GreenValley Equine

GreenValley Equine Horse Training Services. Performance & Sale Horses

SOLDLilly 2 year old filly. QH14 hhLily is currently nominated on this months triangle auction!She is very quiet and eas...
29/09/2025

SOLD

Lilly

2 year old filly. QH
14 hh

Lily is currently nominated on this months triangle auction!

She is very quiet and easy to handle, rug, trim, float and wash.

Had a hadful of rides. Showing no dirt or resistance. Has a nice soft mouth.
Had her teeth done recently.

She can’t be registered.
Picture of her mother (buckskin) and her sire, chesnut. Also some of when she was a foal.

Not suited to green, inexperienced or beginners.

Located chinchilla Qld.

SoldBuff steer Very quiet, would suit being worked by young horses not suited to competitive horse as he is steady. $770...
17/09/2025

Sold

Buff steer
Very quiet, would suit being worked by young horses not suited to competitive horse as he is steady. $770 inc.
Located chinchilla qld

25/08/2025
Ha ha He has got it down pat! 🤣
22/08/2025

Ha ha He has got it down pat! 🤣

I get sent lots of videos of wrecks. They are pretty predictable. Usually involves a dog a fat guy and someone putting their hand on the cantle as they mount.

In the comments there’s always a carrot stick Karen telling them to do more groundwork.

Karen I’m pretty sure they did whatever groundwork they do to get into that wreck. I don’t think doing more s**t groundwork is going to change that outcome. Maybe they could get help and find some better groundwork but they probably ain’t gonna.

Just be tough enough to ride the stupidity of your decisions.

Pretty wet here playing around with young horses!! What fun 🫠
22/08/2025

Pretty wet here playing around with young horses!! What fun 🫠

08/08/2025

Get those miles in on the colts before the rain!! 

06/08/2025

3 year old stallion on his 5th week of breaking, what a lope he has big fella!

29/07/2025

A young filly I had here for a few weeks to put some miles and education on travelling smooth and kindly

Enough said.
25/07/2025

Enough said.

Stop Fixing Problems You Created

There’s no easy way to say this, so I’m just going to say it plain:

A lot of the problems people bring to me — barn sour horses, buddy sour horses, horses that won’t load, won’t stand at the mounting block, don’t stop, don’t steer, don’t pick up the right lead — didn’t come out of nowhere. They weren’t born that way. And most of the time, they weren’t trained that way either.

They were made that way. And most often? They were made that way by the very people trying to fix them.

Now before you get your feathers ruffled, hear me out. I’m not here to shame anyone. Horses are honest creatures. They respond to the environment they’re in and the leadership they get. If you’ve got a problem horse, that horse isn’t out to make your life miserable. That horse is just reacting to what it’s been taught — directly or indirectly — by you.

So before you go looking for a fix, stop and ask yourself one simple question:

“Did I create this?”

Horses Learn Patterns — Whether You Meant to Teach Them or Not
Horses are masters of pattern recognition. They don’t just learn what we intentionally teach — they learn what we repeatedly allow.

Let me give you a simple example. You ride your horse for 45 minutes, and every single time you dismount right at the gate. After about a week of that, your horse starts pulling toward the gate at the 40-minute mark. Two weeks in, you’re fighting to stay in the arena at all. You say, “He’s barn sour.” No — he’s gate-conditioned. You taught him that the gate is where the ride ends, and he learned it better than you realized.

Same thing with mounting blocks. You let your horse walk off the second your foot hits the stirrup? Don’t be surprised when he refuses to stand still. He’s not being disrespectful — he’s doing exactly what he thinks he’s supposed to do. You taught him that.

Buddy sour? Happens when every ride, every turnout, every trailer ride, every everything happens in pairs. You never ask that horse to be alone, never train it to focus on you instead of the herd, and then act shocked when it melts down the minute its pasture mate walks away.

These are learned behaviors. And if you taught it — even accidentally — then you’re the one who needs to un-teach it.

Avoidance Creates Anxiety
I see it all the time: the rider knows their horse doesn’t like something — maybe it’s going in the trailer, riding out alone, crossing water, walking past a flapping tarp. So what do they do? They just avoid it. Again and again.

And you know what happens? The horse gets more anxious. The issue doesn’t go away. It gets bigger. Because now that thing is associated with stress, and the horse has never been taught how to work through it. The human’s avoidance has created a mental block.

And then one day they try to address it — maybe they need to trailer somewhere, or they’re in a clinic and someone pulls out a tarp — and the horse explodes. And they say, “I don’t know why he’s acting like this!”

