Caballero Livery and Riding

Caballero Livery and Riding FOR THE LIFE & LOVE OF HORSES - Holistic horse care stable yard. Caballero Livery Yard established 2002 is a small private yard.
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Tranquil environment for the well-being of horse and rider.
📧[email protected]
📞+27 82 338 0838
📧[email protected]
📞+27 82 550 0809 A tranquil setting for the well being of horse and rider

Concrete brushed stables are user friendly and well ventilated warm in winter and cool summer

Horses are individually turned out into shaded paddocks that are grassed all year round

Facilities includ

e a 60mx40m sand arena with effective herringbone drainage and a 20 metre lunge arena . they are irrigated and raked regularly to maintain integrity of good going

Live-in grooms are superbly trained and supervised owner lives on the property

Shower and refreshment facilities are available

Dressage instruction by arrangement

Call Steph 0825500809 or Ang 0823380838 to set an appointment to view facilities and layout . The Ethos of Caballero Livery Yard is Excellence

🌟Caballero Livery and Riding 🌟A boutique stable in a tranquil setting, we offer expert, compassionate horse care focused...
11/11/2024

🌟Caballero Livery and Riding 🌟

A boutique stable in a tranquil setting, we offer expert, compassionate horse care focused on mind, body, and spirit. Our holistic approach creates a harmonious environment for both horse and rider to thrive.

✨ What We Offer:
Equine education space
Full stabling or DIY hybrid options
Well-ventilated, comfortable stables
Year-round grass paddocks
Full-sized sand arena with drainage
User-friendly lunge ring
Ad-lib grass feeding in paddocks
3 daily meals with personalized nutrition
24/7 care from live-in staff
Flexibility for your own instructors
Convenient location near schools and shops
Horsebox for hire
Clipping service
Secure, eco-friendly environment with abundant nature

Come see how your horse can relax and enjoy life to the fullest! 🐴💚

📧[email protected]
📞+27 82 338 0838
📧[email protected]
📞+27 82 550 0809



Follow us on Instagram - .liveryandriding

🌟Caballero Livery and Riding 🌟A boutique stable in a tranquil setting, we offer expert, compassionate horse care focused...
04/11/2024

🌟Caballero Livery and Riding 🌟

A boutique stable in a tranquil setting, we offer expert, compassionate horse care focused on mind, body, and spirit. Our holistic approach creates a harmonious environment for both horse and rider to thrive.

✨ What We Offer:

Equine education space
Full stabling or DIY hybrid options
Well-ventilated, comfortable stables
Year-round grass paddocks
Full-sized sand arena with drainage
User-friendly lunge ring
Ad-lib grass feeding in paddocks
3 daily meals with personalized nutrition
24/7 care from live-in staff
Flexibility for your own instructors
Convenient location near schools and shops
Horsebox for hire
Clipping service
Secure, eco-friendly environment with abundant nature

Come see how your horse can relax and enjoy life to the fullest! 🐴💚

📧[email protected]
📞+27 82 338 0838
📧[email protected]
📞+27 82 550 0809



Follow us on Instagram - .liveryandriding

To understand the soul of a horse is the closest human beings can come to knowing perfection. – Author Unknown🖤FOR THE L...
28/10/2024

To understand the soul of a horse is the closest human beings can come to knowing perfection. – Author Unknown

🖤FOR THE LIFE & LOVE OF HORSES🖤
Caballero Livery and Riding

Have a lovely week!! 🐴

📧[email protected]
📞+27 82 338 0838
📧[email protected]
📞+27 82 550 0809

26/10/2024

From the Executive Producers of The 24 Behaviors of the Ridden Horse in Pain, you can now watch the full-length documentary, “Horses and The Science of Harmony”! Available for free on YouTube, Apple TV, Amazon Fire, ROKU, LG, Samsung and online via Equus Television Network

Featuring a who’s who of legendary equestrians as well as some of the top equine veterinarians and researchers in the world, this moving and educational film explores the nature of trust-based relationships between horse and rider through the lens of cutting-edge science.

https://www.24horsebehaviors.org/horses-and-the-science-of-harmony

22/10/2024
Hi All! Please make sure to follow our new official Instagram page - .liveryandriding ✨ What We Offer:Equine education s...
21/10/2024

Hi All! Please make sure to follow our new official Instagram page - .liveryandriding

✨ What We Offer:
Equine education space
Full stabling or DIY hybrid options
Well-ventilated, comfortable stables
Year-round grass paddocks
Full-sized sand arena with drainage
User-friendly lunge ring
Ad-lib grass feeding in paddocks
3 daily meals with personalized nutrition
24/7 care from live-in staff
Flexibility for your own instructors
Convenient location near schools and shops
Horsebox for hire
Clipping service
Secure, eco-friendly environment with abundant nature
Come see how your horse can relax and enjoy life to the fullest! 🐴💚

📧[email protected]
📞+27 82 338 0838
📧[email protected]
📞+27 82 550 0809

Hi everyone! Please give our official Caballero Instagram page a follow 🙏🐎
18/10/2024

Hi everyone! Please give our official Caballero Instagram page a follow 🙏🐎

🌟 Welcome to Caballero Livery & Riding! 🌟A boutique stable in a tranquil setting, we offer expert, compassionate horse c...
18/10/2024

🌟 Welcome to Caballero Livery & Riding! 🌟

A boutique stable in a tranquil setting, we offer expert, compassionate horse care focused on mind, body, and spirit. Our holistic approach creates a harmonious environment for both horse and rider to thrive.

