The Peach Orchard Equestrian Academy

The Peach Orchard Equestrian Academy A space where everyone is welcome, judgment is left at the gate, and mistakes are part of the journey.

Come as you are—this is a place to learn, grow, and feel supported every step of the way.

06/07/2026

🌞 **POEA Summer Volunteer Series Starts Tomorrow!** 🌞

We are excited to kick off our first Summer Volunteer Day tomorrow!

A few reminders before you arrive:

✅ Wear closed-toe shoes (required for safety around horses and farm equipment)
✅ Apply sunscreen before arriving
✅ Bring a water bottle to stay hydrated
✅ Bring a snack for our break time
✅ Make sure all required paperwork has been signed and returned before participation

For updates, announcements, weather notifications, and photos throughout the summer, please join our BAND group:

[Band Invite]

Catherine Glisson Hefner invited you to the **POEA Summer Volunteer Series** BAND.

Accept the invite and join the group!

https://band.us/n/a9a2b49868i55

We can't wait to see everyone tomorrow morning and are looking forward to a fun summer of learning, helping, and making great memories at the barn! 🐴☀️

06/04/2026

🌭🍔 Calling All Grill Masters & Cash-Handling Geniuses! 🍔🌭

We are looking for two volunteers to run the concession stand during our horse show on June 27th.

Duties include:
Grilling hotdogs and hamburgers
Selling said hotdogs and hamburgers
Keeping hungry horse people alive and functioning
Preventing the show grounds from becoming a scene from The Hunger Games

Qualifications:
✅ Can count cash up to at least $20 without needing a calculator and a prayer
✅ OR is technologically savvy enough to accept a Venmo payment without accidentally sending money to a stranger
✅ Knows the difference between "medium well" and "charcoal briquette"
✅ Can withstand being asked, "How much is a hotdog?" approximately 73 times

Compensation Package:
💰 Unlimited appreciation
🏆 Community hero status
🌭 First dibs on concession stand snacks
😂 Front-row seats to horse show shenanigans

If you're willing to help feed the masses and keep our riders, parents, trainers, and spectators from becoming hangry, let me know!

Remember: A horse show runs on volunteers, caffeine, and concession stand hotdogs. 🐴❤️🌭🍔

06/03/2026

A lost stirrup is rarely just about the stirrup. It is almost always a symptom of something happening further up the leg such as a gripping knee, an unstable lower leg, a foot that has crept too far into the iron, or an ankle that is bracing rather than absorbing. Losing a stirrup is a symptom. The position fault that causes it is what needs to be addressed and it is almost never just about the heel. Here is what is actually going on and how to fix it...

1. The gripping knee pushes the lower leg back and up.
This is the most common cause of a lost stirrup and the most consistently misidentified one. When a rider pinches with the knee, the knee essentially acts as a fulcrum and thus the lower leg (the calf) tends to fly backward away from the horse's side. This is the mistake that some instructions make by telling the rider "heels down" when the real instruction should be release the knee. A gripping knee cannot produce a stable lower leg regardless of how much the rider tries to push their heel down. Fix the grip and the heel position almost always improves without another word about it.

2. The lower leg has no independent stability.
A lower leg that swings with every stride has not yet developed the muscle memory and strength to stay in one place independently. The leg likely moves because the rider does not yet have the neuromuscular control to hold it still while the rest of the body moves with the horse. This takes time and specific exercises to develop and heels down as a correction does not build it. You have to train the stability directly.

3. The stirrup is on the wrong part of the foot.
Stirrups belong on the ball of the foot which is the widest part just behind the toes. A rider who has pushed the foot too far into the stirrup is a position where the foot cannot maintain a correct heel down position because the ankle joint is blocked. Check foot position before you correct anything else. Sometimes the fix is that simple.

4. The tread angle does not match the rider's natural foot position.
Some riders naturally turn their toes out slightly. Some turn them in. A stirrup iron that forces the foot into an unnatural rotation creates tension in the ankle and lower leg that contributes directly to stirrup loss. Adjusting the expected foot angle slightly can make a significant difference for riders who consistently lose stirrups despite correct lower leg work. For western, I love using stirrup turners because they keep the stirrups in the correct riding position as opposed to you fighting the fenders. I am not sure of the name for the english stirrup ones, but MDC makes them where the stirrups are on a swivel and can be changed to three different positions. I personally love to use these for myself and my students because it beats "fighting" your tack.

Here are some exercises that actually build the stability to keep the stirrups...

- No stirrup work at the walk:
Start with regular walk work without stirrups and doing exercises such as transitions, direction changes, halt to walk, all help to develop the independent leg position. A rider who can walk without stirrups in a correct stable position is developing the muscle memory that transfers directly into stirrup work at faster gaits.

