Gold Creek Farm

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06/19/2026
06/17/2026
06/06/2026

Why Do Horses Walk The Same Paths Around Their Fields❓

Have you ever noticed that horses rarely wander randomly around a field❓

Instead, they often create well-worn tracks that loop around the boundaries, curve through gateways, connect favourite grazing spots, water sources and shelter areas. What’s particularly interesting is that these routes are almost never straight lines.

This behaviour isn’t laziness or habit in the way we might think of it. It’s actually rooted deep within the horse’s natural instincts.

As prey animals, horses evolved to constantly monitor their environment while conserving energy. Rather than repeatedly assessing every possible route across a landscape, they establish familiar travel corridors that they know are safe. Once a route has been used successfully, it becomes part of their mental map of the environment.

In the wild, horses often travel significant distances each day between grazing, water and resting areas. They naturally follow routes of least resistance, avoiding obstacles, steep ground, boggy areas and anything that might restrict a quick escape if danger appears.

This is one reason their paths rarely form straight lines. Horses don’t think like humans. We tend to look at a destination and choose the shortest route. Horses tend to choose the safest, easiest and most familiar route. Their tracks often follow contours of the land, skirt around exposed areas, pass close to herd mates or maintain good visibility of their surroundings.

There is also a biomechanical reason. Horses are large animals designed for forward movement, but they naturally travel in gentle arcs rather than perfectly straight lines. Curved movement allows them to maintain balance more easily, make subtle adjustments to their direction and continue scanning their environment without constantly changing course. A winding route is often more comfortable and efficient than repeatedly travelling in rigid straight lines with sharper turns.

The tracks themselves can also become self-reinforcing. Once a horse uses a route, the ground becomes slightly firmer. The next horse follows it because it’s easier. Over time, an entire network of equine highways develops throughout the field.

Interestingly, these pathways can tell us a lot about our horses. They often reveal where horses feel safest, where they prefer to socialise, where resources are located and even how herd dynamics operate. A dominant horse may control access to certain routes, while lower-ranking horses may develop alternative pathways to avoid confrontation.

So next time you’re looking at those winding tracks around your field, you’re not just looking at worn grass.

You’re looking at a map of horse behaviour, decision-making, movement patterns, social structure and thousands of years of evolutionary survival instincts written directly onto the landscape.

Do your horses have obvious “motorways” around their fields? We’d love to see photos of the pathways they’ve created.

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05/27/2026

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There were a lot of people that appreciated the post the other day about setting the saddle before tightening the girth, so I figured I would share a few tips about tightening the girth itself.

A few things I try to focus on:
• Tighten the girth equally from both sides of the horse
• Go SLOW - one hole at a time is appreciated by your horse
• Create movement throughout the process
• Don't over tighten - don't check at the elastic, check from the sternum area

I think it's best to allow the horse to move at least once before the final tighten, and then again after the final tighten and before mounting. This gives the skin, muscles, and soft tissue time to adjust to the pressure rather than being suddenly restricted all at once.

A few common “problems” and things to think about:

1. “Blowing up” or bloating:
Horses are not actually filling themselves with air just to make things difficult. More commonly, they are tightening their muscles and bracing in anticipation of pressure or discomfort. Slow the process down and add more movement. Often that alone changes a lot.

2. “Girthy” horses:

Sometimes girthiness is pain related. Gastric ulcers, back pain, or poor saddle fit are the most common reasons, so having the horse evaluated by a veterinarian, body worker, and saddle fitter is always the first step.

However, girthiness can also become a learned or habitual response based on anticipated discomfort with a history. In those cases, it helps to look closely at the girthing habits of everyone handling the horse. Are people rushing? Tightening all at once? Small changes in timing, pressure, movement, and even where you tighten the girth can help start changing the horse’s association with the process.

One thing I learned from a vaulting lesson I took years ago: you don’t vault onto a horse standing completely still. Why? Because landing force on relaxed muscles is harder on the horse’s back.

While girthing obviously isn’t the same level of impact, the same idea applies. Tightening the girth while the horse is walking calmly in a straight line allows the horse to engage and organize their muscles more naturally instead of bracing against sudden pressure.

Sometimes slowing down for 60 seconds creates a much more comfortable experience for the horse.

05/07/2026

LOOKING FOR A SUMMER JOB?
Interested in LEARNING more about handling horses ?
Possibly getting into volunteer work or a part time job at a barn?
Here’s your opportunity .
Come work with a professional to hone your skills . Part time paid work cleaning stalls and turning horses out , then shadow and sometimes assist training sessions . Hands on lessons also , for additional fee . Amount of work will depend on experience and skill level. This can be 2 part time people.
Some experience with horses is a must .
Call or text for details .
Tina 518-423-3330

03/22/2026

Update.
I have someone for Saturday’s. Still looking for help other days. If you can’t do 8 stalls, mayb a cpl people can do 4 ea?
Opportunity for riding time or trade for lessons
HELP WANTED.
Monday ,Tuesday, Thurs,Friday , Saturday
8-10 stalls , help w/ AM turn- out.
Text 518-423-3330 or PM

I teach all my students how to “ read the horse”. It is paramount to safety and building a good relationship.   The abso...
03/15/2026

I teach all my students how to “ read the horse”. It is paramount to safety and building a good relationship.
The absolute number one most important thing you can do to remain safe around Horses, is to learn to read them.

Sometimes horses (or pony), start out fine, but little things happen during the course of the ride. The triggers stack and your horse that WAS fine isn’t anymore.
It is important for riding students to learn more than just how to balance, steer, stop etc..
Learning the whys of horse behavior helps to avoid problems when riding.
Learning what exercises to do with the horse to maintain their emotional state so they can listen to you makes a huge difference in the serenity of the ride for horse and rider. Learn about the total horse here at Gold Creek Farm.

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137 Goldfoot Road
Charlton, NY
12302

Telephone

+15184233330

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