I do. You’ve been letting it fester. You taught your horse that he never has to face the thing that scares him. Until now. And now it’s a fight.

Inconsistency is the Fastest Way to Ruin a Good Horse
You can’t train a horse one way on Monday and another way on Wednesday and expect them to understand anything. And yet that’s what a lot of folks do.

Monday: you make him back out of your space.
Tuesday: you let him walk all over you because you’re in a rush.
Wednesday: you smack him with the lead rope for doing the same thing he got away with yesterday.
Thursday: you feel bad and let him be pushy again.

That horse has no idea what the rules are. And when there are no clear rules, a horse will either take charge or check out completely. Either way, it’s not going to end in a safe, willing, responsive partner.

Stop Saying “He Just Started Doing That”
I hear that phrase constantly: “He just started doing that.”

No, he didn’t. You just started noticing it once it became a problem you couldn’t ignore.

Most bad habits start small. A little shoulder lean. A step into your space. A half-second delay in picking up a cue. But when you ignore those things, they grow. Horses don’t suddenly wake up one day and decide to bolt, buck, rear, or refuse. They show you the warning signs first. It’s up to you to listen and respond before it becomes a crisis.

So the next time you say, “He just started doing that,” stop and think: Did I actually miss the signs? Did I allow this to build?

Horses Are Honest — But So Are Results
Your horse is just doing what it was taught. Maybe not on purpose. Maybe not maliciously. But consistently.

The results you’re getting today are a direct reflection of the leadership you’ve given up until now.

And the good news is — that works in reverse too.

If your horse is a problem today, and you take responsibility, and you start showing up consistently, with clear expectations, fair corrections, and better timing — the horse will respond. Horses aren’t holding grudges. They’re not being stubborn just to spite you. They’re not political. They’re not bitter. They’re honest.

They will follow a better leader the moment one shows up.

Final Thought
If you’re spending your time trying to fix a problem, the first place you need to look is the mirror.

Because if you’re the one who taught it — even by accident — then you’re also the one who can fix it. But only if you take responsibility.

Stop blaming the horse. Stop acting surprised. Start being the kind of leader your horse actually needs — not the one that avoids, excuses, and compensates.

The horse isn’t broken. The horse isn’t rebellious. The horse isn’t hard to train.

You’re just trying to fix something you created without first owning the fact that you created it.

And until you do that, nothing is going to change.

16/07/2025

Sold

Buff Steer for sale. Not quite 1 yet.
800 ono plus gst. Chinchilla QLD.
Has been kept in two wire electric tape
And 4 barb fence with no worries.
Needs confident handler.

SOLDGipBorn 7th nov 24Paint x Qh Filly. Can lead and tie up. Been hobbled.Had her first trim today, up to date with worm...
23/06/2025

SOLD

Gip

Born 7th nov 24

Paint x Qh Filly.

Can lead and tie up. Been hobbled.
Had her first trim today, up to date with worming.

Photo of her dam (unregistered)
And her sire. ( highbrowcat/docs spinifex )

She has a small scar on her right eye.

Chinchilla qld.

$2,200 inc

🏜️ Hanks Little Lena 🏜️�3-Year-Old Filly | Q-98855Sire: Frogman’s Henry (Smart Little Lena)�Dam: Hank Man’s Leo / Bills ...
13/06/2025

🏜️ Hanks Little Lena 🏜️�3-Year-Old Filly | Q-98855
Sire: Frogman’s Henry (Smart Little Lena)�Dam: Hank Man’s Leo / Bills Cutter Mare�Height: 14.3 hh

Introducing Hanks Little Lena, a quiet, easy-going 3-year-old filly with a calm disposition and no unwanted behaviors. Lena is an easy to train, versatile and well-mannered horse. She has had one outing loping around at a draft, proving her ability and willingness to get along.
This filly is an absolute pleasure to work with—whether it's grooming, trimming, or other routine care, Lena is as easy as they come. She is incredibly forgiving and can be left for extended periods, then brought back into work without any issues.
Lena’s temperament makes her a perfect candidate for a future child’s mount, as she is happy to do whatever is asked of her., She has had plenty of miles on the road getting those sweaty saddle pads.
Once finished with her under saddle work, Lena would also be an excellent addition to any broodmare program.
Don’t miss out on the opportunity to own this quiet easy going, well-rounded filly!

Ph: 0497526845
Located Chinchilla QLD .

Video of dry work and wet work in link 🔗

👉🏼 https://youtu.be/zSCujtjL6fA?feature=shared

Address

Auburn Road
Chinchilla, QLD
4413

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when GreenValley Equine posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to GreenValley Equine:

Share

Category