Vecthom Sporthorses

Vecthom Sporthorses Welcome to the Uk's leading Sport horse importing page. Vecthom Sporthorses is one of the Uk's leading sporthorse importing yards.

It has carefully been set up over several years and has gone from strength to strength with world wide success, World wide buyers. Vecthom imports a wide variety of 2yro upward warmbloods from various studbook all over Europe for top level sport in mind or Amateur riders alike. Vecthom chooses horses for type, temperament, ability, Breeding, Movement and with sport in mind whether it be Showjumping, Dressage or Eventing im sure Vecthom has your next prospect.

See Vecthom Horses for more details.
02/06/2026

See Vecthom Horses for more details.

See Vecthom Horses for details and keep up to date
29/05/2026

See Vecthom Horses for details and keep up to date

Just until the little Sister finds her feet the Big Brother will promote but please head over to Vecthom Horses like and...
28/05/2026

Just until the little Sister finds her feet the Big Brother will promote but please head over to Vecthom Horses like and share and follow as there is some really special ones coming through.

Same eye for Talent, Same eye for QualitySame eye for PotentialJust a range of different heads over the door. Please fol...
28/05/2026

Same eye for Talent,
Same eye for Quality
Same eye for Potential
Just a range of different heads over the door.

Please follow my new page. There is some super super ponies on there later today.

Hi Everyone,

After over 20 years in the horse industry with the highly successful Vecthom Sport Horses, a few years ago I decided to step away from importing European horses.

There were many reasons behind that decision — the rising transport costs, the knock-on effects following Brexit, and also changes in my personal life. After spending my entire life around horses, I became a wife and mum and decided it was the right time to take a short break and focus on family life.

Now, I’ve decided to come back — bringing with me the same expert eye, honesty, and passion that built the Vecthom name in the first place.

While I’ll still be offering quality young horses and experienced horses alike, my focus will now be much broader. From Connemaras to cobs, Irish Draughts and everything in between, I want to offer genuine quality horses and ponies for a wider range of riders and budgets.

One thing that will never change is my standards. Quality has always mattered to me and always will. Just like the original Vecthom motto, I will only ever purchase and sell the type of horse I would be proud to own myself.

My name means everything to me — and it always has. My clients have always come first, and they always will. Matching the right horse to the right rider remains at the heart of what I do, whether that’s helping clients find their perfect horse here in the UK or continuing to source horses directly from Europe through my horse finder service.

For anybody wanting references, I will happily provide them. Through Vecthom Sport Horses I have been fortunate enough to build clients and contacts all over the world. I’m proud to say I have sourced Olympic horses, sold horses to Olympic riders, and everything in between — from top-level competition horses to much-loved family horses.

So while the horses may now come in different shapes, sizes, ages and types, the trusted Vecthom values remain exactly the same.

I’m excited to welcome both old and new clients, familiar faces and new ones, and I can’t wait to start this new chapter with some wonderful horses and ponies currently in my yard.

Look forward to working with you all

Jenny @ Vecthom Horses LTD

07/05/2026

🤭👏🏻 Quite ironic really following on from Part 1 & Part 2 posts recently which part 1 has gone viral. Here Ted Edgar who needs no introduction what so ever is training jumping a stone wall in the field in…..Drum Roll🥁🥁🥁🥁🥁

DRAW REINS Shock horror aghast😵.

Iv just purchased from Amazon Prime BIG STAR NICK SKELTON STORY and I’m only 10 minutes if that in and thank the Lord it’s been kept as it should be showing how it was regardless of backlash. When Nick attempted the world record he openly admits obliterating it the first attempt and the second but triumphed on the 3rd attempt. The 3rd! It was encouraged to go again and again. Nowadays if a horse stops in the ring or obliterates something the rider sees no option but to give it a pat and call it a day to the cheering and clapping crowd as god help that rider if they were to continue the round it would be classed as unfeeling & unsympathetic to the horse to continue. Nowadays you’d never be allowed to keep trying again without getting backlash that the horses welfare was not thought of bla bla bla and the social media circus doing their thing. My post about a few days ago about the old ways included draw reins and side reins and so does today’s post on social media and the debate on has it changed the equestrian industry. I touched on in my first post how back in the day side reins and draw reins were valuable training tools and were used by the worlds greatest riders and most influential people in the sport. I’m here to say as well to all those pulling their face right now saying “you’re not a good rider if you have to ride or train in them”. Well guess what….The riders out their today winning for GB in the Olympics, Competing in the Europeans and who are your hero’s…..I can assure you they also ride in draw reins….Just now they tend to do it behind closed doors and kept away from the “general public” because of the back lash. These are still training aids used TODAY training those Olympic horses by those world class riders. Things are just done more quietly since social media. Perhaps as it should be!

📣 PART 2 Has social media damaged the horse industry?I’ve been involved with horses and ponies virtually all my life.Fro...
07/05/2026

📣 PART 2 Has social media damaged the horse industry?