- Single stirrup work:
Drop just one stirrup. This isolates each side independently and reveals asymmetries in lower leg stability that riding with both stirrups masks. The side that loses the stirrup most often is almost always the weaker or tighter side. Work it specifically rather than drilling both sides equally and hoping the weaker one catches up.

- Two point at the walk and trot:
Two point position requires the rider to balance entirely through the lower leg with weight sinking into the heel and the stirrup bearing the rider's weight directly. A rider who cannot hold two point has not yet developed the lower leg stability to keep a stirrup reliably at any faster gait. Build two point progressively through halt, walk, trot, until it is solid before expecting stirrup security at the canter.

- Transitions without stirrups:
Walk to halt, halt to walk, walk to trot and back, all done without stirrups. Every transition tests the lower leg's ability to stay in place while the body manages a change in energy. A leg that stays stable through a transition without stirrups will stay stable through the same transition with them. Use transitions specifically to develop the stability rather than just drilling gaits in straight lines.

Losing a stirrup consistently is a position problem that no amount of heels down correction will permanently solve. Find the root cause such as a gripping knee, unstable lower leg, incorrect foot position and address it directly with exercises that build the stability rather than just reminding the rider it is missing. If you fix the leg, the stirrup takes care of itself.

What is your go to exercise for building lower leg stability in your students?

🐴 Advanced Rider Opportunity 🐴The Peach Orchard Equestrian Academy has a limited number of lesson openings available for...
06/01/2026

🐴 Advanced Rider Opportunity 🐴

The Peach Orchard Equestrian Academy has a limited number of lesson openings available for experienced riders seeking quality saddle time and opportunities to further develop their skills.

These lessons are ideal for riders who are confident at the walk, trot, and canter and are looking to gain experience riding safe, well-mannered horses that are still developing their education. Riders will have the opportunity to improve their feel, timing, problem-solving abilities, and overall horsemanship while helping bring along green horses in a structured, supervised environment.

A great rider isn't measured by how well they ride the easy horse, but by how effectively they help the green horse become a good one.

This is an excellent opportunity for:
✔ Advanced lesson riders
✔ Former riders looking to get back in the saddle
✔ Riders interested in developing a softer, more educated seat
✔ Those wanting experience beyond simply riding "finished" horses

Our program emphasizes correct fundamentals, horse-first training, and creating thoughtful riders who can adapt to different horses and situations. These are not beginner lessons—these opportunities are designed for riders ready to expand their skillset, deepen their understanding of horse behavior and training, and become true horsemen and horsewomen.

📍 Gastonia, NC

For more information or to schedule an evaluation ride, send us a message. Availability is limited.

05/29/2026

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?

🚨 INTRODUCING: SUMMER BARN VOLUNTEER DAYS 🚨Also known as:“How to Remove Your Child From the Couch Ecosystem.”This summer...
05/28/2026

🚨 INTRODUCING: SUMMER BARN VOLUNTEER DAYS 🚨
Also known as:
“How to Remove Your Child From the Couch Ecosystem.”

This summer, instead of allowing your child to become one with an iPad charger, send them to the barn. 🫶🐴

At The Peach Orchard Equestrian Academy, we believe children should:
✔️ Touch grass
✔️ Learn responsibility
✔️ Develop work ethic
✔️ Experience sunlight
✔️ Realize food and water do not magically appear for animals through “auto refill settings”

Your child will spend the morning doing thrilling activities such as:
• Carrying buckets like a Victorian orphan
• Sweeping the same aisle 47 times because hay reproduces
• Grooming horses
• Cleaning tack
• Learning how farms actually function
• Asking “WHY IS IT SO HOT?” every 12 minutes

📍 9AM–12PM

📅 JUNE:
8, 10, 15, 17, 22, 24, 29

📅 JULY:
6, 8, 27, 29

⚠️ REQUIREMENTS ⚠️
• Must be potty trained
• Must be capable of existing independently for 10–15 minutes without:

* eating grain
* climbing fences
* fist fighting another volunteer
* opening random gates “to see what happens”
• Must understand that horses are not giant emotional support Labradors

A few important notes:
🚫 This is NOT free childcare
🚫 We are not responsible if your child suddenly develops:
• a work ethic
• confidence
• horse girl tendencies
• an obsession with Carhartt and iced coffee

Parents, if your child has spent the last 3 weeks saying “there’s nothing to do” while standing in a fully stocked house with WiFi, air conditioning, and 7 streaming services… this is for them. ❤️

Message us to sign your kiddo up!

