Swagger & Sass Stables

Swagger & Sass Stables Boots, bridles & drama
Training days & unfiltered horse girl chaos
Two girls, one vibe, zero supervision
Serving looks… and stable champagne 🥂✨

09/05/2026

Each of these horses has had their own unique journey, training, and schooling. 🐴✨

Different strengths.Different personalities.Different levels of experience. 🩷😍

But every one of them has something special that makes them unforgettable. 🤍

If you could choose one to ride… which horse would you pick and why? 👀✨





09/05/2026

POV: you own a donkey but she thinks she’s a Kardashian 💅✨

Every stable has that one employee who does nothing and causes drama. Ours is donkeydashian Sprinkles. 🫏💋👑





02/05/2026

Our sassiest member of Swagger & Sass Stables out here humbling the Thoroughbreds… 🐎

Tiny legs, unlimited scope. 💅✨

Swagger & Sass Stables doesn’t do average 😏🩷

29/04/2026

✨ This is Claude… our 18.1 hand gentle giant Shire stallion

And this… is two months of progress. ✔️🐴

What you see in the ring always looks easy…but behind the scenes, it’s a completely different story.

Early mornings. 🌅
Consistent work… over and over again.

Building strength. Building trust.
Putting in the kind of work no one sees.

It meant developing him into peak show condition…
and finding a way to make everything happen —
entries, transport, products, a groom… even a show bridle.

No perfect setup. No shortcuts.

Just commitment.

There was a goal —
to step onto a stage like Horse of the Year South Africa 🏵️

And moments like that aren’t given… they’re earned in the quiet hours.

Our yard isn’t the fanciest.
Our tack isn’t the most expensive. 💰

But this sport was never about that.

It’s about passion.
Discipline.
And showing up — especially when it’s hard.

Because sometimes…
you don’t wait for the perfect moment.

You create it.

We are so proud of Claude.

And this… is only the beginning.

✨ If you’re on your own journey — we’d love to hear your story too.

Share your journey with your horse with us 😍🐴🙏

29/04/2026

Feta minding his business getting sheered…🧶🐏

Stitch: “blink twice if you need rescuing” 😭🐐

24/04/2026

Off-the-track Thoroughbreds aren’t ‘too much’… they just need understanding 🥰🐎

This is Grace — a 3-year-old unraced filly who came to us unsure of the world…and in just 3 weeks, look at her now. 😍🐴

Soft. Willing. Trying her heart out.

Every Thoroughbred baby has a story… and Grace completely stole ours. 🥹🐴😇

Only the very best home for this special girl 🏡🙏

10/04/2026
10/04/2026

🚨 FETA UPDATE 🚨
HE ATE THE APPLICATIONS. ALL OF THEM.

🐑 Status: Still single
🍽️ Reason: He thought “speed dating” meant EATING FASTER

💘 IDEAL GIRL:
• Thicc ✔️
• Eats nonstop ✔️
• Can emotionally handle a man who disappears into the bushes for snacks ✔️

📉 WHY HE’S STILL SINGLE:
Date #1: Ate her food
Date #2: Ate HER food AND the table decoration
Date #3: Tried to eat her scarf (thought it was grass… no regrets)

🏡 WHAT HE SAYS HE OFFERS:
“Luxury grazing & emotional support”

🏡 WHAT HE ACTUALLY OFFERS:
• Vibes
• Zero self-control
• Missing snacks

💬 COMMENT “🐑” IF YOU THINK YOU CAN FIX HIM
(you can’t)

08/04/2026

Some riders plateau at 1.10m not because they lack talent—but because a few key pieces never fully come together. In showjumping, that height is often where the sport stops forgiving gaps.

Here’s what typically holds people there:

1. The basics aren’t as solid as they think
At 1.10, you can’t “get away with it” anymore. Inconsistent rhythm, weak straightness, or poor distance judgment start costing rails every round. Riders often chase bigger tracks instead of sharpening flatwork and fundamentals.

2. Riding reactively instead of proactively
Many riders at this level are still following the horse rather than riding the plan. They see a distance late, make last-second decisions, and rely on luck instead of creating the jump.

3. The wrong horse (or mismatch)
Not every horse has the scope, carefulness, or mindset to move up. And sometimes it’s not about the horse being “bad”—just not the right fit for that rider’s style or goals.

4. Comfort zone mentality
1.10 can feel safe and achievable, so riders stay there. Moving up means risking rails, time faults, and ego. A lot of people choose consistency over growth without realizing it.

5. Lack of correct coaching or feedback
Progress stalls when no one is truly pushing you or correcting the small details. The wrong voices—or too many voices—can also create confusion and inconsistency.

6. Mental ceiling
This is a big one. Riders often believe 1.10 is their limit. That belief shows up in hesitation, over-riding, or riding not to make a mistake instead of riding to succeed.

7. Inconsistent system
Training sporadically, changing methods, or not having a clear program makes it hard to build confidence and progression—for both horse and rider.

The truth?
Getting past 1.10 usually isn’t about doing something dramatic—it’s about doing the simple things exceptionally well, consistently, and under pressure.

The riders who move up:

Obsess over flatwork and rideability

Develop a clear system and stick to it

Put themselves (and their horses) in the right environments

Stay coachable and honest about their weaknesses

Get comfortable being uncomfortable

08/04/2026

All Thoroughbreds have been sold 🤎🐴

Sheep got promoted 🐏💛

Now is Feta’s time to shine ✨🤩



Address

Pecan Grove Lane
Midrand
1685

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