Twilight Equestrian Coaching - Josephine Peters

Twilight Equestrian Coaching - Josephine Peters Freelance Horse riding coach. BHS Stage 3 Coach. Lucinda Green XC Academy Coach.

*** Lucinda Green Academy XC Clinics 2026 - with Academy coach Di Burgess***Twilight Equestrian Coaching is delighted to...
07/04/2026

*** Lucinda Green Academy XC Clinics 2026 - with Academy coach Di Burgess***

Twilight Equestrian Coaching is delighted to welcome back Di Burgess to
Equipark on Saturday 30th May and
Hillcrest Equestrian Centre on Sunday 31st May

Full day training. Morning and afternoon sessions.

Di is an international 4* rider who spent many years working with Lucinda Green and teaches Lucinda's fundamentals in coaching riders of all levels. Practice the Greenprint, The Ready for Trouble position, combinations and troubleshoot issues.

To book your place click on the link below.
https://www.itsplainsailing.com/org/twilightec

Had a great day at the BHS Ireland Comprehensive Coaching Techniques for Equestrian Coaches Training Day at Kildalton Co...
19/03/2026

Had a great day at the BHS Ireland Comprehensive Coaching Techniques for Equestrian Coaches Training Day at Kildalton College today with Sam York FBHS.

Really informative and thought-provoking discussions throughout the day.

Great practical demonstrations of good coaching practice and great demo riders.

Thanks to Susan Spratt for organising.

10/10/2025

Cavesson fit tip 🐴
Your cavesson noseband should sit about two fingers below the cheekbone 👇

If it’s fitted too high, it can press on the facial nerves that run just under the skin along the horse’s cheek. This can cause:
😣 Numbness or tingling
😬 Head tossing or tilting
😕 Resistance in the contact
💢 General tension through the jaw and poll

If it’s too low, it can interfere with the bit or restrict breathing

A small adjustment can make a big difference to your horse’s comfort and way of going!

Your support would be much appreciated. Thanks
04/10/2025

Your support would be much appreciated. Thanks

🐴✨ **Calling All Horse Lovers!** ✨🐴

The reins are in YOUR hands! 🏆 The **3rd Annual Local Pet Awards Ireland** are galloping into Dublin this Autumn – and we’re on the lookout for **Ireland’s Best Equestrian Centre and Riding Instructor**.

👉 Nominate your favourite below by **tagging them** and telling us why they deserve to take home the prize.
👉 Or trot over to www.thelocalpetawards.com to make your nomination and see the full list of categories.

Let’s celebrate the equestrian centres and instructors who go the extra furlong for their riders and horses! 🐎💫

Good quality canter makes it adjustable
30/09/2025

Good quality canter makes it adjustable

One skill that the better jumping riders have, that the ones less skilled usually lack, is the ability to create an adjustable canter.

By adjustable, it means a canter that is both powerful and active, and therefore able at an instant to be lengthened, but at the very same time balanced and light enough that it can be instantly shortened.

It isn’t too tricky to create forward power by itself. It isn’t too tricky to half halt for balance without much go. But it DOES take skill to create both forward power and collectible balance in the same canter at the same time.

There are only three choices that a rider has on the approach to a jump to get to the place where the horse has the easiest time from which to leave the ground.

One is to stay in the same canter, do nothing. Or to lengthen the stride, which requires impulsion. Or to shorten the stride, which requires balance.

And even if the rider can’t see a distance and lets the horse figure it out, just the act of putting the horse into a better canter will make the horse’s job easier.

Take your average group of, say, 15-20 jumping riders, and ask them to explain why a horse needs an adjustable canter, and how to create such a canter, how to train it into the horse, and see how many of them have thought through this concept enough to explain it.

Do it. Ask them. At your own barn. See for yourself whether the riders are well enough educated about something that should be somewhat basic.

You may be pleasantly surprised, you may be disappointed, but my guess is that the majority will not be able to explain this very well.

(Odessa Contessa, nicknamed Doe because of her big radar ears)

You'll love it!
30/09/2025

You'll love it!

Join the Academy to access the “Greenprint”, Lucinda’s training framework + monthly challenges to keep you on track

My Twilight was kept going to 37!!!!
23/09/2025

My Twilight was kept going to 37!!!!

I retired a very good polo horse at age 16. While some can play into their 20s, this horse was showing the strain of the quick hard stops with a rollback that the game of polo demands of a horse's hocks. Anybody could ride this horse, and he was a favorite of my kids, so he stayed at the farm. I had a BHS Pony Club then, and I leased this horse to new D1 and D2 Pony Clubbers until he died at age 34.

My advice for older horse owners is to give them a job. Just as it is with humans, the body has to move if it is going to be comfortable into the senior years. The more the horse has done, the more likely it has experienced injuries of several kinds. As a horse ages, those injuries, however small, turn into increasingly ouchy or painful daily struggles. Scar tissue hardens and makes movement more difficult. That tissue needs to stretch to stay supple. Arthritis and various levels of bone calcification can increase low pain into discomfort. Joints need to be kept as fluid as possible.

You can call the vet and get a rundown of what the senior horse is experiencing and why, but when a horse gets past their 20s I don't bother with a diagnosis when I can feel the pain and its location in a horse. I treat the pain, not worrying what the source might be, and I keep older horses moving.

There is a simple rule with injured horses, "When you work them, they either get better or worse." Most older horses get better with work. If they get worse, you have to stop and rethink it.

It is possible to raise an older horse's threshold of pain with regular movement. It's hell getting old no matter if it's a horse or a person. Movement can be painful, but not moving results in a growing intensity of pain until the body just doesn't want to move.

My go to treatment for aging ouchy horses is Glucosamine in their daily feed and Bute before every ride. Some people believe that Bute will irritate the stomach lining and put a horse off their feed. But back in the 80s Cornell Vet School did a study that found this was generally a myth. They might be off their feed from the pain and not from Bute issues.

Another technique I learned is to put an older horse in the pasture with a controlling pony mare that won't let a horse stand still for very long. This works well with colicly horses too. I say pony because they don't eat much and get the job done. I highly recommend cranky POA mares for the job.

I know many horse owners' approach with an aging horse is to feel "they deserve an easy retirement" and they do nothing with an older horse but watch them graze in a field. I think this is a mistake.

Another adjustment we must make as horses age in their senior years is their feed. Teeth can become less efficient, and guts can slow down. Exercise helps with some of these issues, but feed adjustments must be part of the picture. Fortunately, the most recent advancements in horsemanship have been in nutrition and we now have many more solutions than in the past. Do your research.

Another trick I learned to keep horses feeling young is to take an older horse along to something they used to do. As the older polo horse I mentioned aged, once in a while I'd load him up with the other polo horses and take him to a game. He'd stand in the line of horses tied to the trailer where he could hear the announcer, the crack of a ball being hit and experience the typical game day activity around the trailer. I swear, every time I did this, he looked ten years younger.

What methods have you discovered to help an aging horse?

Address

Knocklong

Telephone

+353876469333

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