Mary Chick Horsemanship

Mary Chick Horsemanship Mary Chick has a BSc in Psychology and is a holder of the MRPCH. Riding both Western and English she trains using gentle methods.

Mary Chick obtained her BSc in Psychology at Royal Holloway University of London before going on to study with Intelligent Horsemanship to attain the MRPCH. Working from groundwork to ridden, she uses an understanding of horse and human psychology to work quietly and patiently with both horse and owner. Mary believes in using techniques from a range of disciplines and strongly believes science and

practical technique go hand in hand to create good horsemanship. She has a particular focus on teaching both horse and rider to work with softness and co-operation. She runs clinics in the South East covering a range of horsemanship techniques. Follow this page to keep up to date with what’s coming up!

For some reason it won’t let me share the marketplace ad here but selling my inky dinky synthetic saddle if anyone is in...
30/05/2026

For some reason it won’t let me share the marketplace ad here but selling my inky dinky synthetic saddle if anyone is interested. £250 ono. Please pm me ☺️

Sunday afternoon vibes at the yard 🫶
10/05/2026

Sunday afternoon vibes at the yard 🫶

I hope he never loses his joy for being in the saddle 🫶
03/05/2026

I hope he never loses his joy for being in the saddle 🫶

🥰🥰🥰
03/05/2026

🥰🥰🥰

Sneaky ride on the little one today 😍
16/04/2026

Sneaky ride on the little one today 😍

Cant believe it took us this long but Leo finally had his first ever ride today!! 🫶 And of course when he was done Max n...
11/01/2026

Cant believe it took us this long but Leo finally had his first ever ride today!! 🫶 And of course when he was done Max needed a go so poor little Rocky has his work cut out now 🤣

Had a great time at horsemanship showcase yesterday! Apologies for the poor quality of the pictures. I forgot about my p...
01/12/2025

Had a great time at horsemanship showcase yesterday! Apologies for the poor quality of the pictures. I forgot about my phone 5 mins in so these are literally all I got 🤣

I really love the format of the horsemanship showcase. The idea of bringing together a range of trainers with different styles is so underrated and I got to fully embrace my inner geek and saw some lovely horsemanship from people I probably wouldn’t have considered before 😍

I do think the horsemanship world can be isolating at times. It’s almost as if when you venture into horsemanship you’re expected to pick a cult leader and then throw stones at all other styles, despite the similarities or the common goals of trying to do what’s right for the horse.

I’ve been very lucky in that the trainers I’ve been able to work closely with have always encouraged me to explore different types of horsemanship and find my own style, my own set of values. I have never put anyone on a pedestal or followed their methodology blindly but equally really try not to write people off because their style is different from what I know.
There’s always more to learn where horses are concerned and you can gain new perspective from the most unexpected places!

Already excited for next years showcase 🫶

21/11/2025

Why riding schools matter.

In the U.K. riding schools are becoming increasingly rare. Insurance is astronomical, paying for staff, feed and vets bills is crippling, and the workload for the smaller and smaller staff teams managing the show is overwhelming.

It’s easy to criticise riding schools, but without them, as a trainer, I am seeing a crisis for ‘private’ horses and horse owners.

When I was young having your own horse just wasn’t on the cards. We were far from a rich family and instead got my half hour, fortnightly riding lesson. As a teenager I could earn my own pennies, and also work at the stables, so could increase the amount of hours I spent in the saddle.

Long before I had my own horse (in my twenties) I had ridden many, many different horses and ponies, entered shows on kind (or not so kind, depending) ponies from the stables, dribbled along in carnivals (in the rain), hacked for hours with varying levels of control. Through the power of the riding school I had at least learned the basics of balancing myself on a horse in all three gaits.

However, there has been a change which many of us who teach for a living have witnessed. With less riding schools able to afford to exist, and cash in our own pockets, more people are buying their own horses - with very few hours riding under their belt. Often getting a green horse, or an OTTB, or even sometimes an unstarted youngster. Or, maybe someone is coming back to riding after a long break, and their body has experienced many things during the previous years, but sitting on a horse has not been one of them.

Then, all 3 members of this team - the horse, the owner and the trainer - are in an impossible position. The owner may not really be able to rise to the trot. And that’s no criticism. It’s actually not an easy thing to do well, and requires many hours of practice with horses who can do most of the heavy lifting while you learn.

The new horse owner may not have really cantered, or if they did, that was twenty years ago. Something a horse and person need to feel confident and happy about is cantering, even if you’re not doing it that regularly. Because, if cantering is ‘off the cards’, on a day when cantering turns up unexpectedly, you’re both going to get a shock. You both need to feel like your bodies are accustomed with cantering.

What a riding school horse can do is act on behalf of all those privately owned horses and teach the riders. They can provide us with a variety of experiences in a safe way to give us time and brain space to learn. Our own young, green or less experienced horse might not be able to do this for us; they need us to pick up all the slack instead. A riding school horse who knows their job can provide the secure hours in the saddle needed to learn how to ride well in all three gaits. Your own horse can quietly pass on their thanks through the great equine network.

If you’re new to riding and are getting a horse, or haven’t ridden in a while and are stepping back into the saddle, or have only ridden one or two horses and are about to buy a youngster, then please consider getting some good old fashioned riding lessons. It’s far less humbling to take lessons at a riding school than it is to get hurt by your own horse or have things swiftly unravel because you just don’t have enough experience. And you can only gain that experience by, you know, riding. No amount of reading fb posts, watching videos or even spectating clinics can compare to actually riding horses.

There are several good riding schools here in my own locality, and my excellent friend Nikki Stephens runs Burcott Riding centre in Somerset. If you have a riding school you’d like to celebrate please do, and maybe think about going to get a lesson, your own horse will likely thank you for it.

Photo shows an excellent school horse at Burcott giving someone some time to learn…

Address

Brighton And Hove
BN14

Telephone

07788410654

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