Ardmedden Equestrian & Livery

Ardmedden Equestrian & Livery Based at Ardmedden Farm, Oldmeldrum, AB51 0AG. Stud, training, livery, camps & clinics. Equestrian Centre & livery yard.

16/06/2026

Looking for some general farming/property maintenance seasonal help. Temporary post ☀️
Mowing, fencing, draining, tidying, hay making.
Would suit student with relevant experience.
🏠Accommodation available
Driving licence required.
Please share

09/06/2026

Looking for some general farming/property maintenance seasonal help. Temporary post. Mowing, fencing, draining, tidying, hay making.
Would suit student with relevant experience. Accommodation available. Driving licence required. Please share 🙂

Cross country training area and arena event fences for hire.
07/06/2026

Cross country training area and arena event fences for hire.

05/06/2026

We had lots of galloping & water practice last weekend at the Ernest camp. Lots learnt. We have a free couple of weekends so the cross country & stabling are available for private hires. £50 gives you a 24hr stay over with full use of all facilities. Feel free to camp & we have hook ups. Cottage accomodation. We have left the show jumping course up from last weekend. Get in touch for private hires next couple of weeks before the busy time of camps which are fairly back to back after the Highland Show.
The farm ride is looking amazing at the usual £15 per hire and we have a few subscriptions available at £50 for use of indoor & farm ride.
Also anyone feeling horseless feel free to get in touch to join us on our ride outs. We’ve got a little group of nice ladies keeping our favourites fit. We’ve a few ponies as well. Photos to follow 🙂

31/05/2026

We’re all on fire 🔥🔥🔥 at Ardmedden having a fabulous time at the Ernest Dillon Fbhs camp. We’ve got burnt BBQ sausages for breakfast & sunburnt riders 🤣 All in all very educational with the option of cooling down in the water jumps 💦

Looking for some summer seasonal help. Would suit the student holiday period. Three very different skills required altho...
16/05/2026

Looking for some summer seasonal help. Would suit the student holiday period.

Three very different skills required although for variety could pick & mix 🙂

1- mowing and strimming general tidying & painting. Help with the hay making & preparing for harvest. Opportunity for cattle work.

2 - handling & riding our young horses must be very experienced with a high level of horse knowledge. Looking for equivalent of BHS stage 3 but qualifications not necessary. Need to be willing to groom & muck in as well.

3 - tidying and cleaning houses. Ripping up carpets. Basic painting & decorating skills. Must be willing to get hands dirty with this one also have the finesse to dress the final product.

In first instance please PM this page 🙂

Clinic Full. Can join waiting list incase of any cancellations.
13/05/2026

Clinic Full. Can join waiting list incase of any cancellations.

***** STOP PRESS*****

We will be starting our own Ardmedden camps with our very own Ernest Dillon FBHS on the 25th and 26th April then the following 30th and 31st May.

Launching our camps we are doing a two time only deal!!!

£100 Yes £100 gets you:-

4 lessons

That’s a flat lesson
Show jumping lesson
Arena event lesson
Cross Country lesson

There will be 3 groups of 4 so a total camp of 12 riders.

Stabling on Friday and Saturday night.

We have hook ups available, an area to camp with toilet and kitchen facilities. Also cottage accommodation for those wanting a bit of luxury.

A buffet lunch will be provided on Saturday and Sunday with a BBQ cooked by Ernest himself on Saturday night in our new garden room at Grandma’s. You never know we might even get the bubbly out 🥂

Apologies for the late notice… do not know where the time goes and cannot believe that’s summer just around the corner!

🎉 PLEASE SHARE AND GET THOSE BOOKINGS IN. 🎉

A photo from the good old days to where we will return
Soup, scones & sausage rolls from Grandma’s

13/05/2026

***** STOP PRESS*****

We will be starting our own Ardmedden camps with our very own Ernest Dillon FBHS on the 25th and 26th April then the following 30th and 31st May.

Launching our camps we are doing a two time only deal!!!

£100 Yes £100 gets you:-

4 lessons

That’s a flat lesson
Show jumping lesson
Arena event lesson
Cross Country lesson

There will be 3 groups of 4 so a total camp of 12 riders.

Stabling on Friday and Saturday night.

We have hook ups available, an area to camp with toilet and kitchen facilities. Also cottage accommodation for those wanting a bit of luxury.

A buffet lunch will be provided on Saturday and Sunday with a BBQ cooked by Ernest himself on Saturday night in our new garden room at Grandma’s. You never know we might even get the bubbly out 🥂

Apologies for the late notice… do not know where the time goes and cannot believe that’s summer just around the corner!

🎉 PLEASE SHARE AND GET THOSE BOOKINGS IN. 🎉

A photo from the good old days to where we will return
Soup, scones & sausage rolls from Grandma’s

04/05/2026

📣 “Are we losing real horsemanship?”

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about how much the horse world has changed—and not all of it, in my opinion, for the better so I’m going to address it.

I grew up in a time where a handshake meant everything.
You bought a horse on trust. Your word was your bond. Loyalty mattered. Reputation mattered. And horsemanship wasn’t something you bought—it was something you earned through years of experience, graft, and learning from real horse people.

