Serenity Sport Horses

Serenity Sport Horses Building Confident Partnerships Between Horse and Rider

Beth has been riding horses since before she could remember.

From a very young age, it became clear that her life’s purpose was deeply rooted in working with horses—not just riding them, but understanding them, helping them, and giving them a voice. Her journey began with a love for the animal itself, and that passion has grown into a career built on trust, knowledge, and transformation. Over the years, Beth has learned from a variety of respected riders an

d trainers, developing her own approach through hands-on experience, thoughtful observation, and continuous education. At age 18, she began starting young horses under saddle professionally, laying the foundation for future success through patience and consistency. As her experience grew, so did her calling—Beth began working with horses labeled “difficult” or “unrideable.” Instead of giving up on them, she retrained them into safe, reliable, and willing partners. Beth has worked with countless horses of all breeds, disciplines, ages, and temperaments. She has addressed everything from severe fear-based behavior to dominant, pushy horses who have never learned to respect boundaries. Her training is not a one-size-fits-all approach—she believes that every horse is an individual and that the key to success is listening. She tailors each training plan to meet the needs of the horse, allowing the animal to guide the method, speed, and direction of the work. Beth’s philosophy combines horsemanship, equine behavior, communication, and physical education to help both horse and rider reach their highest potential. Whether she’s halter-breaking a weanling, putting the first tack on a green two-year-old, fine-tuning a seasoned show horse or learning to ride on one of her seasoned school masters, she focuses on the relationship first—because without trust, there is no partnership. Her goal is always to build a confident, balanced, and respectful relationship between horse and rider. She works with riders and horses of all experience levels and disciplines, and is especially passionate about helping people understand how a horse’s behavior and movement impact its overall performance. Beth's ability to explain the "why" behind a behavior—paired with her gentle yet effective correction strategies—makes her an invaluable resource for both beginner riders and advanced equestrians. Her calm presence, clear communication, and thoughtful instruction help her work with all types of students—from young children just starting their riding journey, to adult amateur riders, to senior horse lovers seeking a better relationship with their trail companions. She meets every horse and rider where they are, helping them build the skills and confidence needed to reach their individual goals. Whether your dream is to compete, gain confidence on the trail, start a c**t the right way, or simply have a more harmonious relationship with your horse, Beth is here to help you get there. Her training methods, educational programs, and one-on-one instruction go far beyond the saddle—they are built to transform not only how you ride, but how you understand and communicate with your horse. With persistence, patience, and a deep respect for the horse, Beth will guide you and your equine partner toward a stronger, more successful relationship—one that’s built on trust, clarity, and mutual respect.

05/30/2026

Talent is not what builds lasting rider success. Neither is the right horse or the right barn, the right show schedule, or the most expensive equipment. The riders who are still riding twenty years from now and who keep improving, who stay connected to horses through every season of their life, who look back on riding as one of the defining threads of who they are - got there through something less glamorous and more reliable than any of those things. Here is how...

1. A solid foundation built without shortcuts
Everything in riding sits on top of something else. Balance before posting trot. Posting trot before sitting trot. Sitting trot before canter. Correct flat work before jumping. A foundation that was rushed produces a rider who looks competent until the work gets hard and then everything held together by habit and the right horse falls apart. A foundation built properly produces a rider who can apply what they know to any horse in any situation because the skill lives in their body not in the specific circumstances that taught it to them. Take the time to build it right because the shortcuts always cost more than they save.

2. Consistency over intensity
Two lessons a week over two years produces a better rider than ten lessons a week for two months followed by a long break. The nervous system needs time between sessions to consolidate what it learned. Muscles need recovery to develop correctly. Feel develops through repeated exposure over time not through cramming. The riders who improve most consistently are not the ones who ride the most in any given week, they are the ones who show up regularly over a long period of time without significant gaps. Consistency is unglamorous and it is the single most reliable predictor of rider development that exists.

