Bad Heart Farms

Bad Heart Farms Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Bad Heart Farms, 23019 Township Road 754, Sexsmith, AB.

Family farm located in Northern Alberta raising Irish Draught Sport Horses and Tornjak Livestock Guardian Dogs

Currently standing at stud Class 1 Irish Draught stallion Corraidhín - Irish Draught Stallion

🙌🏻 🙌🏻 🙌🏻
07/07/2024

🙌🏻 🙌🏻 🙌🏻

As a trainer I start alot of babies and work with problem horses and I have this discussion quite frequently with customers to try and prepare them for the time it takes to get a nice solid horse. I don't think anyone truly understands but as long as I can get them off to a good start the rest of time, effort and wet saddle pads has to come from the owners.

To replace a good horse!
The best horses are built over years of hauling, hard work, tough times, good times, bad times, big spooks, little spooks, their mistakes, our mistakes and continual love and care.

No, your breaker can not turn your young prospect into your old faithful in 30, 60, 90, or even 365 days. It takes years.

I’m plagued with the problem of trying to impress on people how long it truly takes to build that dream partner. There’s not a smooth paved path. Your green horse will embarrass you, frustrate you, and maybe even hurt you. For some of you, buying a $20,000-$30,000 horse is going to be worth it and SAVE you money. Even that more finished horse will take a year or more to sync up with.

Cheap rate for horse training is $1,000 a month.
1 year of training: $12,000
2 years of training: $24,000

Many of you won’t believe this but your dream horse is on the other side of two years of training. In reality, it’s likely around two years of training and two years of seasoning (hauling them to town). Will that horse still make mistakes? Yes, they all make mistakes until the day they die. But that horses mistakes probably won’t put you in serious danger and that horse will probably pack your grandkids around.

If you’re trying to decide between a $3,500 prospect or a $15,000 proven horse. My advice is to do an internal inventory and figure out what you want. Buying that prospect is like the first roll on the Jumanji board. You’re entered up, get ready for a journey of ups and downs (possibly quite literally!) If you’re buying that finished horse decide what you really want, get ready for a lot of shopping and painfully overpriced sh💩tters. Take a friend or a trainer on this journey with you and try to double your budget (that’s right, 30k). Be smart and buy something OVER 8 years old. Don’t buy that pretty 5 year old they only want 20k for. He isn’t old enough to be proven for you. Lots of horse traders are trying to flip horses, anything under 8 is likely twice as green as he looks in the video. Maturity, both mental and physical will be key when looking for a safe horse.

If you want a project and a challenge I’m not hating, that’s what I want in a horse too, so I buy young ones. If you need a safe one, bring lots of money and quit thinking you need a 6 year old. You probably don’t have what it takes to mentally support that 6 year old through new situations.

The biggest reason I bring this up is because as folks retire their old faithful they are so far removed from when that horse was green and did dumb stuff. They forgot how tough those two years were back when he was 4-6. They only remember the amazing horse he was when he matured. The 3 year old they just bought is YEARS from filling that horses shoes when it comes to training level and safety level. I see people hate on trainers because the trainer couldn’t make their young horse, “finished” in 90 days. It’s honestly the biggest reason I like taking colts for 30 or 60 days. The expectation is shockingly lower than when I take one for 90 days. It’s weird what people expect from a 90 day start. Most people should commit to sending their young horse out for a full year. Two years would be even better.

Green horses do green horse things, don’t blame others for the challenge you bought yourself. Accept the challenge or pay the price for one further along. No matter which path you choose with horses, it’s going to cost you.

(I didn’t write this one I’m not sure who did, however every word of it rings true)
Author Credit: Craig Moore

We have a beautiful litter of kittens that were born May 10th Several ready for new homes soon, both boys and girls avai...
06/28/2024

We have a beautiful litter of kittens that were born May 10th

Several ready for new homes soon, both boys and girls available, all black and white or fully black colouring. Please contact for more information

Parents are excellent mousers, we have zero mice on the farm! Fantastic barn, farm and house cat companions

Located in Bad Heart 20 mins NE of Teepee Creek AB

Rainy & ruminating, resting & dreaming day here at Bad Heart Farms — We'd like to start an open discussion specifically ...
06/27/2024

Rainy & ruminating, resting & dreaming day here at Bad Heart Farms —

We'd like to start an open discussion specifically about one of our favourite topics here at the farm!

