls enjoying some Friday afternoon therapy 🩷🩷🩷🩷

Shared from the very wise Tracey VanBeek
05/07/2026

Shared from the very wise Tracey VanBeek

Modern horse culture often celebrates the horse that performs the biggest movements, jumps the highest, wins the ribbons, or looks the most impressive online. But Nuno Oliveira measured good riding differently.
He looked at the horse itself.

Was the horse calm? Proud? Willing? Did he move with freedom and softness, or with tension hidden underneath obedience? Because a horse can perform beautifully and still be mentally exhausted inside.

Horses are incredibly adaptable animals. They will tolerate confusion, discomfort, and pressure for a very long time. They learn to keep going even when they are mentally overwhelmed. So people mistake endurance for happiness.

But happiness in work looks different.

The horse stays mentally present. He offers instead of avoiding. The body swings instead of braces. The eye stays soft. He doesn’t rush to escape pressure or shut down emotionally. He understands the work, participates in it, and finishes feeling better—not smaller.

This is why classical masters spoke so much about tact, lightness, patience, and timing. Not because they wanted riding to look elegant, but because the horse’s emotional state mattered. A truly educated horse is not just obedient. He is confident in the conversation.

And this quote forces us to ask a difficult question: Are we training horses to perform for us… or teaching them to feel safe, capable, and proud in the work they do with us?
Because those are not always the same thing.
--

05/04/2026

Address

812 N Griffith Road
Oconomowoc, WI
53066

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 8pm
Tuesday 8am - 8pm
Wednesday 8am - 8pm
Thursday 8am - 8pm
Friday 8am - 8pm
Saturday 8am - 4pm
Sunday 8am - 4pm

Telephone

+12625277311

Website

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