Haggerty Equine Experiences

Haggerty Equine Experiences Advocate and student of the horse

Building confidence and mutually trusting relationships with horses

06/15/2026

Training paddocks got waaayyy too muddy with the rain we've had so hoping some lime will help!

06/13/2026
06/13/2026

Your horse is not trying to figure out who the leader is.

They’re trying to figure out what works.

Before anyone jumps into the comments, this isn’t because I think “leadership” is inherently a bad word.

The problem is that in the horse world, people often use the same word to mean completely different things.

Some people say “leadership” and mean:

• Being predictable
• Providing clear guidance
• Helping the horse feel safe
• Setting consistent and clear boundaries

Others say “leadership” and mean:

• Compliance
• Submission
• The horse accepting a higher “rank” or “boss”

Those are VERY different concepts.

And that’s why I personally tend to avoid the word.

Not because I disagree with the first list.

But because words like clarity, predictability, communication, and consistency tell me much more about what is ACTUALY happening.

When a horse is struggling, I don’t find myself asking whether they need more “leadership” or if I need to be more of a boss.

I find myself asking:

Do they understand what I’m asking?

Is my timing clear?

Have I taught the skill I’m expecting?

Am I reinforcing the behaviour I want?

Because horses aren’t navigating “office politics”.

They’re navigating consequences, experiences, and information.

The clearer we are, the easier it becomes for them to succeed.

The stick in front is my favorite grain stirring stick!What do you use?
06/13/2026

The stick in front is my favorite grain stirring stick!
What do you use?

My students may appear to do a LOT of "just walking" but I promise there's so much to accomplish at the walk!
06/13/2026

My students may appear to do a LOT of "just walking" but I promise there's so much to accomplish at the walk!

Master the free walk to working walk to collected walk transitions!

The free walk to working walk is honestly one of the hardest dang transitions!!! Yet you have to do it at the lowest levels! Start with a horse on a completely loose rein, like pictured…. (not a competition style free walk.) Pick up one rein, and ask your horse to soften to it. “Soften” can mean a few different things. Maybe you ask for bend. Maybe you lead that front foot onto a turn. Maybe you ask the opposite front foot to abduct (away from body). Maybe the horse just softens the poll and jaw.
Maybe try all those things! If it’s not going great, try the easiest one. If it is going great, try the ones that’s the hardest. But the idea is that we want to pick up just one side and wait for the horse to respond with softness. Too often we gather up both reins, and the horse’s initial reaction is to brace!!! Fix that one rein at a time.
Then you can start going from free walk to working walk ON A CIRCLE!!!!
One of my biggest complaints with Dressage test is that we always have to do that transition on a straight line or from a diagonal into the rail.

But another transition you’re really going to want to master is from working walk to collected walk back to working walk without marring the rhythm! This is going to help you dramatically when it’s time to do walk pirouettes (which double coefficients) and will also help build your piaffe!
How much can you collect the walk without losing rhythm?

If you’re getting the same heat wave that we are, this is a great time to work on some advanced walk work!

06/12/2026

A horse died in New York City this week.

Before any necropsy results were released, before a cause of death was determined, and before the facts were known, social media immediately filled with calls to ban carriage horses.

Not because evidence had been presented.

Because the conclusion had already been decided.

Over the last 24 hours I’ve been told I shouldn’t exist, that I should be investigated, that I’m unsafe around horses, and that any animal that works with humans is a “slave.”

I’ve spent more than a decade working in horse welfare. I’ve treated starving horses, injured horses, abandoned horses, neglected horses, working horses, retired horses, and beloved family horses.

One thing that experience has taught me is that welfare is complicated.

Good welfare is not determined by whether a horse works.

Bad welfare is not determined by whether a horse works.

A horse can suffer in a field.

A horse can thrive in a working environment.

A horse can suffer while working.

A horse can thrive while retired.

The question has never been whether humans benefit from animals.

The question is whether the animal itself is healthy, safe, well-fed, well-managed, free from unnecessary suffering, and able to live a good life.

Some people believe any human use of animals is inherently wrong. That is their right.

But that is an animal rights position, not an animal welfare position.

Animal welfare asks: “How is this individual animal doing?”

Animal rights asks: “Should this relationship exist at all?”

Those are not the same conversation.

As someone who works with horses every day, I will always support evidence over outrage, facts over assumptions, and welfare over ideology.

A horse deserves a proper investigation.

Not to become a political slogan before the cause of death is even known.

His name was Deniz. His memory deserves respect not outrage.