3. The ability to handle failure without quitting
Every rider fails... regularly... at every level. The missed lead. The refusal. The lesson that felt like three steps backward after a week of progress. The show that went nothing like it did at home. The horse that had a bad day and took the whole ride with it. The riders who last are not the ones who never fail; they are the ones who developed the ability to absorb failure, extract what it is telling them, and come back next week without carrying it like a verdict. That resilience is built gradually through a program that normalizes struggle and teaches students that a bad ride is information not a judgment.

4. A genuine relationship with the horse
Riders who treat horses as vehicles for their own progress plateau. Riders who develop genuine curiosity about the horse and who want to understand how it thinks, what it feels, why it does what it does, keep growing long after the technical instruction stops being the limiting factor. The relationship between horse and rider is where the most sophisticated riding lives. Collection, self carriage, lightness, harmony... none of these are achieved through correct aids alone. They are achieved through a rider who has learned to listen as much as they communicate. Teach your students to be curious about their horse and you teach them something that carries forward into every horse they will ever ride.

5. Mental skills developed alongside physical ones
A rider with excellent position and no mental game will fall apart under pressure every single time. The ability to manage nerves, reset after a mistake, ride with focus and intention rather than anxiety and autopilot, and trust themselves in the moments that matter are skills that need to be developed deliberately alongside the technical ones. They do not arrive automatically when the riding gets good enough. They have to be built and they have to be practiced and the instructor who understands that is the one whose students perform in the arena the way they perform at home.

6. A community worth belonging to
Riders who have people around them like other riders who understand the journey, an instructor who genuinely invests in their progress, a barn culture that celebrates effort and supports struggle, stay in the sport significantly longer than riders who are doing it alone. Connection to a community gives riding meaning beyond the skill itself. It makes the hard days worth coming back from and the good days worth sharing. Build that community in your program deliberately and you build something that retains students through every season of life that would otherwise pull them away.

7. An instructor who teaches the whole rider
Not just the position and not just the aids. The confidence and the resilience and the horsemanship and the feel and the self trust and the ability to think clearly on a horse that is not cooperating. The instructor who teaches all of these things and sees the whole rider, not just the technical development, produces the riders who are still riding at forty and fifty and sixty and who bring their own children to lessons one day because riding gave them something they have never been able to fully explain but have never wanted to be without.

Lasting rider success is not a destination. It is a direction, built one honest lesson at a time, by a student who keeps showing up and an instructor who keeps seeing them clearly.

What do you think is the single most important factor in building a rider who lasts?

🐴✨ Meet Sulli ✨🐴Sulli is a 10-year-old gelding who recently celebrated his one-year anniversary with us 💛 What a journey...
05/26/2026

🐴✨ Meet Sulli ✨🐴

Sulli is a 10-year-old gelding who recently celebrated his one-year anniversary with us 💛 What a journey it has been.

The once scared and uncertain gelding with horribly neglected feet has transformed into a thriving sport horse in our program. Over the past year, Sulli has grown into the sweetest, kindest, and bravest soul — always willing to try, learn, and trust and is always the first to come up to you in turnout!

Watching his confidence build day by day has been incredibly rewarding. From where he started to where he is now, Sulli is a true reminder of what patience, proper care, and understanding can do for a horse.

We are so proud of the horse he has become and so grateful to have him as part of our barn family 🤍🐎

🐴✨ Meet Myles ✨🐴This sweet 13h pony may have had a rough start in life, but today he is truly living life to the fullest...
05/20/2026

🐴✨ Meet Myles ✨🐴

This sweet 13h pony may have had a rough start in life, but today he is truly living life to the fullest 💛 Through patience, care, and a fresh start, Myles has blossomed into a happy, willing partner who is adjusting beautifully to his new life.

Now, he spends his days doing something incredibly special — teaching kids how to ride and helping young riders build confidence in the saddle. Watching him transform from where he once was to the pony he is today has been nothing short of amazing.

