Revenant Equine

Revenant Equine Horse Training, Lessons, OTTBs, Hunter/Jumpers, Tune-Ups, and More!

LOCATED IN FOUNTAINCharlie and Odin are both looking for a lessee! Looking for an intermediate to advanced rider looking...
12/18/2024

LOCATED IN FOUNTAIN

Charlie and Odin are both looking for a lessee! Looking for an intermediate to advanced rider looking to enjoy an on site lease. Both go western and english.
Lessons are available for additional fee. Any jumping will be done in lessons ONLY.
Pm for more info or to schedule a trial.

12/06/2024

Lessons have been going great getting everyone back into the swing of things since the move 🙂 super happy with everyone!

11/23/2024

Dried up enough that we did a Friday and Saturday lesson 🙂 both went very well after a month off from the move to the new barn, my vacation, and waiting to dry out after the snow storm!
Excited to be back at it!!!! And loved seeing my clients again ❤️

11/03/2024

HORSES IN TRAINING…

You pay that hefty training bill for the month.

You look to have you horse in training as little as possible so it doesn’t break the bank.

You’re disappointed when after 30 days or 60 days or 90 days, there’s still more work to be done or the goal hasn’t been met. Worse yet, it looks good, you take the horse home and it unravels piece by piece. All that money “wasted”.

When you pay a trainer, that money isn’t paying for a result, it’s paying for someone’s skilled effort.

At least for me, when someone gets unhappy that their horse “isn’t fixed yet”, or comes “untrained” after it’s been home a while, makes the task of training horses for other people, discouraging. Discouraging because the efforts are being made, usually my best efforts that are filled with compassion, determination and lots of ruminating on how to fix complex issues a horse may have. Their disappointment becomes my failure basically. I know that’s not an actual truth but it’s never rewarding when someone is disappointed due to their own expectations.

Training a horse is NOT like being a mechanic on a car. Its not a tune up, it’s not the simple replacement of a part. It’s an animal with thoughts, feelings, emotions, habits, talents, etc. You don’t just program them, tune them up or replace a faulty part and send it back good as new.

You arent paying for results to happen within your timeline, you are paying for the time it takes to reach a desired result. The more complicated the project, the bigger the investment. The more baggage a horse has, the more effort it takes to unravel the mess. The bigger the goal, the greater the investment.

People send their horses to certain trainers because they want the outcome that trainer proves they can achieve. The problem is, people want that result in the shortest time frame possible because time, again, is money. It takes the time it takes to create the vision and time costs money. People who have a diy mentality, value the effort so much more when they themselves invest their own energy into a horse rather than just paying for it. I really feel that those who do it themselves, come to appreciate the efforts it takes far more than those who sign the check.

Be nice to your trainers, they work hard for you and your horse!

Written by: katy Negranti
Katy Negranti Performance Horsemanship

10/03/2024

Great lesson this am!!! First time jumping again after a life hiatus. Getting back to what she loves!! ❤️

09/28/2024

Great week of lessons and rides :)

09/19/2024

"New Home Syndrome"🤓

I am coining this term to bring recognition, respect, and understanding to what happens to horses when they move homes. This situation involves removing them from an environment and set of routines they have become familiar with, and placing them somewhere completely different with new people and different ways of doing things.

Why call it a syndrome?

Well, really it is! A syndrome is a term used to describe a set of symptoms that consistently occur together and can be tied to certain factors such as infections, genetic predispositions, conditions, or environmental influences. It is also used when the exact cause of the symptoms is not fully understood or when it is not connected with a well-defined disease. In this case, "New Home Syndrome" is connected to a horse being placed in a new home where its entire world changes, leading to psychological and physiological impacts. While it might be transient, the ramifications can be significant for both the horse and anyone handling or riding it.

Let me explain...

Think about how good it feels to get home after a busy day. How comfortable your favourite clothes are, how well you sleep in your own bed compared to a strange bed, and how you can really relax at home. This is because home is safe and familiar. At home, the part of you that keeps an eye out for potential danger turns down to a low setting. It does this because home is your safe place (and if it is not, this blog will also explain why a lack of a safe place is detrimental).

Therefore, the first symptom of horses experiencing "New Home Syndrome" is being unsettled, prone to anxiety, or difficult behaviour. If you have owned them before you moved them, you struggle to recognise your horse, feeling as if your horse has been replaced by a frustrating version. If the horse is new to you, you might wonder if you were conned, if the horse was drugged when you rode it, or if you were lied to about the horse's true nature.

A horse with "New Home Syndrome" will be a stressed version of itself, on high alert, with a drastically reduced ability to cope. Horses don't handle change like humans do. If you appreciate the comfort of your own home and how you can relax there, you should be able to understand what the horse is experiencing.

