Lone Star Riding School

Lone Star Riding School Lone Star Riding School provides horseback riding lessons to kids and adults, beginners to experienced riders!
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05/05/2026

🌮 Happy Cinco de Mayo from JN Bar Land Management! 🌮

While you’re enjoying tacos and good times, let us handle the heavy lifting. From land clearing mulching to shredding, gravel driveways, culverts, and horse arenas—we’ve got your property covered.

🔥 Need your land cleaned up before summer? Now’s the time.

📞 Call or text: 832-519-3448

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03/17/2026

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02/17/2026
Do not transport or exercise your horse on an empty stomach - say it LOUD for the people in the back!!
02/13/2026

Do not transport or exercise your horse on an empty stomach - say it LOUD for the people in the back!!

“Horses don't have a gallbladder. Because of this, horses' livers only secrete bile acids, salts, and buffers when stimulated by consumption of food. Horses with an empty stomach for a prolonged period of time are more prone to ulcers because the stomach continually releases stomach acid, regardless of whether or not food is consumed. The buffering agents which neutralize this acid are only released when food is consumed. Do not let your horse go more than 6 hours without eating. Do not exercise or transport your horse on an empty stomach.” - Podcast Ep. 48 | Gastro pHix - Foregut Health

Listen to the entire episode wherever you consume your podcasts!

bluebonnetfeeds.com

I gave em my word so…..😂
01/20/2026

I gave em my word so…..😂

01/05/2026

Howdy! We are finally coming up for air around here after our move - thanks to everyone for your patience 😘

First order of business: 2025 Fall Ranch Series results 🌟

Walk Trot youth:
Champion - Teagan Wieghat
Reserve - Mary Elizabeth Zill

Walk Trot adult:
Champion - Angie Wilson
Reserve - Courtney Shepherd

13 & Under:
Champion - Harper Black
Reserve - Kelsey Landriault

14-18:
Champion - Finley Spikes
Reserve - Paulina Harris

Rookie:
Champion - Bradi Drilling
Reserve - Julie Wester

Green Horse:
Champion - Ifeverawhiztherewuz & Cory Mueller
Reserve - FG Marvel & Faith Langford

Amateur:
Champion - Susan Morris
Reserve - Sandy Galloway

Open:
Champion - Kristen Cavanaugh
Reserve - Sandy Galloway

Buckles have already been pre-paid for and will be ordered this week. Please let me know if you have any special requests for yours (horses name instead of yours, etc)
They are custom so it will be several months before they are here.

Thank you to our buckle sponsors and everyone who made this series a great one!

We will not be having a spring series in 2026 but hope to have a few shows or special events in the fall - stay tuned!

Info for the Lavaca Ranch/Reined Cow Horse Show ⭐️
01/03/2026

Info for the Lavaca Ranch/Reined Cow Horse Show ⭐️

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12/27/2025

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In the show pen, you can’t afford to carry extra noise. Missed circles, a bad warm-up, outside pressure, none of it matters once you walk in. Give your attention to your horse and your job, and the rest loses its power.💜

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Chestnuts roasting…because this year in Texas it’s 80 degrees on Christmas Eve 🔥Happy Christmas y’all 🐴🎄❤️
12/24/2025

Chestnuts roasting…because this year in Texas it’s 80 degrees on Christmas Eve 🔥

Happy Christmas y’all 🐴🎄❤️

Interesting read about moving/relocating horses
12/15/2025

Interesting read about moving/relocating horses

There is something we do routinely with horses that we would struggle to accept for ourselves: we relocate them. Frequently. Sometimes with careful thought, sometimes casually, sometimes because the timing suits us. New yard. New field. New companions. New routine. New handlers. New expectations. And we rarely pause to consider what this actually demands of them, not emotionally but biologically.

A horse experiences the world through their nervous system, not through concepts like practical or necessary. That system is continuously assessing: Am I safe. Is this predictable. Where is threat. Can I recover. When we move a horse, we are not just changing their address. We are erasing the entire sensory map their nervous system relies on to answer those questions.

