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Locality: Ridge, New York

Phone: +1 631-747-6416



Address: Smith Rd 11961 Ridge, NY, US

Likes: 329

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Fox View Equestrian 02.01.2021

Best way to spend your birthday is with the horses #barnhairdontcare

Fox View Equestrian 20.12.2020

Such a family man

Fox View Equestrian 03.12.2020

We’ll see everyone tomorrow at 11!!

Fox View Equestrian 28.11.2020

Merry Christmas to all And to all a Goodnight

Fox View Equestrian 18.11.2020

Cutie outfit and pretty sky for our Christmas Eve’s eve ride

Fox View Equestrian 30.10.2020

Ashleigh won Best Horse Costume for her group. Little Red Riding Hood and the big bad wolf disguised as grandma. So creative and how adorable are these horse treats from @heartyhorsecookieco

Fox View Equestrian 25.10.2020

So much fun today during our costume contest I have a million pictures to share but just wanted to say thank you to everyone who came out and made it a great day! Even when our last two groups got rained on everyone brought their game faces and still had a blast!

Fox View Equestrian 23.09.2020

So proud of Cameron’s progress

Fox View Equestrian 09.09.2020

When the little brother’s a natural

Fox View Equestrian 05.09.2020

Both my besties in one day #cutiealert

Fox View Equestrian 18.08.2020

A little Charm action

Fox View Equestrian 03.08.2020

A thought-provoking read. By Jane Smiley Most horses pass from one human to another - some horsemen and women are patient and forgiving, others are rigorous and... demanding, others are cruel, others are ignorant. Horses have to learn how to, at the minimum, walk, trot, canter, gallop, go on trails and maybe jump, to be treated by the vet, all with sense and good manners. Talented Thoroughbreds must learn how to win races, and if they can't do that, they must learn how to negotiate courses and jump over strange obstacles without touching them, or do complicated dance like movements or control cattle or accommodate severely handicapped children and adults in therapy work. Many horses learn all of these things in the course of a single lifetime. Besides this, they learn to understand and fit into the successive social systems of other horses they meet along the way. A horse's life is rather like twenty years in foster care, or in and out of prison, while at the same time changing schools over and over and discovering that not only do the other students already have their own social groups, but that what you learned at the old school hasn't much application at the new one. We do not require as much of any other species, including humans. That horses frequently excel, that they exceed the expectations of their owners and trainers in such circumstances, is as much a testament to their intelligence and adaptability as to their relationship skills or their natural generosity or their inborn nature. That they sometimes manifest the same symptoms as abandoned orphans - distress, strange behaviors, anger, fear - is less surprising than that they usually don't. No one expects a child, or even a dog to develop its intellectual capacities living in a box 23 hours a day and then doing controlled exercises the remaining one. Mammal minds develop through social interaction and stimulation. A horse that seems "stupid", "slow", "stubborn", etc. might just have not gotten the chance to learn! Take care of your horses and treasure them.

Fox View Equestrian 30.07.2020

New matching foxy hats

Fox View Equestrian 20.07.2020

I’d like to tag the moms of all the kids who ride here

Fox View Equestrian 12.07.2020

Sibling lessons