Mountain Gait Foxtrotters

Mountain Gait Foxtrotters Missouri Fox Trotters for sale The fact that our Foxtrotter Stallion, Cloud's Jubalation also produces rare and beautiful champagne color is a bonus!
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At Mountain Gait Horses our goal is to produce naturally gaited horses, with great dispositions, bloodlines and correct conformation. We use our horses in the rugged mountain terrain of Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming. They learn to cross logs, bridges, water, etc. before they are old enough to be ridden. We use natural horsemanship training methods and all of our foals are imprinted at birth. If you are looking for a quality, surefooted trail horse, check us out!

Another Jubal son Laddie at work.
03/12/2024

Another Jubal son Laddie at work.

Always love updates on our horses. Jubalation’s Stetson doing great in Oregon!
03/12/2024

Always love updates on our horses. Jubalation’s Stetson doing great in Oregon!

03/09/2024

Two of Cloud’s Jubalation’s sons doing their job at Champs Heart. It’s always great to see Jubal’s offspring becoming great horses! Champs Heart is a great organization helping children with special needs and their families. Larry Cudmore

We always love updates on our horses!  This one made my day!  Alisha purchased Grace from us as a 3 year old. Alisha and...
06/21/2023

We always love updates on our horses! This one made my day! Alisha purchased Grace from us as a 3 year old. Alisha and Grace have been a great team for 15 years. Now her daughter the next generation of horse women is riding her.

06/21/2023
12/02/2022

If movement doesn’t bring calmness and relaxation, then what is its purpose other than give you control physically? If a horse does not feel calm and relaxed in movements, then problems begin. If you have to escalate your aid (more rein, stronger legs), then you have lost the horse mentally.
If you have to escalate the aids to get the correct responses, it is time to step back to the basics. When you put an aid on, instead of expecting a movement, ask the horse “do you understand what this means?” If the horse seems uncertain how to answer, then it is time to go back and explain how your aids connect to the feet.

10/27/2022
07/26/2022

I see hundreds of riders at clinics every year. Almost all the problems riders have with their horses have the same causes. It disturbs me that as I try to teach riders, what they do that upsets the horse and causes their problems are exactly what their riding instructors and trainers are telling th...

07/25/2022

With our stallion Jubal gone and our broodmares getting old we will no longer be breeding. I will be leaving this page open and sharing occasional horse information, pictures etc. We also love getting updates and pictures on any of our former horses and Cloud’s Jubalation offspring.

07/24/2022

Selling a horse is never an easy process, especially, I find, if you have had the horse for a long time, or have bred it yourself. It involves so many changes and challenges and it doesn't always go to plan.

I liken selling horses to sending a kid to a new foster family. During that transition a horse is having to go from a predictable system of knowns, often to complete unknowns. First their parents change (handler and rider) to completely foreign people. Then the rules change (the boundaries set up by the owner) often causing a whole lot of confusion and frustration. Then their whole school programme changes (new work programme, new exercises, new expectations of how to work), not to mention the changes to their friend group (new band dynamics), or in some cases having no access to friends at all anymore.

Then their whole diet changes (new feed programme, new grass, new minerals). Not to mention a complete change of language used (different aids and forms of communication/ body language etc). Never mind the other factors a horse has to deal with; different saddle, bit, environment, fitness programme etc.

I think it takes about six months before a horse really begins to settle in and thrive in their new environment, and up to 2 years before you really start to see the best out of the combination, simply because of the time it takes to build their trust, to set up a new form of communication and understanding and to build a solid relationship built on good old fashioned foundations.

I have had a great run of finding pretty amazing homes for my horses but it doesn’t always go to plan and that is the realities of working with a living, breathing being. I sold a horse recently that has been going great but there have been a few moments of confusion between the horse and rider so it has been so good to have them both come and stay with me for a few days so I can give the rider the tools to help the horses transition into her new home so much easier.

The issue came about when asking the horse a basic question on the ground which was met with the horse getting confused. What was happening was that the riders body language was a little off, which when corrected instantly fixed the problem and the horse had that ‘Oh that’s what she meant moment.’

I find this so common. No two people communicate the same way and no two horses communicate the same way. That’s why those first few months of owning a horse is so critical to their long term success and to that overall partnership. By taking things really slowly in the beginning and seeking reputable help when needed it can lead to a truely beautiful partnership.

