Timeless Farm Hunters & Jumpers

Timeless Farm Hunters & Jumpers Timeless Farm is a Hunter/ Jumper training and show facility that caters to all-age beginner riders through serious A-circuit competitors. Morris.

We are dedicated to the careful instruction of both horse and rider and offer the best in personalized care. STEPHANIE VELOFF-HISTED
USHJA Certified Trainer, Certified Pulsed Electro Magnetic Field Therapy Practitioner, Published Author of The Species Theory (2013)

Timeless Farm South, 9449 SW 105 ST, Ocala, FL 34481
Timeless Farm North, 7431 Village Edge RD, Arena, WI 53503
608-575-5508, timele

[email protected], timelessfarm.com

BIOGRAPHY

Stephanie Veloff-Histed has been riding and showing horses for over 30 years. Having opened Timeless Farm LLC in Arena, WI in the summer of 1999, she has been a professional trainer/riding instructor for almost 2 decades. Timeless Farm in Arena, WI has been hosting the successful “Timeless Farm Series” of monthly horse shows since the first annual “Fall Cool Down” schooling show in October of 2000. Throughout the past 17 years, Stephanie has created an opportunity for beginner riders, seasoned veterans, and horses green and made to gain invaluable experience whether riding for pleasure or aspiring to national levels of competition . Stephanie’s own group of riders and horses have excelled beyond all expectations. Her many students and horses, from green to Grand Prix, have acquired countless championships and Zone year end awards at the largest venues including the Pennsylvania National Horse Show in Harrisburg, PA and the Washington International Horse Show in D.C. Also noteworthy, at the 2010 Midwest Horse Fair in Madison, WI, Stephanie was chosen to be one of six trainers to compete in the “Ariat Jumping With The Stars”. Stephanie and her “celebrity” won with perfect 10’s. Additionally, in 2012, Stephanie had two students that were fortunate enough to be selected to compete in the USHJA Emerging Athletes Program in Deerfield, WI. Growing up, Stephanie worked with top Dressage riders and trainers, including world renowned Dressage rider, trainer, judge, and author, Charles de Kunffy, and competed to the mid-levels of Dressage and Eventing. Ultimately focusing on the Hunter/Jumper ring, Stephanie won many Championships and Year-End awards. With her green Thoroughbred, Somewhere In Time, Stephanie was Grand Champion of the entire Midwest Winter Series in the High Adult Amateur Jumper in 1996, and went on to win Zone 6 Champion that year as well as Zone 6 Grand Champion in 1997. In 1998, Stephanie and Somewhere In Time embarked on the Amateur Owner Jumper Division with much success and championships. 1998 also brought new excitement when Stephanie decided to breed Somewhere In Time to Corrado USA by the famous “C” line of Holsteiners. As a professional, Stephanie brought Somewhere In Time back from maternity leave to compete at the Level 7 and 8 Open Jumpers and also qualified to compete at the Capital Challenge horse show in Washington D.C. Stephanie is looking forward to similar success with her offspring Coruscation, Suspended In Time and Bid Time Return. Timeless Farm South in Ocala, FL officially opened January 1, 2014. In the last few years, Stephanie and her horses, students, and now her daughter McKenna, have been taking full advantage of the amazing show environment that the Ocala area has to offer. From schooling shows at private farms to the winter circuit at HITS Ocala, the unlimited educational opportunities are very exciting. It has always been important to Stephanie that she stay in the show ring competing herself. Not only for the sheer love of it, but also to keep her teaching skills fresh and current to help her students reach their fullest potential. Throughout the last decade, Stephanie has hosted several USHJA affiliated riding clinics with top trainers in the industry at Timeless Farm, which includes Michael Bea of Madison, WI, Nick Novak of Minneapolis, MN, World Cup contender Greg Kuti of Ontario, Canada, and the unparalleled Nick Karazissis of Calabasis, CA, so that herself, her students, and the community can benefit. Stephanie also participates in riding clinic opportunities off the farm to promote her own continuing education, including the Olympic double gold medalist Joe Fargis, and United States Equestrian Team chef d’equipe, George H. Stephanie is currently in collaboration with local trainers to create and promote new schooling show opportunities, as well as offering the Timeless Farm Arena, WI, show facility for use to outside organizations. But, above all, Stephanie is most proud of the fun, supportive, family atmosphere that is Timeless Farm North and South. Which includes the backbone of what Timeless Farm truly is…the ability to offer the best possible learning atmosphere, due to the wonderful teachers that are embodied in the invaluable school horses that live at TF. We are extremely fortunate and blessed to offer the safest learning opportunities on horseback. You can follow the progress of Stephanie and the Timeless Farm family at www.timelessfarm.com.

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/17FAVfhVXp/?mibextid=wwXIfr
04/09/2026

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/17FAVfhVXp/?mibextid=wwXIfr

There’s a particular vein of content creators who have found their niche in venting to their social media audiences on a few variations of a theme: no one wants to develop their horsemanship anymore, Kristen Kovatch Bentley writes.

