Every horse works better with a job worth doing.
I build conditioning, enrichment, and exposure work into a routine your horse actually looks forward to — and I introduce young riders to horses the same careful way: one honest step at a time.
The short version
About Presley
[This is a placeholder bio — replace with your own story. Suggested shape: how you got started with horses, your training background or certifications, the philosophy behind your approach to exercise and enrichment, and what makes your youth program different. Aim for 3–4 short paragraphs — specific and personal beats polished and generic.]
[Example prompt to answer: What's a moment with a horse or young rider that captures why you do this work? Use that as your second paragraph — it does more than a list of qualifications.]
Based in [Your Town / Region], working at [your facility name, or "at your barn — I travel to you"].
"[Pull a short, real quote here — from a client, a barn manager, or a line from your own bio that captures your approach.]"
— [Attribution, or delete this box]
How the work breaks down
Three pillars, one horse at a time
Exercise
Structured conditioning — lunging, long-lining, hand-walking, and fitness rides tailored to each horse's workload and soundness.
Enrichment
Mental stimulation through groundwork games, obstacle problem-solving, and novelty that keeps a horse curious instead of bored.
Exposure
Stimulus and desensitization training — new objects, sounds, and situations introduced at a pace the horse can actually process.
For families
Youth riding & barn exposure
First-time riders and barn-curious kids get the same patient, step-by-step approach — from leading and grooming to their first lesson in the saddle.