Horse Riding Lesson's!

The Importance Of Formal Lessons

Riding a horse looks so simple that you shouldn't need formal lessons, right? Actually, while it may
be easy to fall off a horse, staying on is a bit trickier. Staying on and looking good is even harder.
Few people can manage all of the intricacies of horseback riding without lessons.

One of the worst things you can do  is to try to teach yourself to ride. Without even realizing it, you
may be sitting on your horse the wrong way, holding the reins wrong or using poor posture. By the
time you decide to take formal lessons, these behaviors may be so ingrained that you won't be able
to learn the correct way to ride a horse without taking many hours of remedial training. Even worse,
you may have an experience that puts you off horseback riding forever, such as being knocked off a
runaway horse by a low hanging tree branch or having a horse buck you off, just because you don't
know what to do when different situations occur.

When you take formal lessons, your instructor may spend what seems like forever on the most
boring exercises, like learning to use the reins to turn your horse or posting without using stirrups,
when all you want to learn is how to ride like the wind. However, all of these seemingly endless drills
are the stepping stones that enable you to become a skilled and graceful rider.

If you enjoy learning to perfect the way you ride your horse and you like competing in events, you
may want to take even more lessons. Dressage is a complicated and intricate form of horseback
riding that requires a great deal of professional training for both the horse and rider. Of course,
there's nothing wrong with learning to ride so you can spend a long summer day riding through the
woods, either.

If you or your child is going to take horseback riding lessons, then they are going to need certain
clothing and safety equipment. Whether you are participating in an English private horseback riding
lesson, or a Western group horse riding lesson, safety equipment is of the utmost importance.



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
RED STAR STABLES RIDING INSTRUCTORS


Steve Schafetz, Instructor and Horse Trainer
Originally from New York, Steve has been training horses for over 10 years.
His horses Crystal and Drifter are well mannered and are trained in various disciplines such as English, Western,
jumping and Dressage. He is well trusted and is regularly asked to work many of the horses at Red Star.























Diane Withem
Diane has been riding since she was two years old when her uncle first put her on her cousin's 16hh thoroughbred
jumper and she's been hooked ever since!  Her philosophy for teaching is one of "safety first" through an
understanding of how a horse's mind works.  Diane rode and showed hunter/jumpers and Arabians as a high
school/college student, and more recently has ridden and shown her Arabian horses in local and regional shows.  She
worked as an instructor at a riding school in California during high school, co-taught  a college riding class in
Bellinghham ,WA while attending school there, and has been teaching friends and their children to ride for the past 15
years.






















CALL THE STABLES AT
332-0202
OR EMAIL
INFO@REDSTARSTABLES.COM
FOR ALL THE INFORMATION AND TO SCHEDULE AN INDIVIDUAL OR GROUP LESSON