Solid Strides

Solid Strides Solid Strides is a horse-welfare based research and education non-profit. Board members; Katie Ebbage, Alison Weston, and Jodi Youngblood and Emily Reiman.

Solid Strides provides horse-welfare based education and intentionally invites participants from historically excluded populations, including BIPOC, LGBTQIA+ and people with financial barriers to entry. We seek to reduce barriers to entry for horse sports, and provide best in the industry holistic education to our students. Contributions made toward Solid Strides are tax deductible under IRC secti

on 170. Solid Strides also receives tax deductible bequests, devises, transfers, and gifts under section 2055, 2106, or 2522.

🐴🧠 Wisdom Wednesday | Equitation Science Principle  #2: Regard for the Nature of the HorseThe 2nd Equitation Science pri...
06/03/2026

🐴🧠 Wisdom Wednesday | Equitation Science Principle #2: Regard for the Nature of the Horse

The 2nd Equitation Science principle encourages us to view horses through a horse-centred lens. Rather than asking horses to adapt to our human-centered world alone, it asks us to consider how our management, training, and interactions align with horses’ innate needs and behavioural expressions.

It emphasizes that as humans we must first understand what makes a horse a horse, or what is the horse’s telos (Rollin 2012; the horseness of a horse). Horses are social animals designed to search for forage and move for most of the day. These behaviours are key to their survival, and the inability to perform them may be worse from the animals perspective than for instance compared to experiencing physical pain.

In training, many of the behaviours we observe in horses are not signs of disobedience or defiance, but rather natural responses shaped by their biology, social needs, and lived experiences

This principle reminds us to:

➡️ ensure horses’ innate needs are met, including opportunities for daily foraging, social contact with other horses, and freedom of movement

➡️ use training methods that promote horse learning and autonomy

➡️ use training techniques with align with hoses ability to learn (i.e., learning theory)

➡️ recognize that changes in behaviour may be indicators of pain, distress or confusion

➡️ respect the social nature of horses, including the importance of companionship, social touch, and the effects of separation

When horses’ behavioural and physical needs are met, they are better equipped to cope with their environment, learn effectively, and engage positively with humans. By respecting the nature of the horse, we can build relationships that are both safer and ethical.

Sincerely,

Dr. Megan Ross

The fun just keeps rolling at Solid Strides 🦄COMMUNITY STRIDES!Sometimes healing begins with something simple:
a breath ...
06/03/2026

The fun just keeps rolling at Solid Strides 🦄
COMMUNITY STRIDES!
Sometimes healing begins with something simple:
a breath of fresh air,
a shared conversation,
a quiet moment on the trail.
Join us on the first Saturday of each month as we gather for a community meditation walk rooted in connection, movement, and well being. There is no destination to reach and no pace to maintain, just an opportunity to step away from the busyness of life and reconnect with yourself, nature, and community.
📅 First Saturday of Every Month
🕤 9:30 AM – 10:30 AM
33826 Orchard Ave, Creswell, OR 97426
✨ First Walk: Saturday, June 6!

🌈 🦄 Moments with the herd🦄 🌈This week, the pasture was painted with a double rainbow after the storm.The horses stood qu...
05/29/2026

🌈 🦄 Moments with the herd🦄 🌈

This week, the pasture was painted with a double rainbow after the storm.

The horses stood quietly beneath it, unconcerned with what had passed and unconcerned with what might come next. Just here. There is something profound about that kind of presence.

This week’s reflection:
Can you find one moment today to simply notice what is beautiful?

Not because everything is perfect.
Not because the storm never happened.

But because beauty and difficulty often share the same sky.

The herd reminds us that both can belong. 🤎

You may have noticed   was on a hiatus last week. This is because I’ve been busy collecting data for a horse behaviour s...
05/27/2026

You may have noticed was on a hiatus last week. This is because I’ve been busy collecting data for a horse behaviour study in collaboration with and

I wanted to take this week to discuss how impactful it has been to watch horses interact with each other over the last 3 weeks. While I initially was worried this would get “boring” 😬, and albeit by 3 pm each day I was ready to be done, it has deepened my understanding of horses cognitive and social capacities. Their unique individual personalities, subtle communication, responses to environmental changes and its influence on their social interactions and the potential for horses to form deep bonds with each other. and will continue collecting data until July - go team!

To top off this outstanding experience, myself and fellow researchers took a drive through the indigenous reserves of the Okanagan in search of the wild horses that roam the land (“wildies”).

We were lucky enough to come across two different harems (reproductive bands). Having never seen wild horses in real life, it was a surreal experience to be in the presence of horses unencumbered by the barns and fields they are typically confined to in our human-centered worlds.

Check out a brilliant documentary (Okanagan Wild) created by an MSc student exploring Indigenous ways of coexisting with the wild horses of the Okanagan. These perspectives are deeply important, grounded in generations of knowledge through immersion and connection with the land and an understanding of the relationships between humans, non-human animals, and the ecosystems that sustain us. Indigenous knowledge have been historically ignored and harmed through colonialism, yet as westernized research continues to evolve, there is growing recognition of how damaging it has been to dismiss these ways of knowing. Increasingly, Indigenous perspectives are being placed at the forefront of animal welfare and sustainability research, acknowledging the immense value of traditional ecological knowledge in shaping more ethical and sustainable relationships with the natural world

‘Til next week,

Dr. Megan Ross

Join us for our FIRST Cosmic Yoga (and cupcakes!) 9:30-11am. Bring a mat and your good vibes! Free to attend, donations ...
05/22/2026

Join us for our FIRST Cosmic Yoga (and cupcakes!) 9:30-11am. Bring a mat and your good vibes! Free to attend, donations support Solid Strides! Thanks to .sweet.treats for the yummy cupcakes!

Good afternoon everyone, and happy Monday! We are less than a month away from our Summer Horse Camps!!! Unfortunately, o...
05/18/2026

Good afternoon everyone, and happy Monday!

We are less than a month away from our Summer Horse Camps!!! Unfortunately, our usual funding for Camps is not available this year and we are looking to our incredible community to sponsor our Summer Camps. Please donate today and help send a student to Camp!!! Link in IG bio and below! Please also consider sharing this post with your friends! Thank you in advance for your support in making this possible! We appreciate you!

Camp Sponsorship link: https://www.zeffy.com/en-US/donation-form/changing-lives-through-horse-camp-sponsorships

Contact us today! Visit our website www.solidstrides.org, call us at 541-729-5767 or email us at [email protected].

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Pleasant Hill, OR
97455

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