Hoofprint Farm

Hoofprint Farm A positive, interactive, pressure-free environment that encourages you to learn at your own rate. Our programs are personalized to help you meet your goals.

Our atmosphere is warm and friendly! You will love to learn to ride with us! Our atmosphere is warm and friendly, between staff, students and their friends and family. We teach all levels and all ages. No one is too old to ride and we start as young as age 4. We are not a large facility with high cost instruction fees nor are we snobby, fancy stable. We are an affordable, established facility, fol

lowing all the mandatory guidelines of a recognized institute to make your riding experience safe and affordable. We offer quality education with only certified and recognized instructors, fully insured and give you the sound fundamentals, hands on, riding instruction without the high prices.

Love this!
04/30/2026

Love this!

Spots are filling up fast!!
04/20/2026

Spots are filling up fast!!

❤️
02/15/2026

❤️

One of the aspects of operating a riding school for a long time is losing cherished school horses, although I own & love...
01/20/2026

One of the aspects of operating a riding school for a long time is losing cherished school horses, although I own & love these special horses….my team! Every student who rode them, who learned how to canter for the 1st time, jump the 1st time, their 1st show, 1st ribbon etc., etc. loved and lost a cherished friend too.
With deep sadness last week we said goodbye to AJ 😥
If you know our farm you know AJ who has been part of the Hoofprint team for 20 years having come to the farm originally as a boarder at age 7. 💕 Retired for the last 2 years he tragicallyy suffered a catastrophic injury in his stall that could not be fixed. Thank you to all the students who learned on and loved our special boy.
We will miss you dearly big guy.

01/18/2026

If you pull on the inside rein, you'll do nothing more than turn your horse's head.

For correct bend, you need to use ALL your aids.

✅ INSIDE LEG at the girth.
This leg asks your horse to bend through his body, stimulating his intercostal muscles and encouraging him to shorten on the inside of his body and stretch on the outside of his body. Your inside leg also creates forward impulsion, encouraging your horse’s inside hind leg to step further underneath his center of gravity.

✅ OUTSIDE LEG behind the girth.
This leg guards your horse’s hindquarters. It prevents them from drifting outwards and keeps them on the curved line that you are following. By coming behind the girth, it also allows your horse’s ribs to expand on the outside, thereby working alongside your inside leg.

✅ INSIDE REIN asks for a small amount of inside lateral flexion.
This rein indicates the direction of bend and helps you to position your horse’s neck on the curved line. Your inside rein should not be used to turn your horse! This will result in too much neck bend and your horse falling out through his outside shoulder.

✅ OUTSIDE REIN controls the outside shoulder.
This rein helps to prevent too much neck bend, thereby helping you to control your horse’s outside shoulder, preventing him from falling out. Your outside rein is also used to control your horse’s tempo (speed of the rhythm) and give balancing half-halts.

✅ HEAD looking in the direction you want to go.
Your head should be up and looking ahead and around the circle, turn, or corner you are negotiating.

✅ WEIGHT in your inside seat bone.
You should have a little bit more weight in your inside seat bone and inside stirrup while remaining sat up straight; do not lean inwards. This small weight shift frees the outside of your horse’s body, allowing it to expand, and encourages your horse’s inside hind leg to step under your weight.

✅ SHOULDERS matching the angle of your horse’s shoulders
Your shoulders should be turned from your waist to the inside to match the angle of your horse’s shoulders.

✅ HIPS matching the angle of your horse’s hips
This should happen automatically as you position your legs correctly, as per above.

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Photo is a stock image.

12/30/2025

✨ The Mindset Shift That Could Save Lesson Barns ✨

I’ve seen a flood of posts lately about the quiet crisis in the lesson-barn world.

Barns are closing.
Owners are losing money on lesson programs.
The economy is tight, and horses are starting to feel accessible only to those with very deep pockets.

These concerns are real. They’re valid. And for many barn owners, they’re the reason lesson programs are being shut down entirely.

I like to think I’m an optimist and while I certainly have my moments of questioning whether the costs meet the means, I believe lesson barns can survive.
Not by working harder. Not by sacrificing more. Not even by raising prices.
But by changing HOW we define what people are actually paying for when they “pay for a lesson.”

The traditional lesson model looks something like this:
You pay $XX to ride for XX minutes per week.
If you miss your lesson, you don’t pay - or you get a make-up at a time that’s convenient for you.