06/12/2026

No longer a shaggy pony, now Munchie looks like a proper mini horse!

I usually try to do this before the end of May, but it's been a super busy month!

I'm glad I did a trace clip first back in April so he hasn't been overheating, but he looks so much better completely clipped

THISSSS!!!!I cannot possibly begin to imagine the stress Nurettin is facing 😭Losing Joe last year was hard for me, but I...
06/11/2026

THISSSS!!!!
I cannot possibly begin to imagine the stress Nurettin is facing 😭

Losing Joe last year was hard for me, but I would've broke if people came after me, blaming me, calling me an abuser, accusing me of things they have no knowledge about.

Losing a horse privately is one thing, but my goodness I'm appalled at the treatment of this man- being recorded, accused, harassed, and bombarded by ignorant comments in the moments he is dealing with great pain and distress himself!!

Why, when a pet cat passes away it's, "I'm sorry for your loss." When the family dog passes away, it's "That's terrible, but there's nothing else you could do." When the horse in the country barn passes away, it's "These things happen." But when a New York City carriage horse passes away it's immediately assumed, "It must have been the driver's fault for mistreating him and we should eliminate all carriage horses."

Deniz was a fit, healthy, beautiful 16 year old horse who had just passed his veterinary exam a couple months earlier in March, by the same vet who treats the NYPD Mounted Unit horses. Deniz had enjoyed his job working in the NYC horse carriage industry for the past 10 years, where he was loved by his owner, different drivers, and the people who took rides with him.

June 9th wasn't a very hot or humid day. There was a bit of a breeze, the high was around 81 degrees in Central Park and it was about 75 degrees when Deniz started his last carriage ride, before he was expected to return to the stable. It wasn't a particularly busy Tuesday and he had had plenty of food and water throughout the day. He hadn’t been acting out of character and was being driven by his owner who knew him best.

Around 7pm, as Deniz rounded the back of Strawberry Fields on flat ground with two customers in his carriage, he suddenly passed away. His driver and owner, Nurettin was in shock despite having decades of experience in the carriage industry. Passerby helped him unharness his horse from the carriage while he made all the necessary phone calls to handle the situation. He told news stations he felt like he had just lost a member of his family and it had happened so unexpectedly and suddenly.

Within minutes bicyclists, joggers, and passerby became outraged at Nurettin, blaming him for his tragic loss. Nurettin professionally ignored the commotion and remained on the scene until the proper authorities arrived to remove Deniz's body.

Animal rights extremists and the real estate funded NYCLASS's executive director, Edita Birnkrant arrived to the scene, chastising Nurettin and calling for an outright ban of all 200+ carriage horses from the industry. Calls to punish the other 150+ carriage horse owners and drivers grew. Verbal attacks began to get hurled at other horse carriage drivers and they returned to the stables for the safety of their horses and themselves.

The carriage industry decided to close the stables the following day to mourn Deniz and for the protection of their horses and drivers. (The following few days work would be very limited for the rest of the horses with the heat and humidity expected to rise and prompt a suspension of operations throughout much of that period.)

Per TWU Local 100, Deniz will undergo a full necropsy by the pathology department at Cornell University’s College of Veterinary Medicine to determine what transpired. Until the results return, the cause of his death remains unknown, though the police stated there was no evidence to suggest wrong doing. Unfortunately no one gets to choose when and where a death will occur and this is something that could happen to any domesticated animal at any time, anywhere. Many even noted Deniz appeared strong, was a healthy weight and not even very sweaty. Some theorized it was some type of heart attack, but until the necropsy is completed, no one can say for sure.

No signs of Deniz's passing are pointing to something preventable, overwork, dehydration, or any relation to Deniz's job or home in NYC, but that didn't stop thousands of keyboard warriors from taking to the internet to point fingers, denounce the horse carriage industry, and even make death threats towards carriage drivers, as well as city council members. They cruelly shared videos of Deniz’s last moments all over social media without an ounce of compassion for his owner in his time of mourning.

The timing couldn't have been worse for the industry. The next afternoon NYCLASS was already expected to hold a rally with PETA at City Hall to support reintroducing the horse carriage ban bill that the NYC Health Committee's council members voted to kill this past November. Council members Harvey Epstein, Carl Wilson, Frank Morano, and Gale Brewer stood with a few dozen NYCLASS and PETA lobbyists outside City Hall to announce Councilman Chris Marte's re-introduction of the carriage ban bill that had been defeated countless times already. Deniz's passing would be exploited by them in propaganda to fuel support of the bill.

