Thunder Ridge

Thunder Ridge CHA Certified Instructor 🙌Whole Horse Hoof Care🐎Masterson Method 👏 forever learning and student 🐴

Typical day at Thunder Ridge 🫣Dan & Reese's prepared for greatness ❤️Liberty the mule with serious questions.And Lupe th...
04/21/2026

Typical day at Thunder Ridge 🫣
Dan & Reese's prepared for greatness ❤️
Liberty the mule with serious questions.
And Lupe the goat 😂 making sure absolutely nothing goes according to plan🙌

Pro tip let your Goat annoy your horse & they will think your mistakes don't matter 🤡😂

Retirement life of Mr. T 🙌He started the day with his chiropractor appointment and then headed back to what I like to ca...
04/09/2026

Retirement life of Mr. T 🙌

He started the day with his chiropractor appointment and then headed back to what I like to call his 40-acre retirement resort. 🌾☀️ Plenty of grass, sunshine, and absolutely no responsibilities.

After years of being such a good horse and taking care of so many riders, this old boy has officially earned the good life. Now his biggest job is grazing, napping, and reminding the younger horses how it’s done. 😎

He deserves every bit of his peaceful pasture life. 💛

Today we celebrate the greatest victory in history💕the day Jesus walked out of the grave. ✝️“He is not here; for He is r...
04/05/2026

Today we celebrate the greatest victory in history💕
the day Jesus walked out of the grave. ✝️

“He is not here; for He is risen, as He said.”
— Matthew 28:6

From all of us at Thunder Ridge, Happy Resurrection Day.🙌
May your hearts be full of hope, joy, and the promise of new life.💕

03/31/2026

The wind today called for something fun… so we flew a kite out by the horses! 🪁🐎

Some were curious 👀
Some were brave 💪
And a few thought the sky was clearly falling 😂

Turns out it’s great desensitizing practice and a good reminder that life at the barn doesn’t always have to be serious. Sometimes you just need a little wind, a kite, and a pasture full of horses to make a perfect day. 🌾💙

All of this 🙌
03/17/2026

All of this 🙌

PSA! Our temps have gone from the 70's to the teens. The grass is glowing green! Do not put your horse on the pasture. Even if "there isn't much out there". This is founder candy, especially for certain horses ( cushions, IR, overweight, Morgans, Andalusians, Lusitanos, Gypsy's, Shetlands, etc).
Despite what people may tell you, you can't unfounder a horse.

03/16/2026

Support your local saddle clubs!
Check out Patton Saddle Club Horse Show
and Madison County Saddle Club 🐴
Events for every exhibitor!

Please reach out if you are interested in this wonderful opportunity!! This is Not just for Perry county any surrounding...
03/03/2026

Please reach out if you are interested in this wonderful opportunity!! This is Not just for Perry county any surrounding county is welcome to join us 🙌 I volunteer my time to help others gain equine knowledge ❤️

Great job to our Perry County 4-H Horse Knowledge members who competed at State 4-H Horse Judging and Horse Bowl.
Senior Horse Bowl team took 2nd place at State. 👏
Anna earned a spot on the All Star Missouri Horse Bowl team with an individual 4th place score.
Peyton was just behind with an individual 5th place.
And a junior earned 5th high individual.
Developing decision making, public speaking and teamwork skills as well as confidence and independence are just some of the life skills they are building as 4-H members.

“This is the day that the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad in it.” — Psalm 118:24Stormy’s Diamond Flash
02/24/2026

“This is the day that the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad in it.” — Psalm 118:24
Stormy’s Diamond Flash

The Lord’s Day at Thunder Ridge 🤍Sunshine naps, quiet moments, and a reminder that rest is a gift from God.“He makes me ...
01/04/2026

The Lord’s Day at Thunder Ridge 🤍
Sunshine naps, quiet moments, and a reminder that rest is a gift from God.

“He makes me lie down in green pastures.”✝️Psalm 23:2

Merry Christmas from our family to yours ❤️🎄🎁🤠✝️🐎
12/25/2025

Merry Christmas from our family to yours ❤️🎄🎁🤠✝️🐎

What amazing conversations we are having in the horse industry ❤️
12/19/2025

What amazing conversations we are having in the horse industry ❤️

People often think they stay calm around their horses. Or that they should. Or that staying calm is simply a matter of choosing to relax. But your body is not wired that simply. Your nervous system reacts to a horse’s activation long before you form a conscious thought about what is happening.

