Tanyderi Farm

Tanyderi Farm Welcome to Tanyderi Farm! We are a small, family-run farm in beautiful Franklin, TN

All the boys soaking up the warm weather and enjoying their hay 🌤️Happy Holidays ❤️
12/23/2025

All the boys soaking up the warm weather and enjoying their hay 🌤️

Happy Holidays ❤️

12/18/2025

The benefits of having fit horses are almost too numerous to mention. Fit horses will have fewer injuries, longer careers, more rapid recovery time, and be better able to cope with all the demands of travel and horse show life. Whether your goals are maintaining fitness, increasing fitness, or enacting a rehabilitation program, many riders overlook probably the most underutilized fitness technique: the mindful walk.

A proper walk, one with forward momentum that positively pushes off all four limbs, has so many benefits. When beginning a ride, this walk will get your horse’s blood flowing and limbs loosened, diminishing risk of injury and strain in the workout to follow. While at the walk, you can establish boundaries and keep your horse focused and listening and set the tone for the full ride. By changing your outlook on the walk and using it as a tool to your advantage, you can develop a more productive ride and improve your horse’s performance. You can include exercises like ground poles to improve topline and allow your horse to think through exercises for themselves.

If you’re looking to increase your horse’s fitness or rehabilitate from an injury, incorporating a second walk into your horse’s program to focus on strength and mobility is more beneficial than you might think. Especially if a horse is stalled during their horse show or rehab regimen, a second ride at a proper walk can have on not only your horse’s physical strength, but their mental well-being as well. By having a second ride only at the walk or focused at the walk, you’re not stressing or straining the recovery or fitness process- you’re providing more natural motion to increase muscle strength while minimizing impact and risk of injury.

Start at a working walk, putting your horse in the bridle, and complete all the movements your horse knows how to do. Practice walking forward, extending and shortening the walk, working at a medium walk, performing a haunches in, leg yield, half pass, haunches out.

Bending their necks aids in loosening their muscles—ask your horse to come around as far as they can on both the left and right side until they soften. Once they complete at the halt, begin working on this exercise at the walk. This will help them learn to listen, and can also help to identify pain responses.

Backing up can illuminate any weakness or lameness issues—if your horse cannot back up in a straight line, that is an indication of something to work on. When horses walk, they rotate their pelvis underneath them, so that when they walk off correctly they can get their weight off of their front end.

Things to note when completing walking fitness: keeping your horse six feet off the rail and riding straight, rotating the footing you work on: working in the arena, in the grass, and on pavement. Performing the working walk on concussive and various surfaces (including but not limited to rings, grass, pathways, and driveways) can help to build muscles around all injury-prone areas in your horse’s legs.

If you can’t include a second ride, give yourself as much time as you can to walk at the start of each ride and warm-up carefully and mindfully listening to your horse.

📎 Save & share this article by Abby Funk at https://www.theplaidhorse.com/2022/09/13/mindful-riding-walking-fitness/

Teddy has really grown up this past year, with plenty more still ahead of him. He’s such an exciting young horse, and it...
11/21/2025

Teddy has really grown up this past year, with plenty more still ahead of him. He’s such an exciting young horse, and it’s been a joy to showcase his development through the US Event Horse Futurity program. Grateful for the opportunity to bring our homebreds along and share their progress💚

Last video update on Teddy for the 2025 four-year-old US Event Horse Futurity

11/18/2025

Tanyderi Liam schooling at home 🍂 This now 6 year old is by Foothills Field Marshall o/o Alley Khan (ISH) bred by Donna Power and produced beautifully by Sally

Coco’s older brother, Teddy, looking great at four years old! Excited for his future 💫2021 gelding by Raven Sky (TB) o/o...
11/16/2025

Coco’s older brother, Teddy, looking great at four years old! Excited for his future 💫

2021 gelding by Raven Sky (TB) o/o Twobits

Fall days, training baby horses, and Forestier saddles đź’šPolly Forestier Sellier(Pictured is Tanyderi Pacifico, 2022 geld...
11/16/2025

Fall days, training baby horses, and Forestier saddles đź’š

Polly Forestier Sellier

(Pictured is Tanyderi Pacifico, 2022 gelding by Spy Coast Farm Pacific des Essarts o/o the halfbred Connemara mare, Denver’s Twobits)

Now in Area 8!
11/12/2025

Now in Area 8!