The world lost a great Foxtrotter today!  We are so thankful for the 16 years we had with him and the wonderful offsprin...
07/19/2022

The world lost a great Foxtrotter today! We are so thankful for the 16 years we had with him and the wonderful offspring he gave us! He will be so missed!

07/12/2022

I never do this, but I am going to do this.

I am going to talk about safety.

And I am not going to mention hats once.

I’ve seen one too many sad stories about people tumbling off their horses, one too many melancholy pictures from A&E, one too many shy, shamed admissions that the nerve has gone.

People feel ashamed that they are afraid to get back on their horses after a nasty fall. But there are two kinds of fear: the useful, sensible fear that keeps us humans alive, and the paranoid amygdala fear that says everything is going to hell and we will never amount to anything. The first one is the one I listen to. I don’t, eccentric as it may seem, want to die.

That fear tells me a lot of good stuff. It tells me that if the red mare and I are out of practice, we will need to go and do a bit of preparatory work before we ride out into the hills again. It tells me that preparation and practice and patience are everything. It tells me not to rely on luck or what the hell; it tells me to do the work, day after day.

So, in our field, we do the work. We do it on the ground, for days and weeks and months, until the fear nods its head sagely and tells us we are ready. We do stuff which looks boring or nuts to a lot of people. And that’s because I don’t want to be the person who has to sit up all night in a chair because of seven broken ribs, or who can hardly speak and is the colour of putty because of a smashed up pelvis, or who is hobbling about on a broken ankle. I live alone. I have to do my work and look after dogs and horses. I can’t break my ankle.

I have a whole boatload of rules that many people will scoff at. I don’t care. For instance, I won’t get on a horse who can’t stand still at the mounting block. Won’t do it. It’s not only dangerous in and of itself, but that inability to stand is what my friend Warwick Schiller calls ‘bolting at the standstill’. That horse cannot control itself, and so we’re in trouble, right off the bat.

I spend years teaching my horses to control themselves. I learnt an entire new horsemanship from scratch to do this. It is never complete, because horses are prey animals and flight animals, but it goes a hell of a long way.

You literally can teach horses to think their way through problems, rather than react.

You can teach them to move easily between the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system, so they can bring themselves down after a fright.

I’ll give you a specific example: when Clova first came to us, it took her as long as forty-seven minutes to bring herself down. I once timed it on my telephone. And that was not after a fright, that was after the tiniest bit of pressure - just me asking her to trot round me on the rope. Forty-seven minutes. I stood and breathed and waited and broke my heart, a little, thinking of the things she must have been through in her life.

Now, it takes between three to seven seconds.

I watched her do it the other day, out on the trail. An unexpected duck flew up off the burn. It gave her a tiny fright. Four seconds later, she dropped her head, relaxed into her loose rein, and licked and chewed. We taught her that, because it’s a lifesaver, for her rider. It also makes her own life so much easier and happier.

We do a ton of other stuff that helps safety. We teach all our horses to stand still, we teach them all personal space, we teach them focus and connection. This means they won’t trample over us in fear. When horses get scared, they go blind. They’ll knock you over because they don’t know you are there. They are in full survival mode. I won’t work with horses like that. It’s not their fault, but they scare the jeepers out of me.

Actually, that’s not true. Our Freya was like that, and I did work with her, because I wanted her to relax and be happy and find herself, and so I had to work through a lot of very sensible fear. It was a balance between keeping myself safe and giving that horse what she needed, all the time. Thank goodness those days are behind us. Kayleigh was sometimes scared and I was sometimes scared and we were absolutely right to be afraid. There was danger, and we reacted to it rationally.

The focus work is not just so the horses won’t send us flying when they are in survival mode, it’s also for things like feeding time and putting them back into the field.

I have a ridiculously strict rule in the field. All our children obey it to the letter. I owe it to their mothers to keep them safe. It is: we lead the horses in, find a good space, turn them to face the gate, check whether they are relaxed, check whether they are focused on us (rather than on the bears in the woods), check whether they are connected to us, and only then let them go.

I do all this because I love being with horses and I don’t want to be scared of them. A horse who can regulate her own nervous system is so much easier to be around. She’s easy with herself and that makes the humans happy and confident. A horse who knows about personal space is a pleasure, in every interaction. A horse who has control over himself is a joy, not a terror.

Horses will always be intrinsically risky. We’ve all tumbled off, at one time or another, the posse and I. But I like to reduce the risk to the lowest possible point. Every time one of us tumbles, we learn a boatload of lessons from that. It’s almost always that I’ve let something slide, got a bit cocky, ignored a warning sign.