Two nervous systems meet each time you interact with a horse. Both constantly read, adjust, and respond to each other. This is not emotional weakness. This is biology. This is relationship. This is the foundation of everything we do in the Whole Horse Journey.

Here is what is happening inside your system when your horse activates, from a scientific, somatic, and trauma informed perspective.

1. Neuroception begins scanning before you have time to think

The moment your horse lifts their head, stops moving, braces, flares their nostrils, or freezes, your neuroception activates. Neuroception is the body’s built-in surveillance system described in Polyvagal Theory. It works below conscious awareness and evaluates cues of safety, danger, and life threat.

Your body reads the horse’s posture, speed of movement, breath, tone, and even tiny shifts in facial expression. You feel something before you understand something. This is your biology doing its job.

2. Sympathetic activation prepares your system

If something feels uncertain, your nervous system mobilises. This is not panic. This is preparation.

Heart rate rises. Breath becomes shallow or faster. Muscles co contract. Vision narrows slightly. The gut slows. The body reallocates energy to the limbs. The fascia and surrounding tissues begin to ready themselves for movement, although how fascia participates is still being researched.

This is the body saying be ready. It is normal. It is functional. It is not a sign of weakness or incompetence.

3. Old implicit patterns try to take the wheel

Humans carry history in their bodies. Not as conscious memories, but as implicit patterns. Times you felt unsafe. Times you felt responsible for keeping things together. Times you were punished for mistakes. Times you learned that activation meant danger or conflict.

When your horse activates, those patterns can reappear. You may tense, snap into control mode, shut down, dissociate, over focus, over correct, or feel the urge to do something immediately.

This is not the present moment. This is your past trying to steer the present. It is a normal expression of a system protecting itself.

4. Co regulation becomes more complex when both systems rise

A horse in activation influences your system. Your system in activation influences the horse. Co regulation is a biological process, not a personality trait. It is not all or nothing. Even partially regulated humans can offer stabilising signals. But the more activation rises in either system, the harder it becomes to share regulation clearly.

This is not failure. It is simply two autonomic systems doing what they were designed to do. It is why regulation cannot be forced and why presence is a moving, living process rather than a fixed state.

5. The body expresses stress through somatic patterns

Humans have ancient patterns for threat response. Breath holding. Tightened pelvic floor. Locked knees. Braced shoulders. Jaw tension. Over stillness. Over activity. Hyper focus on reins or lead ropes. Excessive talking. Going silent.

These patterns are not flaws. They are strategies. They were shaped long before you ever touched a horse. They reveal how your system creates stability when the world feels uncertain.

6. Trauma history shapes your threshold but does not define your capacity

If you have lived through chronic stress, inconsistent environments, emotional neglect, relational tension, or trauma, your system may reach activation more quickly. This does not always mean your balloon is full. It means your system learned to stay alert in order to survive.

This does not mean you cannot work with horses. Many of the most intuitive, sensitive, capable horse people have lived through exactly these histories. It simply means you need compassion for yourself as much as for the horse. It means your body may need different types of support to return to baseline.

7. Resolution and completion follow the event

Once the moment passes and your horse settles, your system seeks completion. You may sigh, tremble, yawn, tear up, shake out your hands, feel tired, or feel uniquely clear. These are normal somatic signs of the nervous system restoring balance.

Your body is reorganising itself. It is integrating what happened. It is not overreacting. It is repairing.

Why this matters for horsemanship

Because your horse does not only read your behaviour. They read your biology. They feel your breath, your heart rhythm, your fascia tension, your subtle postural responses, and the energy that rises or settles inside you. They feel the story your body is telling even when you are trying to project calm.

This is not about striving for perfection. It is about understanding the hidden conversation between two systems. When you know what is happening inside you, you can separate your story from your horse’s story. You can respond instead of react. You can offer clarity instead of pressure. You can meet the horse in a grounded way even when activation rises.

A regulated human is not one who never activates. A regulated human is one who understands what is happening inside their body and can return themselves to connection.

That is the heart of this work. The Whole Horse Journey is not only about the horse. It is about the human who steps into the field with an entire history, an entire biology, and an entire nervous system of their own.

And when both systems feel understood, everything changes.

Address

370 Perry County Road 926
Saint Mary, MO
63673

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