05/29/2026
đ I did not write this, but felt compelled to share it. Wellspring is a HUGE operation and with that comes responsibility. Every person present is responsible to observe, care and communicate with the horses and each other!
⨠Full board is not full service â¨
âFull boardâ doesnât mean your horse isnât cared about. It also doesnât mean your horse is the only one being cared for.
Most boarding barns are built on long days, consistency, and people who genuinely love horses. Every day starts early with feeding, hay, water, turnout, stalls, cleaning, and then repeats all over again at night. In between are vet visits, farriers, fence repairs, weather issues, maintenance, emergencies, and the hundreds of little things that keep a barn running safely.
And through all of that, we are watching your horse.
We notice when they donât finish grain, when they seem quiet, when a shoe looks off, when they come in with a scrape, when theyâre stocking up, or when they just donât seem quite themselves. We care deeply about their wellbeing. But in a boarding barn, there are many horses depending on us every single day â not just one.
Sometimes boarders forget that while their horse feels like the center of their world (as it should), barn staff are balancing the needs of every horse on the property. That means time and attention have to be divided fairly and responsibly.
We try our best every single day to give excellent care while juggling schedules, weather, emergencies, and the unpredictability that comes with working with live animals. Horses donât clock out on holidays, weekends, or snowstorms, and neither do barn owners.
What helps the most is partnership.
Owners who stay involved, communicate kindly, check over their own horses regularly, lend a hand when they can, and understand that we are human too â those relationships make barns stronger. A good boarding barn works best when it feels like a team effort, not a customer service transaction.
At the end of the day, most barn owners and staff do this because they truly care. We celebrate your horseâs wins, worry over their injuries, and lose sleep over their wellbeing too. We are trying. We care. And we appreciate the owners who see that.