Myles is proof that with kindness, understanding, and a second chance, horses can shine brighter than ever 🐎

And let’s be honest… he definitely gets the “Cutest in the Barn” award 😍

🐴✨ Thor ✨🐴Meet Thor, our 19-year-old Thoroughbred gelding and absolute powerhouse of versatility and heart 🤍🐎Thor has do...
05/16/2026

🐴✨ Thor ✨🐴
Meet Thor, our 19-year-old Thoroughbred gelding and absolute powerhouse of versatility and heart 🤍🐎
Thor has done it all — from eventing to long stirrup, stepping into the equitation and jumper rings, and even enjoying relaxed trail rides. No matter the job, he brings the same bold attitude, willing mind, and steady focus every time he steps into the arena.
Fearless and forward-thinking, Thor is the kind of horse you can point at a fence and trust completely — he will jump anything you ask with confidence and try. Beyond his talent, he is also a reliable partner in the barn, always showing up ready to work and learn.
We are incredibly grateful for everything Thor contributes to our program — a true example of heart, bravery, and athleticism all in one horse. 💛

💙❤️
05/14/2026

💙❤️

Walk into any barn and within a few lessons you can feel the difference between an instructor who is just delivering content and one who is genuinely teaching. The horses go better and the students improve faster. The barn has an energy that is hard to name but impossible to miss. That difference does not come from a better arena or a fancier horse or a longer credential list. It comes from a set of habits and a way of thinking that the best instructors have developed often without ever being able to fully articulate what it is. Here is what separates an average instructor from a good one...

1. They teach the rider in front of them and not the rider they planned for
The best instructors walk to the arena with a plan and hold it loosely. They read the horse and rider within the first five minutes and adjust everything accordingly. The student who arrives tense and distracted after a hard week does not need the collected canter work you had planned. They need something that rebuilds their confidence and settles their nervous system first. The instructor who teaches their plan regardless of what the horse and rider are telling them is not teaching. They are just delivering content.

2. They know the difference between a skill problem and a confidence problem
A student who cannot execute a skill and a student who can execute the skill but does not trust themselves to do it require completely different responses. The first needs more progressive, technical work. The second needs space, success experiences, and an instructor who steps back instead of stepping in. Confusing these two problems and applying the wrong solution is one of the most common reasons students plateau and most instructors never stop to identify which problem they are actually dealing with.

3. They are genuinely curious about why
When something goes wrong in a lesson the average instructor corrects what they see. The best instructor asks why it happened. Why is that horse falling out through the shoulder on every right circle? Why does this rider always brace at the canter transition and not the trot? Why has this skill not stuck after six weeks of working on it? The habit of looking for the root cause rather than just addressing the symptom is what produces students who genuinely improve rather than students who temporarily fix one thing while the underlying problem keeps showing up somewhere else.

4. They make their students feel capable and not just corrected
There is an art to correction that the best instructors have developed and most never think about deliberately. It is not about being soft or avoiding hard feedback. It is about framing correction in a way that leaves the student feeling like improvement is possible and within their reach rather than feeling like they are fundamentally doing everything wrong. A student who leaves every lesson feeling capable and motivated comes back and tries harder next week. A student who leaves feeling criticized and overwhelmed quietly starts finding reasons not to rebook.

5. They never stop being students themselves
The instructors whose teaching stays sharp over a long career are the ones who never decided they already knew enough. They take lessons, audit clinics, read, and ask questions of people who know things they do not. They stay genuinely curious about horses and riding and the science of how people learn.

6. They protect their program like a professional
Clear policies. Consistent standards. Rates that reflect their actual value. Boundaries that hold regardless of who is pushing on them. The best instructors run their programs with the confidence of someone who knows what they offer is worth paying for and worth protecting. That professionalism is not separate from their teaching quality but it is part of it. Students trust an instructor who runs a tight professional program in a way they simply cannot trust one who bends every rule and apologizes for every rate.

7. They take the long view on every student
The best instructors are not optimizing for a good lesson this week. They are optimizing for a good rider in two years. That means sometimes slowing down when a student wants to go faster. It means rebuilding a foundation that was rushed the first time. It means making a decision that is right for the rider's long term development even when it is not what the rider or their parent wants to hear right now. Students who are taught by instructors who think this way become riders who last. And riders who last are the foundation of every great lesson program.