For a prey animal, every detail of their environment provides information. The terrain underfoot. The pattern of sounds. The quality of shelter. The rhythm of the day. How light moves through the space. Where other horses are. Whether they can move away when they need to. When a horse arrives somewhere new, the body immediately starts reassessment. Muscle tone shifts. Sleep patterns change. Digestion can alter. Startle responses may rise. Some horses become hypervigilant. Others go quiet and still, a state that often looks like settling in but may actually be conservation mode. This is not dysfunction. This is biology doing its job. But disruption without adequate recovery time carries a cumulative cost.

Horses do not simply live beside other horses. They regulate with them. Established herd relationships offer shared vigilance that allows rest, predictable social structure, buffering through proximity, and safety through numbers. Every time a horse is moved, these regulatory relationships are severed. Even when a horse appears to make friends quickly, the nervous system still has to renegotiate hierarchy, boundaries, proximity, and trust. Some horses do this obviously. Others do it quietly. Both require energy. A horse who has been moved many times may eventually stop investing deeply in connection, not because they do not want it, but because repeatedly rebuilding it is metabolically expensive.

After relocation, people often notice changes that get labelled as behavioural problems. Sudden spookiness. Separation anxiety. Irritability or shutdown. Resistance under saddle. Digestive changes. Altered movement quality. Loss of curiosity. Reactivity to touch. These are not random. They are often the nervous system saying: I am still orienting. I am still assessing threat. I am not yet resourced. When we ignore these signals, push through them, or try to suppress them, we do not build resilience. We build defensiveness.

To understand this without anthropomorphising, consider a human parallel. Imagine being repeatedly moved into unfamiliar homes in unfamiliar neighbourhoods with unfamiliar people, no choice, no preparation, and no stable base to return to. You would not need to feel emotional about it for your nervous system to register instability. Your sleep would shift. Your baseline tension would rise. Your tolerance for novelty would narrow. Your capacity to relax deeply would shrink. That is not a flaw in character. That is physiology. Horses operate under the same biological principles.

Some horses cope better than others depending on temperament, early experience, genetics, and support. But coping is not the same as thriving. And the absence of visible distress does not mean regulation. A horse can appear functional while carrying elevated baseline stress, and research in stress physiology shows that the body keeps score even when behaviour looks fine.

Before relocating a horse, it is worth slowing down to ask different questions. Is this move necessary or simply convenient. What does this horse stand to lose in terms of predictability, relationships, and environmental familiarity. What support will they need neurologically, not just behaviourally. Am I allowing enough recovery time, or expecting performance before safety is re-established. Am I watching for subtle strain in sleep, digestion, curiosity, recovery after work, or social engagement. How many times has this horse already faced this disruption. History matters.

When moves are necessary, we can support the transition responsibly. Give the horse several weeks for genuine settling rather than surface adjustment. Maintain as much routine consistency as possible. Reduce performance expectations at first. Provide choice where possible. Integrate into the herd gradually and thoughtfully. Watch for signs that the nervous system is still working hard. Recognise that turnout with compatible companions supports co-regulation. Understand that some horses need weeks or months, not days.

Stability is not a luxury. Horses do not reset simply because they arrive somewhere new. They carry their nervous system history forward. Every relocation adds to that history. Every disruption registers. Every period of stability is protective. This does not mean never moving horses. Life happens and circumstances change. Sometimes relocation genuinely improves welfare. It simply means acknowledging that movement is not neutral. Environment matters. Herd continuity matters. Predictability matters. Recovery time matters. And a regulated nervous system is not optional. It is the foundation for everything else we ask.

At WHJ, we are not asking for guilt. We are asking for awareness. When we truly understand the biological cost of repeated instability, we begin making different choices. We move horses less casually. We plan transitions more carefully. We watch more closely. We allow more time. We question whether convenience for us is worth destabilisation for them. These choices shape behaviour, health, and wellbeing across a lifetime. That is what it means to think well of our horses, not just in moments but in the long term.

Further reading:
The term “New Home Syndrome” has been used by Dr. Shelley Appleton to describe behavioural changes observed in horses following relocation. Readers interested in a behavioural transition perspective may wish to explore her work alongside nervous-system-based approaches. https://www.calmwillingconfidenthorses.com.au/blogs/new-home-syndrome

Address

30603 Vining Road
Waller, TX
77484

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 8pm
Tuesday 8am - 8pm
Wednesday 8am - 8pm
Thursday 8am - 8pm
Friday 8am - 8pm
Saturday 8am - 12pm
Sunday 8am - 8pm

Telephone

(281) 684-0275

Website

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