It feels easy. It feels flexible.
And it is exactly why lesson barns are disappearing.

Because when you pay for a lesson, you are not paying for 45 or 60 minutes of an instructor’s time.

You are paying for:
• A school horse who is fed every day
• Clean water and safe housing
• A facility to ride at
• Professional daily care staff
• Farrier work
• Veterinary care and injections
• Tack, grooming supplies, fly spray
• Arena footing and maintenance
• Insurance
• Utilities
• Facility upkeep

And the list goes on.

When you don’t show up, none of those expenses stop.
Buddy the school horse still eats.
Still needs shoes.
Still needs vet care.

So who pays when a rider doesn’t?

The barn owner does - usually with a budget consisting of a few dollars, some baling twine, and hay soaked in quiet desperation.

Eventually, the math breaks. And no one can justify owning horses for other people to ride at a loss.

Lesson Horses Are a Fixed Cost

Lesson barns must start charging based on the true fixed cost of maintaining a horse for public use, not on attendance.

If you sign up for a gym and don’t go - you still pay.
The gym still provides the building, the equipment, the staff, the utilities.

Lesson barns are no different.

In fact, they provide a premium service:
• Carefully selected, trained horses
• Safe, maintained facilities
• Quality tack and equipment
• Professional instruction
• Access to horses without the full financial burden of ownership

When you don’t show up or you go on vacation the horse doesn’t stop costing money.

Lesson programs remove the weight of ownership from the rider.
That weight doesn’t disappear.
It lands squarely on the barn owner.

And if a horse must work extra to accommodate make-up lessons, the system is already broken. School horses deserve rest. Two days off per week should be non-negotiable.

If I Could Rewrite the Rules to Save Lesson Barns, Here’s What I’d Do:
🐴 Charge monthly tuition, based on lessons *available* per week
🐴 Tuition is due regardless of attendance
🐴 No make-up lessons and horses receive two days off weekly
🐴 Offer horsemanship, horse education, or groundwork classes as a suitable way to "makeup" lost horse time, which is a way to still offer education without doubling down on the horse's work schedule
🐴 30 days’ notice required to discontinue lessons
🐴 Price programs based on the true monthly cost of each horse, divided by how often that horse can responsibly work (this will vary regionally)

This isn’t about price gouging.
This isn’t about being unreasonable.
This isn’t about making horses inaccessible.
This is about the reality that if you are riding a lesson horse, it is not unreasonable to have SOME commitment to making sure the horse is cared for appropriately.

In many cases, it doesn’t even mean raising prices unless the program is already undercharging.

Yes, it is true that horses cost money.
But if we clearly communicate what riders are truly paying for and structure programs accordingly, lesson barns don’t have to disappear.

They might actually have a fighting chance.

Edit: no, this model does not mean charging students $1,500 a month to ride once a week. It can be done as low as $250-$350 a month in most regions, which is a very reasonable and affordable price to access horses.

It came without ribbons.It came without bows.No matching sets.No plaits in neat rows.It came in the darkwhen the yard li...
12/25/2025

It came without ribbons.
It came without bows.
No matching sets.
No plaits in neat rows.

It came in the dark
when the yard lights hum,
With frozen taps stubborn
and fingers gone numb.

The mud had spread wide
like it owned the place.
The wheelbarrow sulked.
The wind hit your face.

No sparkle. No tinsel.
No festive display.
Just carrots in pockets
and nets full of hay.

He didn’t want presents
or glitter or cheer.
Just dinner on time
and his people still here.

And standing there quietly,
warm breath in the air,
You felt it arrive
without fanfare or flair

Because Christmas, it turns out,
on yards just like these,
Is routine and presence
and moments of ease.

It isn’t the ribbons.
It isn’t the flair.
It’s carrots and kindness
And hay in your hair.

Merry Christmas to all my barn friends who are out feeding, mucking & watering this Christmas morning.

Thanks to all who came out for our Horse Head Wreath workshop. It was great time and everyone’s horses looked amazing 🐴🌲
11/24/2025

Thanks to all who came out for our Horse Head Wreath workshop. It was great time and everyone’s horses looked amazing 🐴🌲

Late afternoon visitor at the farm today 🦊
11/09/2025

Late afternoon visitor at the farm today 🦊

Address

4950 Rice Lake Drive N.
Port Hope, ON

Telephone

+17053408816

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