Cornerstone Equestrian Centre SA

Cornerstone Equestrian Centre SA We offer stabling, outrides, beginner to advanced horse riding lessons and buying & selling of ponies
(1)

12/06/2026

If you dare yourself to keep going when you think you’ve reached rock bottom. When you think you’re at the end of the rope and you can’t do anything more, you’ll find that if you just keep going just a little bit more, you’ll find something remarkable about how far you can go still. It’s when you dig down deeper, that’s where you’ll find yourself.

05/06/2026

🐴🌟 Some stallions leave a legacy. Furioso II created a dynasty.

A true icon of European sport horse breeding, Furioso II is remembered for passing on the qualities every rider dreams of—athleticism, intelligence, elegance, and exceptional rideability.

Born in 1965, this remarkable stallion combined the refinement and courage of his Thoroughbred heritage with the power and versatility needed for modern sport. His influence quickly spread through warmblood breeding programs, particularly within Oldenburg and Selle Français bloodlines, where his offspring earned a reputation for talent and reliability.

From show jumping arenas to dressage rings and eventing courses, generations of horses carrying Furioso II blood have excelled at the highest levels. His descendants continue to appear in elite pedigrees around the world, proving that great genetics stand the test of time.

More than half a century later, Furioso II remains a symbol of excellence—a stallion whose impact can still be seen in the sport horses of today.

🏆 A legend in the breeding shed. A lasting influence in the arena.

05/06/2026

Progress does not always look peaceful 🐴💛

Sometimes it looks like trying again after a wobble.

Sometimes it looks like learning something the hard way.

Sometimes it looks like needing more time than you thought you would.

Sometimes it looks like going backwards before your brain and body feel safe enough to move forwards again 🌱

In trauma-informed work, we have to be really careful not to measure progress only by what looks neat from the outside.

A young person who speaks less one week is not be “going backwards” 🫶

A client who needs the same activity repeated is not “stuck” 🔁

A child who struggles after doing well is not be “attention-seeking” or “not trying” 💛

They may be processing.
They may be testing safety.
They may be tired.
They may be learning that connection does not disappear when things get difficult.

Horses remind us of this beautifully 🐴✨

Some days, the relationship feels soft and easy.

Other days, there is hesitation, tension, uncertainty, or a very firm “no thank you” from the pony department 😂🐴

That does not mean the work has failed.

It means we slow down.
We listen more carefully.
We stop forcing the finish line.
We notice the tiny changes 🌿

The quieter breath.
The softer shoulders.
The moment they come back after walking away.
The first time they ask for help.
The first time they say, “I don’t know,” instead of pretending they are fine.

That is progress too 💛

At Equimotional, we believe growth should be measured with curiosity, not judgement.

Because healing is rarely tidy.

And honestly, neither are horses 🐴😂

05/06/2026
04/06/2026

Voltaire was a remarkable bay stallion foaled in 1979, remembered as both an international Grand Prix show jumper and an influential sport-horse sire. With Furioso II as his sire and Gogo Moeve as his dam, he carried some of the finest jumping bloodlines in Europe. 🐎✨

In the arena, Voltaire proved his quality at international level, later becoming even more famous through his offspring. He was approved by major studbooks including KWPN, Hanoverian, Selle Français, Oldenburg and BWP, leaving a legacy that reached across show jumping, dressage and breeding. 🌍

His name is linked with power, scope, courage and class — the qualities breeders and riders still admire today. Voltaire was not just a stallion; he was a foundation influence whose blood continues to appear in modern sport horses. 💛

A true great of the equestrian world.

04/06/2026

The canter depart, aka the transition into canter, is one of the most diagnostic moments in riding. It tells you immediately what the rider actually has and what they do not yet have in terms of balance, timing, feel, and preparation. A clean balanced canter depart on the correct lead does not happen by accident. It happens because the rider prepared the horse correctly, applied the aids clearly, and had the balance and core stability to stay with the transition rather than getting left behind it. Here is what goes wrong and how to fix each one...

1. The horse picks up the wrong lead.
This is almost always a preparation problem rather than an aid problem. The horse picks up the wrong lead when it is not balanced and bent correctly before the aid is given. Before the canter depart, ask for correct bend through the last corner or circle, confirm the horse is soft on the inside rein and connected to the outside one, and then ask. A correctly prepared horse picks up the correct lead far more consistently than one that was surprised by the transition from a straight or incorrectly bent position.

2. The horse runs into the canter.
A horse that accelerates at the trot before breaking into canter is a horse that was pushed into the transition rather than lifted into it. The aids came from the leg alone without a half halt first to rebalance and engage the hindquarters. A half halt two to three strides before the canter aid rebalances the horse, lightens the forehand, and creates the engagement that makes a clean upward transition possible. Without it, the horse falls forward into canter rather than stepping under and up into it. Teach your students to half halt first, every single time, before the canter aid is applied.