I’ve been involved with horses and ponies virtually all my life.

From producing jumping ponies as a child to later forming Vecthom Sporthorses as a teenager, horses have completely shaped my life.

And one thing I will openly say is this:

👉 Social media has completely transformed my life and in my opinion the horse industry.

In many ways, for the better.

Truthfully, most horses I ever sold were sold through social media platforms. I barely even used my website.

Social media gave ordinary people a worldwide audience overnight. It allowed buyers to follow journeys, watch horses progress, see success stories and connect with sellers and producers from all over the world instantly.

That side of social media is incredible.

But unfortunately, I also think social media has become one of the most damaging things to ever happen to the equestrian industry.

And I know that because I experienced it first hand.

Around 12 years ago, I posted a video of one of my show jumpers lunging in side reins.

The side reins were relatively loose — loose enough that the horse was having a proper play, bucking, squealing, rearing and enjoying itself.

In fact, in the original video, the horse’s head was often completely in the air because it was messing around and enjoying its work.

But somebody took a single slowed-down screenshot from a split second of that video.

One tiny nanosecond.

In that exact split second:
– the horse’s ears were back
– its mouth was open
– there was saliva visible on the bit
– and its head was lower

And suddenly the narrative completely changed.

That screenshot was posted online claiming I was forcing the horse into a frame with excessively tight side reins and causing discomfort.

Which was completely untrue.

The horse was in a copper snaffle, working correctly, moving freely and comfortably. The side reins were slack enough to allow the horse to buck, rear and play.

But once that screenshot hit social media, none of that mattered anymore.

The post was shared.
Then shared again.
Then more posts appeared.

Within days it had spiralled completely out of control.

Thousands of comments.
Hundreds of shares.
Death threats from all over the world.

I even received an email from somebody involved with a Pony Club saying that children there had once looked up to me, but that they were now using my photo as an example of “bad horsemanship.”

And I can honestly say it was one of the worst periods of my life mentally in my job.

Every single night I dreaded waking up the next morning and looking at my phone.

There was no escape from it.

It felt like the whole horse world was talking about me.

I remember being at Royal International Horse Show during all of this.

I’d driven six hours to compete, but when I arrived, I physically could not get out of the lorry.

What I’d once been proud of — wearing Vecthom Sporthorses clothing, saddlecloths and branding — suddenly felt impossible.

I felt embarrassed to even ride under the name.

That’s how powerful social media can become when something snowballs.

And then something very strange happened.

Several very experienced and well-known people in the industry surrounded me and reassured me.

One person said something I’ll never forget:

👉 “This will probably be the best thing that’s ever happened to your business.”

At the time, I thought they were absolutely mad.

How could something causing me that much distress possibly be a good thing?

But bizarrely… they were right.

That week I had some of the biggest horse sales I’d ever had.

My followers massively increased.
My page exploded.
People who had never heard of me before suddenly knew who Vecthom Sporthorses was.

And amongst all the people coming to judge, many also stayed to actually look at my horses, my results, my standards of care and the reality of who I was.

And many of those people became clients.

That experience taught me something very important about social media:

👉 Outrage spreads faster than truth.

And controversy spreads faster than kindness.

Which is exactly why I think social media can be such a dangerous place within the horse industry.

Because once something is online, people stop seeing the human being behind the screen.

Everybody becomes judge and jury from a 10-second clip, a screenshot or a headline.

And for the person living through it, it can become an incredibly lonely place mentally.

And I genuinely have never seen so many suicides in the horse industry as recently.

I genuinely believe social media has played a huge role in the rise of mental health struggles within the equestrian industry.

Not because horse people are weak.

But because no human being was designed to deal with thousands of opinions, abuse and judgments all at once from complete strangers around the world.

At the same time, I also believe social media can be an incredibly powerful tool when used in the correct way.

It can build businesses.
It can connect people.
It can educate.
It can inspire.
It can create opportunities people once could only dream of.

But in the wrong hands — or with the wrong people behind the keyboard — it can also be devastating.

And I think many people within the horse industry will have experienced that in one way or another.

So I’d genuinely be very interested to hear people’s thoughts and experiences on this subject.

👉 Has social media affected you positively or negatively within the horse world?
👉 Do you think social media has improved the horse industry or damaged it?
👉 And do you think the horse world was better before social media… or better because of it?

Jennifer Thompson
CEO, Vecthom Sporthorses

Further parts to this debate series to follow.

The picture used was created by AI. The text my own words

📣 “Are we losing real horsemanship?”I’ve been thinking a lot lately about how much the horse world has changed—and not a...
03/05/2026

📣 “Are we losing real horsemanship?”

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about how much the horse world has changed—and not all of it, in my opinion, for the better so I’m going to address it.

I grew up in a time where a handshake meant everything.
You bought a horse on trust. Your word was your bond. Loyalty mattered. Reputation mattered. And horsemanship wasn’t something you bought—it was something you earned through years of experience, graft, and learning from real horse people.

