Amy R.
Apr 19, 2022
Registered through community education offerings and we have not been disappointed. Best part was that our kiddo had fun. He got to ride a horse, lead a horse, help feed and brush a horse. It was a nice camp. Easy drop off and pickup. Friendly staff and they post pics of all the kids. Would recommend.
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pat s.
Apr 25, 2023
We had a terrible experience here when my daughter went to a camp. Spent all day in the heat sitting outside. Played musical chairs and had no direct contact with a horse other than 15 minutes of riding with someone else. Terrible and frustrating for the $ we paid!
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Foodie 1.
May 10, 2020
Alright. If you want to have your child sit on a horse once a week and throw away some cash, go for it. This is the place to go. You're not actually going to learn anything here. The horses are okay for lessons, the facility is fine. Not the best, not the worst. Please don't believe anything the owner says - she's going to try to convince you and your child that the horses are all in need, and you should buy all this equipment for them when in reality, she has so much stuff she's collected over the years she needs to actually get rid of stuff. Don't fall for it. Now, if you actually want to learn how to ride a horse and improve your riding ability, I would suggest checking out Caille Farm in Monticello. Barb's horses are fantastic, well kept and not your average lesson horses. These horses are trained to help you progress through the levels of dressage, all the way to I2. Barb has an extreme wealth of knowledge, something that Andrea wishes she had. Please don't waste your money sitting on a broken down lesson horse for a year and a half just learning how to walk, trot, and canter. If you actually want to learn how to ride, learn upper level dressage movements, ride horses that can get you to the point of going to regionals or nationals, I beg you, go to Callie Farm.
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