Foundations Philosophy
People come to horses for many different reasons.
Some want to build a partnership. Some want to compete. Some want to trail ride, start a young horse, develop their riding skills, or simply enjoy spending time with their horse.
While goals, disciplines, and methods may vary, we believe good horsemanship is built on principles that remain the same.
These principles guide our training, coaching, clinics, and community.
Good Horsemanship Is Good Horsemanship
The saddle may change. The principles do not.
Whether you ride Western, English, Ranch, Working Equitation, Cowboy Challenge, Trail, or something else entirely, good horsemanship is built on principles that transcend disciplines.
Behaviour Is Information
We believe all behaviour is communication.
Whether it comes from a horse or a rider, behaviour provides information about understanding, confidence, preparation, emotion, physical comfort, or experience.
Our job is not simply to react to behaviour, but to learn from it.
Understanding Leads to Better Decisions
The more accurately we understand the horse, the rider, and the situation, the better decisions we can make moving forward.
Understanding does not replace action. It improves it.
The Human Is Part of the Equation
The horse brings what the horse brings.
As riders, trainers, and leaders, it is our responsibility to evaluate the situation, adapt the plan, and help both horse and rider succeed.
When challenges arise, it is important to ask not only what the horse can do differently, but how we can better support them in doing differently.
Create Opportunities for Success
We believe in setting horses and riders up to succeed.
By breaking challenges into manageable pieces and helping horse and rider find the right answer, confidence, understanding, and willingness can grow.
As we often say:
Make the right thing easy.
Consistency Creates Confidence
Clear expectations help both horses and riders feel confident and secure.
Consistency is not about rigidity. It is about creating clarity, fairness, and understanding.
Leadership Carries Responsibility
Leadership is not control.
Leadership is the responsibility to provide direction, clarity, fairness, and safety.
Good leaders help others become more confident, capable, and successful.
Progress Over Perfection
Horsemanship is a lifelong journey.
There will always be more to learn, new challenges to overcome, and opportunities to grow.
We celebrate progress, effort, curiosity, and the willingness to keep learning.
We'd love to hear from you.
Which of these principles resonates most with you right now?
Or is there another principle that guides your horsemanship journey?
👇 Share your thoughts in the comments.
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Amber Skoog
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Foundations Philosophy
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Foundations Horsemanship
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Building better riders and developing better horses through practical horsemanship, meaningful partnerships, and lifelong learning.
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