And buying horses was completely different too.

You’d be out competing, and there’d be that one pony on the circuit that was hard to beat. You’d watch it, ride against it, learn its strengths—and often that was enough.

That pony could be bought there and then, at a show, based purely on what you’d seen.
No trials. No endless vettings. No long lists of requirements.

As a child, I wasn’t saying “I want this type” or handing over a wish list.

It was simply:
👉 That one does the job. That’s the one.

And that was it.

It didn’t matter if it wasn’t the perfect type.
It didn’t matter how it went in the contact.
It didn’t matter what bit it wore, or whether it had quirks in or out of the stable and a vetting? What was one of those? You saw if the horse/pony was suitable with your own knowledgable eyes.

What mattered was this:
You made it work.

That pony was yours, and it was your responsibility to build a relationship with it—whatever it took. You didn’t swap it, you didn’t write it off, you didn’t move it on because it didn’t suit you perfectly and there was no sales of goods act to fall back on it didn’t exist it peoples mindsets.

I believe because of this and no fall back throw away option You learned. You adapted. You grafted.
And in doing so, you made something of the horse/pony.

I can honestly say—every pony we bought, I made work. There was no throwaway mindset. No “not fit for purpose” mentality. That just didn’t exist in the same way.

And the way we managed horses reflected that mindset too.

We weren’t surrounded by endless products and specialists.
We relied on solid, traditional horsemanship.

– Horses with duvets on with circingles holding them in place or even further back straw in their rugs made out of sacks.
– Feeding straights—oats, barley, simple feeds you understood
– Boiling up linseed properly
– Sugar beet done the right way
– A proper hot bran mash after a hard day’s hunting or competing, often with a touch of Epsom salts
– Grooming that meant something—strapping a horse properly, not a quick brush over

You knew your horse inside out because you had to.
You didn’t outsource its care—you lived it daily.

And then there’s the way horses were produced and conditioned.

Fitness wasn’t done on a screen or a programme—it was built through real work.

– Gallops
– Long days out
– The beach and the sea
– Using things like weighted boots as part of strengthening and conditioning

You only have to look at examples like Red Rum, trained by Donald McCain, who famously used Southport beach and the sea as part of his training. The legend that is John Whitaker cantering through the Yorkshire fields popping over brick walls, That kind of thinking—working with the environment—was second nature.

And young horses?

They weren’t wrapped in cotton wool.

Many were started by going out hunting—learning to go forward, to think, to travel, to jump, to be part of a herd. They learned the job by doing the job.

Now?

It feels like we’ve gone the opposite way.

If you’ve got a dressage horse, the legs are seen as far too valuable, too protected to even consider letting them go across a field or do something outside the arena.

Everything is controlled. Everything is managed.

And yet people still end up with horses that go sour, switch off, or lack genuine enthusiasm for the work.

And then there’s another side to this conversation—one that’s become incredibly controversial.

The way horses were broken and produced.

There were tools and methods used back then that, in the right hands, were part of producing countless quality horses that went on to perform at very high levels.

Things like draw reins, side reins, and stronger aids weren’t unusual—they were tools. And like any tool, they depended entirely on the hands using them.

Now?
You wouldn’t dare put a photo or video online using certain tack or methods without facing serious backlash.

Even experienced riders and professionals think twice—or keep things behind closed doors—because the reaction from the modern-day audience can be instant and intense.

And that raises a real question…

👉 Have these tools become the problem…
or is it the lack of experience and understanding behind them that’s the issue?

Because when knowledge drops, tools get blamed.

Now… it feels very different.

We’ve got:
– X-rays on every horse before it’s even sat on
– 5 different vets giving 5 different opinions
– £150+ lessons with “top” instructors
– Specialists for everything—dentists, chiropractors, physios, massage, therapy machines
– Endless feeds, balancers, supplements, gadgets

And yet…

Have we ever seen so many horses broken, lame, or written off?

It makes me question—
Have we progressed… or have we overcomplicated something that used to rely on good, solid, common sense horsemanship?

That’s not to say everything modern is wrong—far from it. Veterinary advances have absolutely saved and improved countless horses.

But I do think we’ve lost something important along the way.

👉 So here’s the question…
Are we improving the industry—or are we slowly losing the art of true horsemanship?

I’m genuinely interested in people’s thoughts—especially those who’ve been around horses for decades.

Jennifer Thompson
CEO, Vecthom Sporthorses

Further parts to this debate to follow, including the sales side—covering the modern approach to buying and selling horses coming soon.

05/06/2025
17/04/2025
Temp stables needed. At leas 5 needed. Dont mind barn type or like below. Dont want to buy new if can help it.
15/03/2025

Temp stables needed. At leas 5 needed. Dont mind barn type or like below. Dont want to buy new if can help it.

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Hollydale
Leek

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