Little Feather Equestrian Center

Little Feather Equestrian Center Facility available for board, training, lessons and sales. Teaches lessons to ages 7+, from basic E

Professional trainer with more then 25 years riding experience and 15 years experience as a professional. She is certified by the American Riding Instructors Association in Equitation. She relocated from Lexington, KY in March 2013, where she was being trained by former Grand Prix rider Nori Scheffel.

06/13/2026

Most riding instructors did not start this career because they wanted to manage difficult conversations about boundaries. They started it because they love horses and wanted to teach. The instructors who last in this industry are the ones who learned (often the hard way) that boundaries are not optional extras you add once you are established enough to "afford" them. They are part of running a professional program from day one. Here is where boundaries matter most and how to hold them without apology...

1. Your time outside of lessons is yours.
Texts at nine at night about tomorrow's lesson. Calls during dinner about a schedule change. Messages on your day off asking for advice about a horse buying decision. None of this is malicious but most clients genuinely do not think about the fact that you have a life outside of teaching their child to ride. If you respond immediately every time, you train them to expect immediate responses always. Set communication hours and state them clearly in your new client materials. Then actually hold them, even when it feels easier to just answer the message.

2. Your schedule is not infinitely flexible.
The family that needs to move their lesson time again. The parent who wants to add an extra session this week because of an upcoming show. The student who is consistently five minutes late and expects the lesson to run the full length anyway. Every accommodation you make sets an expectation for the next one. A clear scheduling policy communicated at enrollment and held consistently protects your time and your sanity far more effectively than saying yes every time and quietly resenting it later.

3. Rail commentary is not welcome during lessons.
This is one of the hardest boundaries to set because it usually involves a parent who genuinely believes they are helping. A parent calling out instructions from the rail undermines your authority, confuses the student, and turns a structured lesson into a tug of war between two voices. Set this expectation clearly before the first lesson that questions and feedback happen before or after the lesson, not during it. If it happens anyway address it directly and privately. This is not about ego, it is about your student getting one clear consistent voice to learn from.

4. Payment terms are not negotiable on a case by case basis.
The family that is reliably a few days late every month. The client who wants to pay per lesson when your program runs on monthly tuition. The parent who asks for a discount because their child missed two lessons this month. Every exception you make becomes the new expectation for that family and often for others who hear about it. A clear payment policy applied consistently to everyone is not harsh. It is the foundation that makes your program financially sustainable for everyone in it including the horses.

5. "No" is a complete sentence.
You do not owe a lengthy explanation every time you decline a request. No I cannot fit in an extra lesson this week. No I am not available on my day off. No we cannot extend the lesson because you were late. A short, professional, non-apologetic no protects your time and your energy far more effectively than a long justification that invites negotiation. The families who respect your "no" are the ones worth keeping. The ones who push back against it are showing you something important about the relationship.

6. Hold the same standard for everyone.
The boundary that gets broken for your longest standing client or your highest paying family becomes the boundary that does not really exist. Consistency is what makes a boundary a boundary rather than a suggestion. It will occasionally cost you a client who feels entitled to an exception. It will also build you a program full of families who respect your professionalism which is worth significantly more in the long run.

Boundaries are not about being difficult. They are about running a program that is sustainable for you, fair to your students, and respectful of the horses who depend on a schedule and a routine that boundaries help protect.

You are allowed to have them and you do not need to apologize for them. The families and clients worth keeping will respect them without you having to explain why.

What boundary took you the longest to actually hold?

06/11/2026

Address

871 Pamela Kay Lane
Parker, TX
76088

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 8pm
Tuesday 8am - 8pm
Wednesday 8am - 8pm
Thursday 8am - 8pm
Friday 8am - 8pm
Saturday 8am - 3:30pm
Sunday 8am - 3:30pm

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