The gap between a good instructor and a great one is not usually found in the arena. It is found in how they think about teaching and about their students, about their program, and about what they are actually trying to build. The technical skills matter too but the mindset is what makes them stick.

What is the one thing that has made the biggest difference in your teaching over the years?

🐴✨ Picture Perfect – Patrick ✨🐴Meet Patrick, our 27-year-old Haflinger gelding and true beginner superstar 🤍🐎Patrick is ...
05/13/2026

🐴✨ Picture Perfect – Patrick ✨🐴

Meet Patrick, our 27-year-old Haflinger gelding and true beginner superstar 🤍🐎

Patrick is the definition of steady, kind, and dependable. With his calm nature, he has guided countless new riders through their very first experiences in the saddle, always showing up with the same quiet confidence and willingness to work.

But Patrick’s story goes far beyond the lesson ring. Over the years, he has done it all — from relaxing trail rides and festive parades to competing successfully in eventing championships several years in a row, as well as stepping down the levels to be a standout in the short stirrup ring and the most important be a lead line horse for kids of literally any age! No matter the job, he has always adapted with heart, class, and consistency.

Now in his golden years, Patrick continues to give his all as one of our most trusted school horses. He is a true testament to versatility, experience, and the incredible partnership between horse and rider. We are beyond grateful for everything he has contributed — and continues to contribute — to our program. 💛

🐴✨ Meet Our School Horses ✨🐴At the heart of our program are our incredible school horses — the true teachers of the barn...
05/12/2026

🐴✨ Meet Our School Horses ✨🐴

At the heart of our program are our incredible school horses — the true teachers of the barn. Each one has a unique personality, but all share the same important qualities: patience, reliability, and a willingness to teach riders of all levels.

These horses are carefully selected for their experience and temperament, making them ideal partners for learning everything from basic riding skills to advanced horsemanship. They help build confidence, consistency, and a true understanding of partnership between horse and rider.

We are grateful every day for the important role they play in shaping our riders and creating a safe, supportive learning environment. 🤍🐎

05/10/2026

🐴 Sulli’s canter is coming along so beautifully! ✨ 💛 Watching Sulli grow more balanced, relaxed, and confident in his canter has been incredibly rewarding. He’s beginning to really settle into himself and enjoy his work, and it shows more and more with every ride.
Big fields, happy horses, and progress you can feel — days like this are what it’s all about 🌞🐎
EquestrianLife TrustTheProcess

🐴✨ Limited Riding Lesson Availability on Our School Horses ✨🐴We currently have a small number of openings available for ...
05/07/2026

🐴✨ Limited Riding Lesson Availability on Our School Horses ✨🐴

We currently have a small number of openings available for lessons on our carefully selected school horses. These horses are experienced, well-schooled, and trusted partners in our program, offering a safe and consistent learning environment for riders of all levels.

Our school horses play an essential role in developing strong foundational skills, confidence, and correct horsemanship. Whether you are beginning your riding journey or continuing to advance your skills, they provide reliable support every step of the way.

📌 Availability is limited
📌 Suitable for all experience levels
📌 Instruction focused on safety, education, and proper horsemanship

📩 Please contact us directly to inquire about current openings or to reserve a lesson spot.

🌞🐴 Sunday well spent at the barn 🐴🌞Beautiful weather, great rides, and lots of happy horses made for the perfect day of ...
05/04/2026

🌞🐴 Sunday well spent at the barn 🐴🌞
Beautiful weather, great rides, and lots of happy horses made for the perfect day of lessons! It was one of those days that reminds us why we love what we do.
Grateful for our riders, our horses, and these moments that make it all so special ✨🐎
HorsebackRiding PerfectDay

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Cary, IL
60013

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 9pm
Tuesday 8am - 9pm
Wednesday 8am - 9pm
Thursday 8am - 9pm
Friday 8am - 9pm
Saturday 8am - 9pm
Sunday 8am - 9pm

Telephone

+18156213509

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