Sea Star Stable

Sea Star Stable Small relaxed boarding and lesson facility for riders of all ages + abilities.

We focus on building solid foundations for dressage, jumpers, eventing or just having fun in the saddle.

05/25/2025

Things your riding instructor wants you to know:
1. This sport is hard. You don't get to bypass the hard…..every good rider has gone through it. You make progress, then you don't, and then you make progress again. Your riding instructor can coach you through it, but they cannot make it easy.

2. You're going to ride horses you don't want to ride. If you're teachable, you will learn from every horse you ride. Each horse in the barn can teach you if you let them. IF YOU LET THEM. Which leads me to…

3. You MUST be teachable to succeed in this sport. You must be teachable to succeed at anything, but that is another conversation. Being teachable often means going back to basics time and time and time again. If you find basics boring, then your not looking at them as an opportunity to learn. Which brings me to…..

4. This sport is a COMMITMENT. Read that, then read it again. Every sport is a commitment, but in this sport your teammate weighs 1200 lbs and speaks a different language. Good riders don't get good by riding every once in awhile….they improve because they make riding a priority and give themsevles opportunity to practice.

5. EVERY RIDE IS AN OPPORTUNITY. Even the walk ones. Even the hard ones. Every. Single. Ride. Remember when you just wished someone would lead you around on a horse? Find the happiness in just being able to RIDE. If you make every ride about what your AREN'T doing, you take the fun out of the experience for yourself, your horse, and your instructor. Just enjoy the process. Which brings me to...

6. Riding should be fun. It is work. and work isn't always fun.....but if you (or your rider) are consistently choosing other activities or find yourself not looking forward to lessons, it's time to take a break. The horses already know you don't want to be here, and you set yourself up for failure if you are already dreading the lesson before you get here.

7. You'll learn more about horses from the ground than you ever will while riding. That's why ground lessons are important, too. If you're skipping ground lessons (or the part of your lesson that takes place on the ground), you're missing out on the most important parts of the lesson. You spend far more time on the ground with horses than you do in the saddle.

8. Ask questions and communicate. If you're wondering why your coach is having you ride a particular horse or do an exercise, ask them. Then listen to their answer and refer to #3 above.

9. We are human beings. We make decisions (some of them life and death ones) every day. We balance learning for students with workloads for horses and carry the bulk of this business on our shoulders. A little courtesy goes a long way.

Of all the sports your child will try through their school years, riding is one of 3 that they may continue regularly as adults (golf and skiing are the others). People who coach riding spend the better part of their free time and much of their disposable income trying to improve their own riding and caring for the horses who help teach your child. They love this sport and teaching others…..but they all have their limits. Not all good riders are good coaches, but all good coaches will tell you that the process to get good is not an easy one.

*thank you to whoever wrote this! Not my words, but certainly a shared sentiment!

04/12/2025

𝐁𝐫𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝐁𝐚𝐜𝐤 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐏𝐥𝐚𝐢𝐧 𝐉𝐚𝐧𝐞’𝐬

Lately, something’s been sitting heavy with me and it hit even harder after spending more time helping out at the local pony club. There’s a shift happening in the equestrian world that’s hard to ignore, and honestly, it’s starting to feel like we’re losing sight of what this sport is really about.

Everywhere you turn, you see kids turning up on high-priced horses €/£/$20,000+ for a youngster with all the bloodlines and breeding, destined to jump no more than 80 or 90cm in their life. These are lovely animals, don’t get me wrong. But at the grassroots level, the horse doesn’t need to be bred for Grand Prix. It just needs to be safe and suitable.

What I’m not seeing anymore? The scruffy ponies. The odd-shaped ones. The old semi-retired hunter that’s taught half the kids in the county how to sit a buck. The “Plain Janes” of the horse world. Where have they gone?

When did we stop letting our kids learn the hard way?

It’s not just about the money (though, yes the cost of horses in 2025 is mind-blowing). It’s about what we’re expecting from these kids, and how we think a “good horse” will shortcut them into being a great rider. Spoiler: it won’t.

Because before you can make a good rider, you’ve got to make a problem solver. And problem solvers aren’t made on perfect horses. They’re made on ponies that stop at the gate. That duck out. That need a soft hand one day and a strong leg the next. They’re made in moments of frustration and tiny breakthroughs. They’re made in muck and chaos and trying again and again.

The pressure to “have the right horse” is everywhere. But the truth is, the right horse might be the one with a few quirks, not the one with a five-figure price tag.

We’ve created this illusion that a child’s success in riding depends on the flashiest setup the horse, the truck, the gear. But the best riders I’ve known? They learned on what was available. They fell off more than they stayed on. They learned to adjust, to listen, to think, and to feel. And none of that came from being bought the perfect ride.

So here’s a gentle plea to parents, trainers, and riders alike:

Let’s normalise kids riding average horses again.

Let them ride the hairy cob. The semi-retired showjumper with a dodgy change. The pony that came from the riding school, or off a farm, or doesn’t have a passport full of fancy breeding. Let them earn their feel, their seat, their instinct not buy it.

Because at the end of the day, it’s not the horse that makes the rider. It’s the hard lessons, the dirty boots, and the thousands of tiny moments when they choose to keep going, even when it’s tough.

So if your kid has a safe pony, a helmet, and a dream? That’s enough.

And if you want to teach them to win start by letting them lose. Start by letting them learn.

That’s what makes a rider. Not a receipt.

The School Master of Gurteen 2013.

Good morning friends & Family of Sea Star!!I’m going to be making a 2025 calendar soon and want to see if there would be...
09/23/2024

Good morning friends & Family of Sea Star!!
I’m going to be making a 2025 calendar soon and want to see if there would be any interest from you as well. They would be $40 with proceeds going to more barn/arena projects!

2 possible calendars
1: 2025 Yellow House Fox den 🦊
2: A Guess that Boopable Snoot! 🐴

Please comment here or email Katelyn @ [email protected]

These also make GREAT Christmas 🎄 gifts 💕. Thank you all and I hope to hear from you soon!

~Katelyn ( Barn elf from the Yellow Palace)

Hey friends! We are selling our 2003 Sundowner 6H head to head trailer. Spacious tackroom, attached water tank in the fr...
09/05/2024

Hey friends! We are selling our 2003 Sundowner 6H head to head trailer. Spacious tackroom, attached water tank in the front, recently inspected and ready to roll. Please pass it along if you know anyone looking! Asking $23k obo. Thanks!

Address

Middle Road
Brentwood, NH
03833

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