Revelation Farm

Revelation Farm Horses make life better and make you better at life. Horse lovers welcome! Revelation Farm Revelation Farm is a premier and passionate dressage barn.

Trainer, Danielle Perry, loves to train horses and humans to improve their dressage skills, competition scores, earn their USDF medals or freestyle bars. Offering classical dressage instruction with the modern approach of integrating the mind, body and spirit as well as, a dash of project management methodology so you can plan and see your progress. Our goal is to help you enjoy every ride, lesson and reveal the rider within! Call today to learn how you can get started!

06/02/2026
06/02/2026

There has been a trend going around lately about “10 Things I Hate About Dressage,” and honestly some of them have been hysterical… and painfully accurate. Thank you, Lauren Sprieser. I fully agree that walk pirouettes deserve their own category.

So here are mine.

1. “You have to be rich.”

I hate this one.

Mostly because it keeps people from chasing the dream before they even start. I understand where it comes from, and yes, horses are expensive. But I did not get into this industry because I wanted to make a million dollars. I got into it because I had a dream that would not leave me alone.

The opportunities came first.
The money followed the opportunities.

I never sat down and said “How can I make the most money?”
I asked “How can I make this work?”

Maybe that is terrible financial advice, but it worked for me. I worked relentlessly, kept saying yes to opportunities, and figured things out along the way.

But let me also say this very clearly:
None of it works without the work.

2. The idea that being “good” is supposed to feel easy.

Absolutely not.

This sport is hard.
It will stay hard.
And most of the time you will still feel like you are not good enough.

That feeling does not go away when you become successful. If anything, the standards get even higher.

Learn to love the process before you love the results.

3. The idea that top trainers are not supposed to get dirty.

Please.

Yes, I have a groom. She is also my other two hands. We work together. We are both filthy by the end of the day sometimes.

If you think you are above scrubbing buckets, wrapping legs, bathing horses, or sweeping aisles, then I question how connected you really are to the process.

4. Trying to control the environment at all times.

This one drives me insane.

The arenas do not need to be silent.
The kids can run around.
The tractor can drive by.
The staff can mow the lawn.

How are we supposed to create emotionally balanced horses if they only know how to function in a perfectly controlled environment?

Teach the horse to manage emotions first.
Then worry about the movements.

A horse that cannot emotionally regulate will never truly perform consistently anyway.

5. Bits are for comfort, not control.

Find the bit that gives your horse the most confidence and comfort.
Not the one that gives YOU the most leverage.

6. Stop hating worthy competitors.

Business is business, and competition is competition, but there is absolutely no reason we cannot respect and care about the people we compete against.

Save your frustration for abusive training methods, shortcuts, and actual mistreatment of horses.

Not the rider who beat you fairly with good horsemanship and classical training.

7. Maintain your horse before they are lame.

This is a huge one for me.

There is nothing wrong with responsibly maintaining horses. PRP injections can be incredible. I use them on myself too.

And no, your horse does not need to be limping to tell you something is wrong.

Sometimes the signs are:
“He feels sluggish in the changes.”
“He is not sitting in piaffe the same.”
“He is yanking me every once in a while.”

Pay attention to those details.

Inflammation changes movement long before obvious lameness appears. My entire program focuses on addressing inflammation first and then building proper muscle to support the joints correctly.

There is no reason horses should be expected to perform through pain.

8. Even FEI riders need help.

The feel and the reality are not always the same.

You need eyes on the ground.
You need ideas.
You need exercises.
You need someone who can say “I went through this too, and this helped.”

Drilling movements over and over rarely fixes the root problem.

9. Stop getting offended by judges comments.

The judges are literally telling you what they see.

At my last show, I had no idea I was starting to lean forward. The judge commented on it.

Good.
That is what I paid for.

Not every comment is an insult. Most judges genuinely want to help riders improve, and they went through an incredible amount of education to be sitting in that booth.

10. Stop waiting for perfect before you show.

You do not improve by hiding at home.

It is perfectly fine to show Training Level because the basics need strengthening.
It is perfectly fine to take the less confident horse down centerline.

Every good experience matters.

Showing is not separate from training.
It is training.

Get down the centerline.

05/30/2026

If you find a horse person lying flat on their back, staring into the void with the hollow resignation of a soft play manager at 4pm during half term, please just roll them upright, hand them a caffeinated beverage, and assume they have recently been bested in combat by a Welsh Sec D.

For the Welsh pony is the loving thug of the horse world. They won’t actively try to end your life, but if you get between them and food then they can’t be held responsible for their actions.

Try to lead a sec d is the easiest thing in the world - if you are going in the direction they want. If you aren’t, you may have better luck attaching a leadrope to a wall and attempting to bring that with you instead. The wall may in fact be easier as at least the wall can’t go in the total opposite direction at speed.

The primary ambition of the Sec D is simple: achieve maximum rotundity. This is very easily achieved as the sec d is a medical marvel in that their metabolism does not seem to exist and somehow maintaining a shape usually only seen in a well-upholstered seals, despite not being fed more than a single handful of light chaff. This diet often causes a small uprising, usually demonstrated by the Welsh making a jailbreak for the nearest patch of decent looking grass, straight through the field fence.

In essence - if you own a Welsh sec d, you will no longer require a gym membership…but you may consider therapy.

05/27/2026

Address

Hwy 372
Canton, GA
30115

Opening Hours

Monday 12pm - 7pm
Tuesday 10am - 7pm
Wednesday 10am - 7pm
Thursday 10am - 7pm
Friday 10am - 7pm
Saturday 7am - 5pm

Telephone

+14042191266

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