Kayla McKay Dressage

Kayla McKay Dressage Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Kayla McKay Dressage, Sports & Fitness Instruction, 58 Windward Farm Road, Topsham, ME.

Part of the Poulin Dressage Team I am a USDF bronze and silver medalist, L graduate with distinction, and “r” candidate, offering dressage training and instruction to all ages and levels of riders.

A fun time had by all at GMHA,the weather Friday made me have flash backs of Florida.  Thankfully, New England reminded ...
06/14/2026

A fun time had by all at GMHA,the weather Friday made me have flash backs of Florida. Thankfully, New England reminded us why we love summer here, with absolutely beautiful weather on Saturday and Sunday.

So pretty but still too wet maybe next week 🤷🏼‍♀️🙂
06/09/2026

So pretty but still too wet maybe next week 🤷🏼‍♀️🙂

The Princess caught snacking while napping on green grass….ohh what a tough life she has 🥰
06/06/2026

The Princess caught snacking while napping on green grass….ohh what a tough life she has 🥰

This year’s Mother’s Day horse show looked a little different for me — no riding down centerline, but judging it instead...
05/11/2026

This year’s Mother’s Day horse show looked a little different for me — no riding down centerline, but judging it instead. 🐴

I got to take this super mom with me to scribe for my “r” final exam in Saugerties. ❤️

A huge thank you to all the moms in my life who have given up so much — including their own Mother’s Day — so I could chase my dreams and do what I love. The early mornings, long days, endless support, and everything in between never go unnoticed.

What else is better to do on a rainy Saturday than teach a bunch of lessons in a freshly dragged, dry, warm indoor? Mayb...
05/02/2026

What else is better to do on a rainy Saturday than teach a bunch of lessons in a freshly dragged, dry, warm indoor? Maybe ride your own two horses? Mission accomplished!! 🦄

02/24/2026

Here’s my Sports Med Team at their finest 😉. If you can’t have a little fun at work then you’re working at the wrong place. So thankful for all that Dr. Brown and Dr. Helmer have done for my horses.

Annabessacook Veterinary Clinic

02/19/2026

That's Nutmeg. My one foal who had the audacity to survive. Someday, the centerline is hers. But let me explain....

I've been thinking about luck lately.

Not in a self-pity way. More in a... "why does this sport work like this" way.

Here's what I mean.

Six months ago, if I started eating clean, lifting three days a week, and running, like actually running, not just thinking about running, I would be measurably healthier by now. Guaranteed. The input produces the output. The math is honest. Effort in, results out. Not perfectly, not linearly, but directionally? Always.

I find the same with my business. You make the calls, you write the emails, you show up consistently for six months, you will have more customers than when you started. The work has an address. It goes somewhere.

But frustratingly, dressage doesn't work like that.

I've watched people in this sport work for decades. Serious, dedicated, talented people. People who ride at 6am in February. People who skip vacations, drive four-horse trailers across the country, spend money they don't really have on the right trainer, the right saddle, the right everything.
And then the horse dies.

Or goes lame.

Or the farrier can just never get the feet quite right.

Or the suspensory blows on the best horse they've ever sat on, a month before their first CDI.

A couple years ago I decided to keep 3 foals. Within six months, two of them were dead. Freak accidents. Both of them. The kind of thing you can't plan for, can't manage, can't prevent. Just gone.

My prior horse? Developed heart issues at age 12.

The one after that? Suspensory. Retired.

The one after that? Feet. Retired.

You start to feel like the sport is running a very specific kind of joke on you. And the punchline keeps landing the same way.

Meanwhile, somewhere in Wellington right now, there's a nineteen year old having the time of her life.

Her dad bought her two Grand Prix horses.

She didn't break them in. She didn't sit through the four-year-old confidence building, or the five-year-old show tension or the six-year-old "I've changed my mind about flying changes." She didn't bury anyone. She just showed up to an already-made thing and started collecting scores.

And good for her, honestly. I mean that. It's not her fault.

But it does make you ask the question nobody in the equestrian world wants to say out loud:

How much of this sport is skill, and how much of it is just not having bad luck?

I don't have a clean answer.

What I have is this: I've stopped pretending the sport is meritocratic. It isn't. It rewards persistence, yes. Skill, yes. But it also requires a large level of luck, with horses staying sound and staying alive, that no other serious athletic pursuit demands.

When a marathon runner trains for two years and gets injured the week before the race, that's devastating. But they still have the two years of fitness. The body they built. The discipline they developed. The work lives in them whether they cross the finish line or not.

When a dressage rider loses a horse, the work doesn't live in them the same way. Yes, you carry what they taught you. The feel they gave you. The mistakes they showed you. But the partnership is gone. The vehicle is gone. And you can't just lace up a new pair of shoes and go again. You have to find another living creature, build trust from scratch, and hope the luck holds this time.

And you're expected to just... start again.

I think about the people who stayed anyway.

Who buried horses and bought young ones and started over, quietly, without making it anyone else's problem. Who kept their name on the entry forms even when the results didn't reflect the sacrifice behind them.

That's not just athletic commitment. That's something closer to faith.

Faith that the work matters even when the math doesn't add up. Faith that the next horse might be the one that stays sound. Faith that the sport owes you nothing and you're going to show up for it anyway.

I don't know if that's beautiful or insane.

Probably both.

But hey, welcome to dressage.

11/10/2025

A friendly reminder from our trusted TD Official, Janine Malone:

The following new USEF rules that take effect Decenber 1, 2025:

1 - All horses competing in USEF-licensed shows must be microchipped including ALL in Intro and Opportunity classes. The horse owner must report their horse's microchip number to USEF. Non-member owners can get a free Fan membership (and also a free USEF Horse ID number, if needed) to report the horse's microchip number in the database. The show secretary is required to verify that the chip number is on file with USEF before accepting your entry.

2 - Be sure your stirrups are legal! Beginning December 1, 2025, no piece of equipment shall be attached to a saddle that has a rigid upward pointing projection, hook, or similar object capable of catching a rider’s clothing or person when dismounting, including stirrups. While Dressage has had a similar rule for several years, this new rule eliminates some stirrups with a release mechanism on the outside branch. FMI - see the USEF website.

3 - if you are using your own bridle number holder: Each digit of a number must be a minimum of 1.5 inches in height and a minimum of 3/8 inches in width and cannot be obscured by the encasement/holder. (It has become increasingly difficult for judges, ring stewards, etc. to identify horse numbers as they are sometimes too small and hidden by number holders). The numbers normally assigned by the show secretary are the correct min. height and width, but many reusable numbers and their holders are too small to be in compliance with the new rule.

A little light reading this morning with funny faces 😊
10/26/2025

A little light reading this morning with funny faces 😊

All boxes checked to sit for my “r” exam!! Bring on May 2026🙌🏻
10/18/2025

All boxes checked to sit for my “r” exam!! Bring on May 2026🙌🏻

Address

58 Windward Farm Road
Topsham, ME
04287

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