This argument has a few flavors: there’s a lack of work ethic in young people coming up through the ranks of equestrian sports. The “barn rat” is facing extinction. No one is teaching or learning fundamentals of riding and horse care, they’re just rushing to the show ring.

It’s not just Facebook horsemen making these arguments, either – even Margie Goldstein-Engle observed that few riders wanted to work to develop young horses, which requires a focus on a strong foundation.

Generally speaking, there are more equestrians that are constantly seeking to learn more and approach their horses from a holistic perspective than many of these personalities might lead you to believe. But there’s a singular community that embraces this whole-horse perspective almost universally.

Let us introduce the “Thoroughbred people”: those who have fallen in love not only with the breed itself, but the process of developing a former racehorse into a sport horse.

As a disclaimer, the Thoroughbred breed contains multitudes: it’s possible to find plenty of slow-legged kick rides that are suitable for all riders almost right off the track. There is a Thoroughbred out there for almost every rider. That doesn’t mean that all riders are equipped with the tools to develop a green-to-sport former racehorse right after its retirement from the track.

Think of a Thoroughbred as a horse, but concentrated: both their slow- and fast-twitch muscles are honed for peak athleticism, selectively bred for centuries to be fast off the line and also to sustain top speeds for a mile or more. Even an unfit Thoroughbred retains a level of athleticism that can be a lot to handle. When shaped and trained for a particular sport, this athleticism makes for an incredible ride, combined with the breed’s drive and heart for work.

As a result of this high-bred athleticism, the Thoroughbred also possesses a great sensitivity, both to its rider and handler as well as to its surroundings. This sensitivity is often labeled as the horse being “spooky,” “hot,” or “wild.” In reality, these stereotypes are often just misunderstood or misdirected energy with no outlet, manifesting through the horse’s sensitivity.

As a so-called “hot blood” breed, Thoroughbreds generally can’t be lunged down; a thoughtful approach to flatwork will get a rider much further when a horse is fresh. That requires the rider to have a thorough foundation of flatwork themselves, and the ability to develop these foundational basics in a green horse with plenty of forward.

Even the developed Thoroughbred can be a bit of a different animal from the conventional show ring breeds. My own horse has been off the track for far longer than he was on it – he’s 17 this year, and raced from age three to seven, and he still comes out each spring after his winter off requiring all of my flatwork skills to keep him relatively horizontal for the first week reintroducing the canter.

In short, the Thoroughbred does not suffer fools: approach the breed with a solid appreciation of foundational flatwork, and a healthy sense of humor.

📎 Continue reading this article at https://www.theplaidhorse.com/2026/04/06/no-one-wants-to-work-on-horsemanship-tell-that-to-the-thoroughbred-people/
📸 © Captivation Media

❤️🦄
03/16/2026

❤️🦄

02/15/2026
https://www.theplaidhorse.com/2026/02/06/bureaucratic-times/
02/07/2026

https://www.theplaidhorse.com/2026/02/06/bureaucratic-times/

By PIPER KLEMM This past summer I started asking every trainer I know who brings people to their first rated shows what the barriers are. Over and over I heard the same things. There was little to no mention of riding challenges. The memberships, the cost, and confusion over paperwork were both inti...

  ❤️🦄
02/04/2026

❤️🦄

There may be science behind why so many women connect so deeply with mares.

Not in a fluffy “women like mares because vibes” way.
In a nervous-system, lived-body, evolutionary sense.

Mares are biologically wired to be more vigilant. As breeding animals, they are often more sensitive to environmental threat, social pressure, and internal state. Their bodies track safety constantly. Small changes matter. Timing matters. Intention matters.

That heightened sensitivity gets labelled as “difficult”.

Women are often wired the same way.

Research consistently shows that women, on average, display higher relational attunement, emotional awareness, and threat detection. Not because women are fragile, but because many have had to become skilled at reading subtle shifts in mood, power, and safety from an early age.

When you grow up having to notice tone before words, mood before meaning, and danger before it’s named, your nervous system adapts.

Mares respond to that kind of awareness.

They don’t trust bravado.
They don’t relax for dominance.
They settle when the body in front of them is regulated, congruent, and listening.

A mare doesn’t need you to be confident in the performative sense. She needs you to be honest in your body. And many women have spent their lives learning to read and regulate bodies. Often their own, often others’, often at great personal cost.

So when a woman meets a mare, there’s recognition.

Not romance.
Not softness.
Recognition.

Two nervous systems that know what it is to be misunderstood. To be told they’re too much. To be corrected instead of listened to.

And when that connection works, it isn’t because the mare has been “handled”.
It’s because, for once, sensitivity wasn’t treated as a flaw.

That’s not magic.
That’s biology meeting lived experience.

And it explains a lot 🧡🐴



Address

7431 Village Edge Road
Arena, WI
53503

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Timeless Farm Hunters & Jumpers 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 Timeless Farm Hunters & Jumpers:

Share