Respecting that horses interpret and process their environments differently from us helps in understanding why your horse is being frustrating and recognising that there is a good chance you were not lied to or that the horse was not drugged.

Horses have survived through evolution by being highly aware of their environments. Change is a significant challenge for them because they notice the slightest differences, not just visually but also through sound, smell, feel, and other senses. Humans generalise and categorise, making it easy for us to navigate familiar environments like shopping centres. Horses do not generalise in the same way; everything new is different to them, and they need proof of safety before they can habituate and feel secure. When their entire world changes, it is deeply stressful.

They struggle to sleep until they feel safe, leading to sleep deprivation and increased difficulty.

But there is more...

Not only do you find comfort in your home environment and your nervous system downregulates, but you also find comfort in routines. Routines are habits, and habits are easy. When a routine changes or something has to be navigated differently, things get difficult. For example, my local supermarket is undergoing renovations. After four years of shopping there, it is extremely frustrating to have to work out where everything is now. Every day it gets moved due to the store being refitted section by section. This annoyance is shared by other shoppers and even the staff.

So, consider the horse. Not only are they confronted with the challenge of figuring out whether they are safe in all aspects of their new home while being sleep deprived, but every single routine and encounter is different. Then, their owner or new owner starts getting critical and concerned because the horse suddenly seems untrained or difficult. The horse they thought they owned or bought is not meeting their expectations, leading to conflict, resistance, explosiveness, hypersensitivity, and frustration.

The horse acts as if it knows little because it is stressed and because the routines and habits it has learned have disappeared. If you are a new human for the horse, you feel, move, and communicate differently from what it is used to. The way you hold the reins, your body movements in the saddle, the position of your leg – every single routine of communication between horse and person is now different. I explain to people that when you get a new horse, you have to imprint yourself and your way of communicating onto the horse. You have to introduce yourself and take the time to spell out your cues so that they get to know you.

Therefore, when you move a horse to a new home or get a new horse, your horse will go through a phase called "New Home Syndrome," and it will be significant for them. Appreciating this helps them get through it because they are incredible and can succeed. The more you understand and help the horse learn it is safe in its new environment and navigate the new routines and habits you introduce, the faster "New Home Syndrome" will pass.
"New Home Syndrome" will be prevalent in a horse’s life until they have learned to trust the safety of the environment (and all that entails) and the humans they meet and interact with. With strategic and understanding approaches, this may take weeks, and their nervous systems will start downgrading their high alert status. However, for some horses, it can take a couple of years to fully feel at ease in their new home.

So, next time you move your horse or acquire a new horse and it starts behaving erratically or being difficult, it is not being "stupid", you might not have been lied to or the horse "drugged" - your horse is just experiencing an episode of understandable "New Home Syndrome." And you can help this.❤

I would be grateful if you could please share, this reality for horses needs to be better appreciated ❤
‼️When I say SHARE that does not mean plagiarise my work…it is seriously not cool to copy and paste these words and make out you have written it yourself‼️

Located in FOUNTAIN, COThe season is changing! Join Revenant Equine for lessons or put your horse in training where you ...
08/25/2024

Located in FOUNTAIN, CO

The season is changing! Join Revenant Equine for lessons or put your horse in training where you can stay out of weather and not miss training days.
We are boarded at a top notch barn with great care, a beautiful large indoor arena with new footing, outdoor, round pen, cross country course, galloping track, and direct access to Kane ranch open space. Revenant Equine will give you and your horse a well rounded training experience!

07/16/2024

Ponied around the track today! 🐎🐴

Angel 🪽 was a good girl. Learning tantrums don’t get us anywhere. Got hosed off and did well.
07/15/2024

Angel 🪽 was a good girl. Learning tantrums don’t get us anywhere. Got hosed off and did well.

07/12/2024

Gave a first lesson to one of my old CA friends son this am!
Then a lesson myself with Davina Eventing on Odin. Nice HOT day but fulfilling 🙂

07/11/2024

Snowflakes huge progress!!! ❄️

07/11/2024

Proud of Snowflake today 🙂 time and patience and an understanding of trust.
Got the halter on Snow no fuss no chasing. Just letting her understand I wasn’t going to man handle her and gave her the time to get comfortable. She enjoys the pets and stopped shying away. Didn’t run when I actually decided to pull the halter up to hook it and then stuck around with a “well what now” look lol.

Welcome Snowflake and Angel 🙂 looking forward to working with these two
06/30/2024

Welcome Snowflake and Angel 🙂 looking forward to working with these two

06/29/2024

Adjust fences with Odin and I ❤️🐎

Charlie girl over fences ❤️🐴
06/04/2024

Charlie girl over fences ❤️🐴

05/30/2024
05/16/2024

Charlie working in the cross country field today. She did great for her first time out there. Can’t wait to ride out there!!!!

Address

505 Mt View Lane
Fountain, CO
80817

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+15628332610

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