And buying horses was completely different too.

You’d be out competing, and there’d be that one pony on the circuit that was hard to beat. You’d watch it, ride against it, learn its strengths—and often that was enough.

That pony could be bought there and then, at a show, based purely on what you’d seen.
No trials. No endless vettings. No long lists of requirements.

As a child, I wasn’t saying “I want this type” or handing over a wish list.

It was simply:
👉 That one does the job. That’s the one.

And that was it.

It didn’t matter if it wasn’t the perfect type.
It didn’t matter how it went in the contact.
It didn’t matter what bit it wore, or whether it had quirks in or out of the stable and a vetting? What was one of those? You saw if the horse/pony was suitable with your own knowledgable eyes.

What mattered was this:
You made it work.

That pony was yours, and it was your responsibility to build a relationship with it—whatever it took. You didn’t swap it, you didn’t write it off, you didn’t move it on because it didn’t suit you perfectly and there was no sales of goods act to fall back on it didn’t exist it peoples mindsets.

I believe because of this and no fall back throw away option You learned. You adapted. You grafted.
And in doing so, you made something of the horse/pony.

I can honestly say—every pony we bought, I made work. There was no throwaway mindset. No “not fit for purpose” mentality. That just didn’t exist in the same way.

And the way we managed horses reflected that mindset too.

We weren’t surrounded by endless products and specialists.
We relied on solid, traditional horsemanship.

– Horses with duvets on with circingles holding them in place or even further back straw in their rugs made out of sacks.
– Feeding straights—oats, barley, simple feeds you understood
– Boiling up linseed properly
– Sugar beet done the right way
– A proper hot bran mash after a hard day’s hunting or competing, often with a touch of Epsom salts
– Grooming that meant something—strapping a horse properly, not a quick brush over

You knew your horse inside out because you had to.
You didn’t outsource its care—you lived it daily.

And then there’s the way horses were produced and conditioned.

Fitness wasn’t done on a screen or a programme—it was built through real work.

– Gallops
– Long days out
– The beach and the sea
– Using things like weighted boots as part of strengthening and conditioning

You only have to look at examples like Red Rum, trained by Donald McCain, who famously used Southport beach and the sea as part of his training. The legend that is John Whitaker cantering through the Yorkshire fields popping over brick walls, That kind of thinking—working with the environment—was second nature.

And young horses?

They weren’t wrapped in cotton wool.

Many were started by going out hunting—learning to go forward, to think, to travel, to jump, to be part of a herd. They learned the job by doing the job.

Now?

It feels like we’ve gone the opposite way.

If you’ve got a dressage horse, the legs are seen as far too valuable, too protected to even consider letting them go across a field or do something outside the arena.

Everything is controlled. Everything is managed.

And yet people still end up with horses that go sour, switch off, or lack genuine enthusiasm for the work.

And then there’s another side to this conversation—one that’s become incredibly controversial.

The way horses were broken and produced.

There were tools and methods used back then that, in the right hands, were part of producing countless quality horses that went on to perform at very high levels.

Things like draw reins, side reins, and stronger aids weren’t unusual—they were tools. And like any tool, they depended entirely on the hands using them.

Now?
You wouldn’t dare put a photo or video online using certain tack or methods without facing serious backlash.

Even experienced riders and professionals think twice—or keep things behind closed doors—because the reaction from the modern-day audience can be instant and intense.

And that raises a real question…

👉 Have these tools become the problem…
or is it the lack of experience and understanding behind them that’s the issue?

Because when knowledge drops, tools get blamed.

Now… it feels very different.

We’ve got:
– X-rays on every horse before it’s even sat on
– 5 different vets giving 5 different opinions
– £150+ lessons with “top” instructors
– Specialists for everything—dentists, chiropractors, physios, massage, therapy machines
– Endless feeds, balancers, supplements, gadgets

And yet…

Have we ever seen so many horses broken, lame, or written off?

It makes me question—
Have we progressed… or have we overcomplicated something that used to rely on good, solid, common sense horsemanship?

That’s not to say everything modern is wrong—far from it. Veterinary advances have absolutely saved and improved countless horses.

But I do think we’ve lost something important along the way.

👉 So here’s the question…
Are we improving the industry—or are we slowly losing the art of true horsemanship?

I’m genuinely interested in people’s thoughts—especially those who’ve been around horses for decades.

Jennifer Thompson
CEO, Vecthom Sporthorses

Further parts to this debate to follow, including the sales side—covering the modern approach to buying and selling horses coming soon.

Gosh the farm ride was super busy today! Our star rider had to be Isla Scott on Willow who were on a birthday ride outin...
03/05/2026

Gosh the farm ride was super busy today! Our star rider had to be Isla Scott on Willow who were on a birthday ride outing 🍰 🎂 🎁 Looking fab-u-lous girls 😍

Address

Ardmedden
Oldmeldrum
AB510AG

Opening Hours

Monday 7:30am - 9pm
Tuesday 7:30am - 9pm
Wednesday 7:30am - 9pm
Thursday 7:30am - 9pm
Friday 7:30am - 9pm
Saturday 7:30am - 9pm
Sunday 7:30am - 9pm

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