I’m not very brave, and I’m glad I’m not. I used to be deadly ashamed of this. Everything in my childhood was geared to kicking on and riding through it. That was what my dad did, with his steeplechasers; that’s what he famously did when the docs told him he could never ride again and he was back the next year in the Grand National. That was how it was done, in our house.

But I don’t have that kind of physical courage; not any more. I am afraid of breaking things and hurting things. So I train my horses in the ways of slowness and peace. I train them to know me and know themselves, so that fear does not swamp them when it comes. I train them to trust their humans, so they don’t have to go into that hard, terrified survival mode. They always have someone, in their corner, on their side, who will stand on the ramparts and not let the mountain lions pass.

I think a lot about what horses want. Sometimes, I think they want someone who will stand between them and a hungry lion. I am not physically brave, but I would do that for my red mare. I can’t tell you that she knows that, not for sure (I will never entirely know what she knows), but my guess is she has a sense of it. And that is why we are a team. We will protect each other until the last lion is down.

06/23/2022

How do I get my horse to gait?
It’s the most frequently asked question I get from clients. The answer is simple, and not what most riders are expecting to hear. I can’t give you a magic button or trick to make your horse gait. And that’s a good thing, it’s much more simple than that. Gait isn’t achieved through manipulation such as a new bit, different shoes, pulling the head up or forcing the head down. You can’t purchase gait anymore than my husband can buy a good golf swing, by buying the newest gear. But I digress.

Gaited horses are genetically bred to gait. And that is why it is simple. It isn’t something we have to teach them. However, we do have to show them how to travel in balance with a rider so that they can do what will come natural to them. So we become balance conscious, instead of focusing on gait.

Whether your horse is trotty, pacey, or somewhere in between, it all stems from a lack of balance. Trotty horses are typically on the forehand. Pacey horses are usually stiff through their back. When I am working with a horse, I never focus on gait. I start with the foundation and teach my horse how to become flexible, balanced, engaging their hindquarters, and going to the bridle. I teach it at the walk and then teach it with speed. And always, the horses start gaiting. Not because I taught them how to gait specifically, but because they are traveling in balance with speed. It just so happens to be at an even, smooth, four-beat gait.

We love having updates on our horses. Jubalation’s Stetson and his awesome owner Debra!
06/15/2022

We love having updates on our horses. Jubalation’s Stetson and his awesome owner Debra!

05/26/2022

Totally agree! Ground work is so important for safety and building a relationship with your horse. A trainer can train your horse but you are the only one who can build a relationship with your horse. No one can do that for you. Horsemanship is about continual lifetime learning to become a better leader for your horse. So many problems can be fixed by looking at yourself and asking “what could I have done different to have made it better for my horse.”

05/23/2022

When you have properly prepared your horse this is how the first water crossing with your horse will go. Our granddaughter did a great job preparing her young horse.

05/20/2022

You can not change "who" a horse is.

But, good training can help;

A nervous horse be more calm
A dull horse to be more sensitive
A shy horse to be more bold
A touchy horse to be more easy going
And a dominant horse to be more mild mannered.

It's all about training to Balance the individual's mentality and athleticism.

Happy Friday😊
✌️Kalley

https://www.kalleykrickeberg.com/training


Congratulations to Kenzie Steffes on her beautiful new filly!  A Cloud’s Jubalation granddaughter out of Jubalation’s Du...
05/16/2022

Congratulations to Kenzie Steffes on her beautiful new filly! A Cloud’s Jubalation granddaughter out of Jubalation’s Dusty Treasure. Kenzie does an excellent job of matching her mares and stallions together in her breeding program. Great to see a young breeder so diligent in studying and breeding for quality horses.

Thank you Becky Oldham for the fun photos of Cloud’s Jubalation as a 3 year old!  What a great horse he grew up to be!
01/18/2022

Thank you Becky Oldham for the fun photos of Cloud’s Jubalation as a 3 year old! What a great horse he grew up to be!

The home every breeder dreams of for their horses!  Always a wonderful surprise to get updates on the horses you loved! ...
01/01/2022

The home every breeder dreams of for their horses! Always a wonderful surprise to get updates on the horses you loved! Touch has been with her wonderful owner for over 15 years now. So thankful for the wonderful home Donna has given her all these years. What a wonderful surprise photo gift today! Makes my heart so happy!

Merry Christmas from Mountain Gait Horses!
12/23/2021

Merry Christmas from Mountain Gait Horses!

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