Serenity Stables

Serenity Stables Serenity Stables is a family owned and operated full service equine retirement and boarding facility.

Here’s to all of our men, women, canine AND equine who served and gave the ultimate sacrifice. 💜 Have a wonderful day Me...
05/25/2026

Here’s to all of our men, women, canine AND equine who served and gave the ultimate sacrifice. 💜 Have a wonderful day Memorial Day of remembrance.

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🇺🇸🐴

What an awesome horse. Happy Heavenly Mother’s Day Somethingroyal (Secretariat’s mom) ♥️🐴🐎
05/10/2026

What an awesome horse. Happy Heavenly Mother’s Day Somethingroyal (Secretariat’s mom) ♥️🐴🐎

She was never the fastest horse in the field. No garlands draped her neck. No grandstand ever shook for her. But Somethingroyal didn't need the spotlight — because she was quietly building something the world had never seen before.

And you'll never look at greatness the same way again once you understand what she actually gave us.

She carried royal blood — daughter of the legendary Princequillo, a mare steeped in champion lineage. But here's what history doesn't say loudly enough: her destiny wasn't to *be* the legend. It was to *birth* one.

Can you even imagine the quiet weight of that?

In 1970, under the still Virginia sky at Meadow Farm, Somethingroyal delivered her thirteenth foal. A big chestnut c**t. Legs like stilts. A blazing stripe down his face. And something in his eyes that made you pause — something wild and certain at the same time.

He was awkward. Too big. Too bold. Too much of everything.

But she stood over him gently — patient, knowing — like a mother who already understood what the rest of the world would take years to see.

They named him Secretariat.

From the quiet paddocks of Meadow Farm to the thunderous roar of Belmont Park — she watched every stride. From a wobbly foal nipping at her tail to a stallion rewriting the record books. She watched him become the athlete that stopped time. And she passed something to him in every stride he ever took — her power, her grace, her unshakeable pride.

She didn't need a trophy. She had *him*.

He shattered records. He crushed Triple Crown history. He didn't just run — he *flew*, in a way no horse before or since has ever matched. And behind every moment of that glory stood a mare the cameras never followed.

Somethingroyal lived to see him crowned.

She lived to see the entire world fall in love with her son.

In her later years, she remained the quiet empress of Meadow Farm — the matriarch no one put on a poster, the mother no one quite celebrated enough. When she passed in 1988 at the age of 31, she left behind more than a legacy of foals.

She left behind *proof* that sometimes the greatest thing you can do in this life is pour everything you are into someone else's greatness.

Not every legend wears the crown. Some of them *make* it.

Who in your life deserves to be seen the way Somethingroyal deserved to be seen? Share this and let someone know they matter.

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As another beautiful sun sets here, the horses are happy that the rain has passed and they are able to enjoy their pastu...
04/26/2026

As another beautiful sun sets here, the horses are happy that the rain has passed and they are able to enjoy their pastures more.

Good morning and happy Friday from the crew at Serenity Stables!
04/24/2026

Good morning and happy Friday from the crew at Serenity Stables!

New guy Suede looking quite handsome this morning.  We welcome him as well as his mates Georgia and Dancer the mini man!...
04/24/2026

New guy Suede looking quite handsome this morning. We welcome him as well as his mates Georgia and Dancer the mini man! Thank you Daisy and Mitch for entrusting us with their care!!

Happy Easter from the herd at Serenity Stables!
04/05/2026

Happy Easter from the herd at Serenity Stables!

Something to consider.
03/08/2026

Something to consider.

When a horse moves to a new home, people often ask, “How long does it take for them to settle in?”

The honest answer is that there is no single timeline. It depends on the individual horse, their past experiences, their temperament, their health, the environment they have arrived in, and the herd and humans around them.

But one thing is certain.
It is a significant transition for them.

In most cases, the process actually begins before they even arrive. Transport itself is demanding for a horse. Hours of balancing in a moving vehicle, unfamiliar noises, confinement, changes in temperature, and often limited access to water or forage all place strain on the body and nervous system. By the time a horse steps off the trailer, they may already be physically tired and mentally alert.

And then they arrive somewhere completely new.

The landscape is unfamiliar. The smells are different. The sounds are new. They do not yet know where the water is, where the safe resting places are, or where the boundaries of the land lie.

For horses, this is not simply about becoming comfortable. Their nervous system is constantly assessing safety and threat. Every sound, movement, smell, and interaction is information. They are mapping the land, noticing resources, observing the behaviour of other horses, and working out how this new environment functions.

At the same time, they are navigating the social world they have just entered.

For a horse joining an established herd, this can be one of the most challenging parts of the transition. Herds have existing relationships and patterns of interaction. When a newcomer arrives, those patterns shift as horses begin negotiating their relationships with one another and working out how to share space, resources, and proximity.

This can involve tension, posturing, chasing, and sometimes aggression, which is why introductions often need to be managed carefully and gradually. It protects the newcomer, but it also protects the existing herd members whose own sense of stability is being disrupted by the arrival of someone new.

While all of this is happening socially and emotionally, the body is also adjusting physically.

A new home often means different forage, different pasture composition, different hay, and sometimes different water. Those changes alone can influence the digestive system. Stress can also reduce appetite and slow gut motility, which is why the first days and weeks after a move are a time when owners need to observe their horses closely.

Simple things tell you a great deal.

Are they eating normally?
Are they drinking well?
Are they passing manure regularly?
Are gut sounds normal?

These small observations can give early clues about how well a horse is coping with the transition.

Many people use the rough guideline of three days to decompress, three weeks to begin understanding the routine, and three months to truly feel at home. It is a helpful framework, but it is not a rule. Some horses settle quickly. Others need more time to fully relax into a new place.

What helps the most during this period is patience.

On arrival, horses often benefit from simply being allowed to observe. Time to stand quietly, look around, take in the environment, and see other horses without immediately being asked to do anything. Hay, water, and calm surroundings go a long way toward helping the nervous system begin to settle.

What many horses do not need at that moment is pressure.

Starting training immediately, over-handling them, forcing social contact, or assuming that a quiet horse has already settled can create more stress rather than less. Stillness does not always mean relaxation. Sometimes it simply means the horse is overwhelmed and trying to process everything at once.

Settling into a new home is not just about the horse physically being in a new place. Their entire system is reorganising itself. They are learning the land, the herd, the routines, and the humans who will now be part of their world.

Understanding that process, and meeting it with patience and compassion, is one of the most important things we can offer a horse when they arrive somewhere new.

Good morning from the neighbors and this fuzzy headed guy/gal (?).  Funny kids.
03/08/2026

Good morning from the neighbors and this fuzzy headed guy/gal (?). Funny kids.

Morning traffic report from Serenity Stables:Currently there is a roadblock  🦃 at the bridge.  It’s not expected to be u...
03/01/2026

Morning traffic report from Serenity Stables:
Currently there is a roadblock 🦃 at the bridge. It’s not expected to be up very long but please use caution if you’re traveling through the area 😉

Address

21000 East Acampo Road
Clements, CA
95227

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