Horse Stables in Kansas
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Home > Local Horse Stables by State > Kansas Horse Boarding
Looking for a Kansas horse stable? Find boarding, barns and equestrian centers in your area with this nationwide, city by city listing. From large facilities (the kind with air conditioned and covered riding arenas, pro trainers, fully-stocked tack shops and large wooden stalls) to smaller, more private situations offering overnight stabling, simple pipe corrals, senior horse pasture or mare care. Here are several examples:
Q: How do I find riding barns in Boise, ID with access to park trails, riding lessons and turnout?
A: Click "By Your Location" (left) then "Idaho" for a directory of horse barns, stables and eq centers near you.
Q: I actively compete (jumping) - where would I get contact info for hunter jumper stables in Kansas?
A: English riders, (dressage, hunter-jumpers, eventers) find your local training stables in Kansas offering indoor arenas with proper footing, pro training and equipment you need.
Q: I can't keep horses here in my area so I need to locate a reliable barn near me, specifically, an overnight horse boarding facility in Ohio with an indoor riding arena, trainers and turnout.
A: To locate horse barns in Ohio, click on "By Your Location" (left) then on "Ohio" You'll be directed to equestrian centers and boarding facilities offering a wide range of services, some simply offering self care / "do it yourself turnout," and senior pasture, others offering tack stores, covered riding arenas, professional training, fancy wooden stalls and much more.
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Here's your city by city listing; see Horse Stables in Kansas:
| Baxter Springs | Belvue | BONNER SPRINGS | Bucyrus |
| EDGERTON | Leavenworth | Manhattan | MANHATTEN |
| Olathe | Russell | Salina | Shawnee Mission |
| Spring Hill | TOPEKA | Udall | Wa Keeney |
| WAKARUSA | Wellsville |
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Round Pen First Steps
Horse owners and riders: If you'd like to put a solid foundation on your horse - or finally put an end to a nagging training issue, I would suggest the investment of $6.99 in one of my downloadable books:
- Download and print from your home computer
- 5 days, 5 chapters
- Learn at your own pace
An excerpt from "Round Pen First Steps":
If you have a spot on the horse (fore or aft) that he seems to be particularly nervous about, then move your hands quickly. Take your hand lightening-quick over his ears, for instance, before he can move his head away. The quick movement shows the horse that "that's all you wanted" and from there you'll begin moving your hands more slowly over that spot until you can rest them there.
Get your horse thoroughly "sacked out" to the touch of your hands on his ears, over his eyes and the cinch/girth area. A common spot, often overlooked is his chin and lips. Work that hairy chin over good, taking both hands and rubbing it from any direction you can think of. Get him virtually deadened to your touch or you'll be dealing with his head bobbing and weaving when you try to bridle up the first time. (Note: If you can't take two hands to part his lips and see his teeth, and you can't stick your fingers in his ears without him tossing his head, you haven't worked enough.) (rpt)
Other available courses include:
When Your Horse Rears: How to Stop It
Get On Your Horse: Fix Your Mounting Problems
How to Start a Horse: Bridling to 1st Ride
Your Foal: Essential Training
Stop Bucking (reviews)
Round Pen: First Steps (reviews)
Rein In Your Horse's Speed (For Owners of Nervous or Bolting Horses) (reviews)
Trailer Training (read the reviews)