05/25/2026

This Memorial Day, we honor the brave men and women who gave their lives in service to our country, whose courage and sacrifice will never be forgotten.

We also reflect on the legacy of Sergeant Reckless, the remarkable mare who served with the U.S. Marines during the Korean War. Carrying ammunition into battle and bringing wounded soldiers to safety, she became a trusted and beloved companion to those around her. In recognition of her extraordinary courage, Sgt. Reckless was promoted to Staff Sergeant and awarded two Purple Hearts, along with numerous other military honors.

Today, we remember and honor every hero🇺🇸🐴

05/21/2026

Understanding the difference between rhythm and tempo and teaching it deliberately is one of the fastest ways to improve the quality of everything your students do in the saddle.

Rhythm is the regularity of the footfall pattern within a gait. The walk has four beats. The trot has two. The canter has three. A horse in correct rhythm has an even consistent footfall pattern with no stumbling, irregularity, or loss of sequence. Rhythm is about correctness of the gait itself.

Tempo is the speed of that rhythm, how fast or slow the beats occur. Two horses can both be in correct trot rhythm but one is covering ground at a working tempo and one is crawling at a collected tempo. Tempo is adjustable. Rhythm should stay consistent regardless of what the tempo is doing.

A rider who understands only rhythm will maintain the gait but lose control of the pace. A rider who understands both can adjust the tempo - lengthen or shorten the stride, collect or extend - while keeping the rhythm completely consistent underneath those changes. That is feel and adjustability which is what separates a rider who has a gait from a rider who can influence it.

Many developing riders are focused entirely on staying in the correct gait and have no bandwidth left to feel the quality of it. They are surviving the canter rather than riding it. Trotting rather than adjusting the trot. The moment you introduce rhythm and tempo as concepts to actively manage rather than things that just happen the rider's relationship to the gait changes completely. here is how to teach it...

1. Counting out loud
The simplest and most effective tool you have. Ask your student to count the beats of the trot out loud (one two one two) while they ride. Then ask them to slow the count down without breaking to walk. Then speed it up without running. The voice gives the rhythm a physical expression outside the body and helps the rider feel when the tempo is changing before the gait falls apart. It also forces them to breathe which softens everything else automatically.

2. Clapping or music
Set a rhythm from the ground by clapping or use music with a clear consistent beat and ask your student to match their posting rhythm to it. This is particularly effective for riders who struggle to feel when the tempo is rushing or dragging because it gives them an external reference point to match rather than an internal one to generate. Once they can match an external tempo consistently start taking it away and asking them to maintain it independently.

3. Poles for rhythm
A grid of evenly spaced trot poles is one of the most honest rhythm tests you have. A horse and rider in consistent rhythm will flow through the grid. A horse or rider who is rushing, dragging, or irregular will tell you immediately by how they ride over the poles. Use a simple four to six pole grid at working trot and watch what it reveals. Then ask your student what they felt and where it broke down.

4. Transitions within the gait for tempo
Ask for four strides of lengthening followed by four strides of shortening, back and forth across the diagonal or down the long side. This is where tempo control becomes a real skill rather than a concept. The rider has to actively push the tempo forward and then actively compress it back while keeping the rhythm consistent underneath. When the rhythm breaks during a tempo change the foundation is not yet solid enough and you know exactly what to work on next.

5. Use a metronome
For instructors who want to get precise about it a simple metronome app on your phone set to the appropriate beats per minute for each gait gives you an objective standard to teach from. Working trot sits around 68 to 76 beats per minute depending on the horse. Walk around 48 to 55. Canter around 96 to 100. You do not need to be exact but having a reference point helps both you and your student understand what consistent tempo actually sounds like.

6. Scale it to your riders
Beginners start with counting out loud at the walk and trot, just establishing awareness of the beat and what changes it. Intermediate riders work on maintaining a consistent posting rhythm through corners, transitions, and direction changes without the tempo rushing or dragging. Advanced riders work tempo adjustments within the gait by lengthening and shortening on a specific stride count while keeping the rhythm absolutely consistent.

Rhythm and tempo are not advanced concepts reserved for dressage riders and competition horses. They are foundational to every discipline at every level. A western pleasure horse needs consistent tempo. A trail horse needs reliable rhythm. A lesson horse that rushes at one end of the arena and drags at the other is telling you the tempo has not been established and that the rider may not yet have the tools to set it..

How do you teach rhythm and tempo in your lessons?

Address

Union Road
Charlotte, NC
28056

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 8am - 5pm
Saturday 8am - 12pm

Telephone

+17049643944

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when The Peach Orchard Equestrian Academy 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 The Peach Orchard Equestrian Academy:

Share