3. The rider gets left behind.
A rider who tips forward or gets launched out of the saddle at the canter depart lost their position in the transition. This almost always comes from one of two places, either bracing against the transition instead of following it or not having enough core stability to absorb the moment the canter stride begins. The fix for bracing is feel work such as lunge line transitions where the student focuses entirely on softening into the upward transition rather than stiffening against it. The fix for core instability is progressive no stirrup work and two point at the canter before asking for the depart itself. A rider who can hold two point through a canter transition has the balance and stability to stay with a depart without getting thrown.

4. The horse ignores the aid entirely.
A horse that does not respond to the canter aid is a horse that has learned it does not have to. This is almost always a rider problem that has become a horse problem over time. Repeated unclear or uncommitted aids train a horse to wait for a bigger signal and eventually the escalation becomes the normal aid. The fix starts with making sure the aid is clear deliberate and applied once before escalating, not a series of squeezes that the horse has learned to ignore. If the horse does not respond to a clear aid reinforce it immediately and consistently every time. Inconsistency in the response to the aid is what teaches a horse to test it.

5. The depart is correct but falls apart immediately.
A clean depart that breaks down within a few strides tells you the horse was not genuinely in front of the leg or balanced before the transition and that the rider got lucky on the depart itself but there was nothing underneath it to sustain the canter. The fix is the quality of the trot work before the depart. A horse that is forward off the leg, genuinely connected, and balanced through the corners will maintain the canter after the depart because the energy that created the transition is still there. A horse scraped into canter from a flat disengaged trot has nowhere to go but back to trot.

Here are some exercises that actually fix canter departs...

- Transitions on a circle. Ask for the depart at a specific point on the circle such as at the top, at the side, etc and ask for a downward transition back to trot after four to six strides. Return to the same point on the circle and ask again. Repeated short canter transitions on a circle develop the horse's balance in the depart and the rider's feel for preparation and timing without the pressure of sustaining a full canter around the arena.

- Trot to canter over a ground pole. Place a single ground pole on the track and ask your student to trot over it and pick up the canter on the landing side. The pole encourages the horse to step under and lift through the transition and gives the rider a clear preparation point to work toward. A horse that rushes to the pole is a horse that needs more half halt work before the exercise. A horse that steps over calmly and picks up the canter cleanly has found the right balance for the transition.

- Canter from walk. For more advanced riders a walk to canter transition bypasses the rushing trot entirely and requires genuine engagement of the hindquarters and clear preparation from the rider. It is harder than a trot to canter depart and fixing it fixes the trot to canter at the same time because the aids and preparation are identical but just more obvious in their absence at the walk.

A clean canter depart is not luck and it is not natural talent. It is preparation timing and balance built through correct progressive work. Fix the preparation and most canter depart problems fix themselves.

What is the most common canter depart problem you see in your students and what fixed it?

03/06/2026

It definitely should be allowed… 🤷‍♀️🐴🥰 right?!?

03/06/2026

There are moments you can never buy, recreate, or bring back. They last only a few minutes… yet stay in your heart forever. And mornings beside a horse are exactly like that.

When the sun is only beginning to touch the earth, when the grass is still cold with dew, and the world feels so quiet it’s as if time itself has stopped. In those moments, a horse is not just standing beside you. It becomes part of your peace. Part of you.

People often think happiness must be something big. Loud. Impossible to reach. But the truth is, sometimes it looks exactly like this: a warm sunrise, soft golden light, the breath of a horse in the cool morning air… and the feeling that you need nothing else.

Horses look at us differently. Without judgment. Without pretending. They never ask what you do for a living, how much money you make, or how many mistakes you’ve made in life. They care about only one thing — who you truly are inside.

And maybe that’s why people become more honest around them. Calmer. More alive.

In a world where everything changes too fast, a horse reminds us of simple things. Silence. Trust. Moments when nothing has to be proven. When it is enough just to be there together.

Look at this scene. There is no rush in it. No city noise, no unnecessary words, no performance for others. Only a horse, the sunrise, and a warmth you can almost feel even through the photo.

Maybe these are the moments that are the real meaning of life. Not perfect. Not staged. But so sincere that you wish you could stop time and stay there just a little longer.

Because some of the best moments in life truly happen when a horse is beside you.

Address

Farm 167 Zwartkop Lekkerhoekie (R55)
Centurion
0157

Opening Hours

Monday 13:00 - 17:00
Tuesday 08:00 - 17:00
Wednesday 08:00 - 17:00
Thursday 08:00 - 17:00
Friday 08:00 - 17:00
Saturday 08:00 - 17:00
Sunday 08:00 - 12:00

Telephone

+27843507238

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Cornerstone Equestrian Centre SA posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Cornerstone Equestrian Centre SA:

Share