✨ What We Offer:

Equine education space
Full stabling or DIY hybrid options
Well-ventilated, comfortable stables
Year-round grass paddocks
Full-sized sand arena with drainage
User-friendly lunge ring
Ad-lib grass feeding in paddocks
3 daily meals with personalized nutrition
24/7 care from live-in staff
Flexibility for your own instructors
Convenient location near schools and shops
Horsebox for hire
Clipping service
Secure, eco-friendly environment with abundant nature
Come see how your horse can relax and enjoy life to the fullest! 🐴💚

📧[email protected]
📞+27 82 338 0838
📧[email protected]
📞+27 82 550 0809

06/10/2024

Have fun and be inspired by world class trainers

Us3 ...
24/09/2024

Us3 ...

15/09/2024

The Myth of the Universal Method.

A horse who steps into your space and bops you with their nose and crowds you with their shoulder is being pushy and dominant.

Until a horse comes to you with their nose and their shoulder in a bid for your attention.

A horse who wrinkles their nostril as you walk past them is annoyed at you and pre-disposed to being aggressive.

Until a horse wrinkles their nose as you walk past because they smelled the carrot in your pocket.

A horse who has a wide eyed expression is feeling stress.

Until a horse has a facial conformation where they can only see their surroundings crystal clear if they wrinkle their eyelid and put effort into opening their eyes.

A horse with a soft, neutral facial expression is happy, relaxed and experiencing good welfare.

Until a horse expresses this neutral as boredom and stuckness in down-regulation.

A horse who doesn't stand at the mounting block doesn't want you to mount them.

Until a horse feels they need to adjust their position at the mounting block, so they can be more balanced, in anticipation of receiving their rider.

A horse who bolts, or exerts more energy into forward motion than their rider asked for, is probably afraid, in pain, or poorly trained.

Until a horse discovers a light and balanced rider that at last, doesn't get in their way, and they feel the joy of putting full effort into maximum locomotion.

A horse that bites is a rude horse.

Until a horse learns that biting, nipping or mouthing their owner is a great way to refocus their human, up-regulate their human, and bring their human up to the standards of connection and concentration that horse prefers.

Lunging horses in circles is a terrible strain on their ligaments and joints.

Until a horse learns to not twist into their joints and self support their connective tissue in movement, plus is allowed to move on the lunge without their posture being dictated to, or held into cumulative micro-trauma.

A horse person should never ride a horse through fear.

Until a horse and their human reach a level of trust and connection that fear is an obstacle they can face together as a team, bravely, and even robustly jostle with fear without causing a rupture to that trust.

A horse must never step into your space without your permission.

Until a horse steps gently into your space, without permission.
.. I can go on and on. I may have thousands of these, if I put my mind to it.

We need to learn methods. In fact, if you work with or even stand next to a horse, that is a method. The language of "I do not have a method" would technically mean, "I have no procedural skill with a horse".

Method means:
"A particular procedure for accomplishing or approaching something, especially a systematic or established one."

If we are interacting with or caring for horses, methods and tools are always present.

I think the myth here is that of a universal method.
Gee, at a stretch, even universal principals, I find too constraining.

The more experience I experience, the more I see divergence and variables as the preferred norm.

I think we need to stop making hard rules for ourselves. And become better about the living dynamics and working with real life.

21/08/2024

Ideally, a horse should maintain all their basic physical health needs... outside of training.

But that is an ideal. We do not live in an ideal world. Sometimes, this will not be possible. Sometimes, due to our boarding/livery arrangements, the cultural scene surrounding us, financial and logistical restrictions, our horses lose their physical health unless we implement trainings to manage that.

What physical health elements do I refer to exactly?
I refer to
- Their Body Condition Score (Overweight, Underweight, Ideal)
- Their physical fitness to move comfortably and naturally
- Their nutritional needs (More than gross caloric intake; is their diet balanced, not just sufficient calories)
- Mental and emotional stimulation
- Sufficiently rested and energized

I use training for horses whose cup overflows with well-being. Caveat, I only train a horse at the level of physicality, if their cup overflows from their life. And they are abundantly WELL. So well, that they line up at my arena, or present themselves, motivated to work. Because they are well rested, well fed, well mobilised, well socialised, that their systems start to zing with an effervescent vitality. Once they are presenting vitality, I will welcome that overflow into my arena and ask them;

"What have you got?"

If I am using training as repair and recovery, I firstly realise that I am doing so because something in that horses life is out of balance. I use the training, not as training, but as rehab and support, while simultaneously focusing all my efforts on discovering the source of the problem in their life, and putting majority of my focus and reserves into resolving that.