Area VIII Welcomes Tennessee Starting in 2026

The boys at River Glen Equestrian Park 👯‍♂️
11/09/2025

The boys at River Glen Equestrian Park 👯‍♂️

10/30/2025

"I have begun to truly wonder if I can continue what I’m doing. Should I get a second job? Should I drop the price of my nice horses and get out now? Are my clients going to be able to go to any shows? If they go, will they be able to compete?

It’s exhausting.

The biggest problem is that, in the end, no one actually cares to listen to the majority of members. The majority of members of USEF, like the majority of people in this country, are not wealthy. They don’t horse show all the time. They can’t compete for points because points actually don’t matter to someone who only goes to four shows a year. They, most likely, don’t get to ride much either because they have regular jobs.

Listen, I’m all for horses’ well-being and safety. I don’t want horses injured because people drug them or work them to exhaustion. I think we can all agree that more clever ways of drugging these horses are happening now. I hate to tell you, but it’s not coming from the majority of members. It’s coming from the trainers with the people who have the most money and are chasing those points. The majority of members recognize that they aren’t competitive compared to those horses and just want to enjoy what they’re doing. Maybe they pick up a ribbon in good company on their best days, and that’s something to be really proud of.

Why is this happening?

It’s almost always the hunters. I think we can all agree on that, but why the hunters? Well, when we’re awarding the most drone-like horse, with no expression, who jumps a ten every time, never breaks rhythm, and doesn’t look at anything. That winning horse jumps eight fences for three different classes in two divisions at the very least, not to mention schooling, warm up, lunging, riding in the morning, and god knows what else. And with that level of work, there are going to be issues. Horses need to be fitter to do this without being injured, and fit means fresher, which means more work to prepare.

What’s the solution?

I would love it if everyone could ride better so we didn’t have to exhaust these horses to make them quiet enough for their owners to show competitively. However, that feels unlikely with the current look of competition. So what do we do?

Maybe we can make it so we don’t award horses that are going with zero expression. Maybe we award horses that have some life to them. Or, maybe we change the format. Maybe we can bring back more unrelated distances. Maybe if we did that, people would have to ride better and horses couldn’t be drones.

Maybe we can bring back courses that feel more like the original, outside hunter courses. Oh, but people would complain that it was unsafe! Yes, maybe they would. Maybe they would argue that their people couldn’t show if that was the format. Well, I hate to tell you, but with the expenses being raised on everything, people are already dropping like flies. Membership is going to go down. It probably already has, which is possibly why they’ve decided to raise prices.

What about the other problems we have to fix? Simply put, the cost of literally everything is an issue.

I don’t know which of you has gone to a rated show and a local show recently, but I have. At a recent out-of-state rated show I attended, I was only able to show in one class, and the show bill was over $600. That was without a nomination fee and without including hay or shavings, which were billed separately. The single class I did cost $60, but the total cost was over $600 for one class at this show. That is insane.

To compare, I went to a local show this past weekend with a client. She competed in one 2’ division with a warmup. So three over fences classes and a hack class. Her bill for that local show was $160.

This sport is becoming completely untenable for 80% of the people who are members. I know we’re all sick of the endless rules, the moving goal post for drugs, and the 1200-page rule book we’re all supposed to keep updated with. But in my opinion, the real issue is that, eventually, no one is going to be able to afford to do this anymore."

📎 Continue reading this article by Ann De Michele at https://www.theplaidhorse.com/2025/10/29/frustrating-doesnt-even-begin-to-cover-it-the-reality-of-showing-today/
📸 © The Plaid Horse / Lauren Mauldin

We love Stamm30!
10/30/2025

We love Stamm30!

Hallway Feeds' line of ration balancers are designed to make sure all of your horse's vitamin, mineral, and protein needs are met every day.
https://loom.ly/L9dvvzc

07/31/2025

Brought to you by Pony Club Week at Three Mares! From July 28–Aug 2 ,10% of all sales at Dreamers & Schemers Socks, The TackHack, and ManeJane Spur Straps go to National Youth Congress Academy of Achievement. I just feel very lucky. I was lucky I grew up without cell phones. I was lucky to […]

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Franklin, TN
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