Today the carriage ban bill will be re-introduced along with Councilman Jim Gennaro's counter bill to improve the horse carriage industry after years of slanderous damage and over regulation was enacted to drive it out of business. The question remains if common sense will prevail or we live in a society who punishes people and horses for their inability to make NYC carriage horses immortal. We are hopeful that in the year of the horse, common sense will prevail for the horses and all who love them. Stay tuned for action items as our political fight for the NYC horse carriage industry continues once again.

(Due to the disgusting amount of negative, uninformed comments about NYC carriage horses already circulating the internet, any like that will be deleted from this post out of respect for Deniz.)

I am absolutely floored by the comments I've seen over this situation. Thank goodness they are getting a necropsy, I hop...
06/11/2026

I am absolutely floored by the comments I've seen over this situation. Thank goodness they are getting a necropsy, I hope the owner is well protected against all the unnecessary hateful people 😔

To dissipate some things I've read....
- this horse is not malnourished, he appeared to be in great condition
-16 is not old, certainly not too old to be working
-I highly doubt this horse was "worked to death" as in the video he was a little sweaty but by no means abuse levels of work
-spontaneous death like a heart attack is completely plausible and has NOTHING to do with level of care or workload
-no one was cuddling or comforting the horse during his last breaths because THAT IS DANGEROUS!! large animals can flail and very easily hurt people, especially if there's a lot of involuntary muscle spasms. Holding a horse as they pass is ignorant and unsafe
-I read on one post there's been 4 carriage incidents over 6 years... that is a verryyy low number and is not significant enough to push a ban in my opinion. Look at loss during racing stats if you wanna be mad

This is actually really scary how people are reacting to this, screaming "abuse" from their rooftops. I'm not saying I know what does or doesn't happen behind the scenes, but the perspective of the average person viewing this and making assumptions and supporting a ban all because of an accident is crazy.
First they'll ban carriage horses, then they'll ban equine sports, then they'll ban all horse riding and use of horses altogether. This is so much bigger than this one incident... please don't let PETA and similar movements get a foothold onto this!!

My lesson horses are working horses! Ranch horses are working animals! We cannot lose rights to own, ride, and 'work' horses just because of an occasional incident that was most likely a naturally occurring thing that just so happened to be filmed by a lot of emotional peoples

We are writing an article about NYC carriage horses and took a picture of Dennis last week, the horse who died yesterday. This is our photo. So sad, RIP. A necropsy will be done at Cornell University. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5hIwZCgm4LI New York Post ABC News Fox News CNN CBS News NBC News NBC4 Cornell University

I have a lot of big changes happening, and I've made the hard decision to find new homes for a few of my horses so that ...
06/11/2026

I have a lot of big changes happening, and I've made the hard decision to find new homes for a few of my horses so that I can better focus on my lesson horses and my students

This is not an official sale post as I don't have videos yet, but here's a quick preview in case I can catch interest without having to post in public groups

Oswald- 7yo gelding, 14.1hh, grade (I have pics of his parents, I believe his dad is possibly appy) green broke but well started, excellent with groundwork and unbelievably talented! Would excel in a job with variety and challenge, something like dressage, tricks, liberty, working equitation, extreme trail riding, etc. This guy is so smart but needs lots of mental stimulus, he is very healthy and hardy, and would be so great with a partner that keeps him engaged and busy often! Pony rides and lessons are waaayyy too boring for him, a couple circles around and he gets bored wanting a challenge instead. In your pocket is an understatement 😂 he loves kids and can be handled by them, but is more suitable for an intermediate-advanced rider. Has never been stalled and honestly wouldn't do well, he thrives in a herd with others to play with

Smokey & Dillon- older MFT pair in their lower 20s, iso a retirement home or light riding. Came to me as a pair so high preference for them to stay together as I'm only their 2nd home. Biggest thing is they have very different dietary needs. Smokey is borderline metabolic and blows up with green grass but is managed very well on a dirt lot. Dillon is the opposite and needs extra feed to maintain weight. I keep grass hay available at all times but feed their grain separately and it's working well. Both very sweet and easygoing, I was told they trail rode years ago but I just haven't had time to test them in the 3 years I've had them. I have no problem with them being pasture puffs here, but they deserve more quality time and individual care and attention. Priced low, moreso seeking a GOOD and FINAL home for them

Everyone just had their teeth done last week, vet will be coming soon to get new coggins (although last years is good till July), I will trim them before they leave, and they are all in good health! Please PM me to discuss

Address

Ellisville, IL

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