E.G. if a horse is reluctant to move, and I discover they are reluctant to move because their lifestyle lacks ability, or motivation to move, then I fix their lifestyle. I don't force them to move in training. I want to increase vitality that is already there. Not force vitality through what I feel is an inappropriate and invasive overstep beyond. A rolling stone gathers no moss. A body in motion, stays in motion. Because it has a relationship to movement. If they are reluctant to move because they are sore or uncomfortable, or because they are illuminating inner work I have to do on myself before they will share their body with me like that, I listen to that. And implement the solutions, outside of the arena.

It is a hill I will die on. Low-key (High-key) refusing to use training as a cover-up for problems in my horse keeping. And I have had a long and illustrious relationship, affiliated with very, very, very poor and inappropriate horse-keeping environments. Because I did not have access or ability to give them better. I did the best that I could. And then yes, used the training to make up the difference.

But I was aware that the training was making up the difference. I was aware that when I do this, I am on borrowed time. And it is a sure fire way to burn a horse out.

So, because I lived this, I now am aware of how important it is to resolve training issues, outside of training, as much as is humanly possible for us to do so.

from our horse to yours .... ❤️
08/04/2023

from our horse to yours .... ❤️

rolling rocks ... 🖤
29/03/2023

rolling rocks ... 🖤

looking for a new home for your horse ... stabling is available here ...  ❗️
28/03/2023

looking for a new home for your horse ... stabling is available here ... ❗️

20/02/2023

A friend said recently that horses really like a ’Long Hello’. That many horses feel immediately rushed by us, and this can really set us onto a path of misunderstandings and conflicts with the horse. 



Out on a trail ride the other day, my horse carrying me calmly, carefully, steadily, he waded into the river, and splashed his nose in the water, lifted into a Flehman’s Response, then pawed at the water. It made me laugh. The sun was shining. It was perfect weather, cool enough for a jacket, sunny enough to not get cold. I reached down and rubbed his shoulder. My body flooded with all the feel good things I almost always feel around horses.
"Thanks buddy”, I said.

Gratitude. 

I wake up. I go to my horses. I am grateful. Already won. Why?



There are plenty of voices out there telling us, and our horses, that they are not good enough. Not correct enough, fit enough, collected enough, shiny enough, natural enough, healthy enough, calm enough, cooperative enough.



It is enough.



I am grateful before the horse because that is my long goodbye to the horse. We never know when we will have our last moment with our horses. And under normal set of circumstances, we will all outlive our horses, and if we are REALLY lucky, we will be there with them, in gratitude and dignity, at the very end. 



So I stay grateful, so that I do not have to GET grateful. Because that is my long goodbye to my horses. No matter if it was to be today, or in 30 years from now.

There is a training principal that permeates equestrian culture at almost every level and wears many disguises. It is the principal of trying to win. It sets the human against the horse and see's the working relationship with them as something competitive. Who wins, who loses, who gets their way. Who gets what they want.

The reason why I try to steer away from that, and you should to, is that it sets you up on a pathway of diminishing gratitude. That diminishing gratitude will eventually leave you utterly burnt out with horses.

So what to do about it? How to express your gratitude to a horse in a way they understand?



1. When the horse doesn’t give you what you want, try smiling about it. Breathe-in. Wait. You can always repeat the question in a moment. And maybe they didn’t understand you, or can’t do that thing today. Or maybe their lesson for you today is not about you getting what you want, but something else



2. When the horse does give you what you want in two seconds or less, permit yourself to feel joy about that. Smile like a maniac. Don’t be entitled or demanding (Unless in an emergency of safety). Tell that horse, in your language, that it was wonderful what they did. And feel what you say, so that the horse feels you too. 



3. The 1-Minute Ride. Once in a blue moon (For established, hard working saddle horses). Catch, groom, tack, warm up, mount. Sit for one minute quietly. Get off. Finish. Say THANK YOU to the horse and give them some extra hay that day. 



4. When correcting a horse whom has problematic posture, movement issues, or behavioural issues. Remember that it is their body not yours. Maladaptive responses exist for a really good reason and taking those away from a horse too quickly and absolutely could deprive the horse from an important coping strategy that is holding them together. Go slower in your reformation of what you deem incorrect, so that the horse has a chance to contribute to it too. They may not adhere to the rules of the system you are using, so give them a chance to SHOW you, what they need. 



5. Give your horse the absolute best quality of life you can. Try to relocate if your barn doesn’t have good living conditions for your horse. Stop giving money to people who know better, but can’t/won’t do better. It doesn’t have to be perfect. But never give up trying to give your horse a life that they enjoy living, outside of their time with you. Even in the most compromised of conditions, you would be amazed what some creative thinking can do to totally change the environment, improving your horses life outside of training.

https://www.emotionalhorsemanship.com

Address

Paardeplaats 177 : Robert Broom Drive
Mogale City
1739

Opening Hours

Monday 09:00 - 16:00
Tuesday 09:00 - 16:00
Wednesday 09:00 - 16:00
Thursday 09:00 - 16:00
Friday 09:00 - 16:00
Saturday 09:00 - 17:00

Telephone

+27823380838

Website

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