We have a question we’d ask the members of the Irish Draught community. What type of Irish Draught (or outcross) is your ultimate dream horse? What size, colours, bloodlines are you favourite? Do you like the smaller ones (between 15.2hh - 16.2hh) or do you like the larger ones (16.2 - 17hh+) ? The breed standard of course is 15.3 - 16.3hh, but what is your preference? What's your reasoning behind it? What do you like doing with your Irish Draught(s) or sport horses? Jumping, Fox hunting, Trail riding, Eventing, Driving, Pony Club, Ranch Work, Pleasure riding, Companion, Heart horse, you name it! ❤️

So in the comments, please let us know how the weather is in your part of the world, share where you are from and live, and what your dream horse is like! Here in the Peace Country of Northern Alberta Canada its very rainy at least! ☔️

If its not already obvious, I myself already am lucky enough to own my dream horse, Corraidhín ☘️

This post will be shared to various Irish Draught groups all around the world - Please comment on this post to share your thoughts!!

Pictured is my mom Chris Curran riding Corraidhín - Irish Draught Stallion

I’m sooooo thrilled with my latest tattoo by s a p p h • i n k Still healing and not completely finished but I love it s...
06/24/2024

I’m sooooo thrilled with my latest tattoo by s a p p h • i n k

Still healing and not completely finished but I love it sooo much 🖤

It completely captures the joy that each of my babies bring to me ☘️🦄 at Bad Heart Farms

💖
06/19/2024

💖

The work we do in the arena should be looked at as a way to prepare our horses for life. We develop their minds to handle the world and their bodies physically to stand up to the demands of it.

With this base it's important to then test our work. It is there, in the arena of life, not the opinions of ourselves or others, that we learn the quality of the ideas we stand upon.

Tests can be many things but really it's anything that pushes us and our horses, out of our comfort zone, so what is within them is demonstrated.

It's the beautiful space where we can find out what's working and what isn't. It is here opinion holds no weight and the horse's mind and body speak.

I like to keep these three points in balance to stay the most informed about my work.

1) Build connection - prioritize relationship.

2) Develop them physically - this allows them to feel strong and carry you powerfully.

3) Test often - test's inform you about what's working and what isn't. It's a place your horse can make purposeful sense of your teaching and gets a change to put things together. It's also the place you will learn how deeply your work is sinking in!

I often think about raising kids when it comes to this work. Being over protective will only make the world a harder place. But if we can develop them so their time in the world can be processed with the skills we have taught them, all of a sudden the arena work makes sense!

Testing your work takes a level of bravery mentally, as it may expose a part of your horsemanship that needs to shift, are you ok with that?

It is only when we stay in a bubble that thoughts and ideas can linger and not hold weight, I have found this to be the centre of judgement, confrontation and division in the horse community. In our bubble the things I want to believe hold more weight than what actually works to create empowerment.

In the end, our horses need to be the ones that inform us of what works holistically and testing up is the road to this knowledge! Things going poorly or excellent are both very helpful to deepen your wisdom.

Be gracious with yourself and others in the process of testing as this is a very vulnerable space for both horse and rider. It often doesn't look very impressive and it's where most judgements are made.

Always remember how it feels when you are putting yourself out there and give that same grace to your horses and others when they are bravely testing up and learning from the arena of life!

🙌🏻 🙌🏻 🙌🏻
06/14/2024

🙌🏻 🙌🏻 🙌🏻

05/23/2024
05/05/2024

Address

23019 Township Road 754
Sexsmith, AB

Website

Alerts

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

Contact The Business

Send a message to Bad Heart Farms:

Videos

Share