Limitless Riders

Limitless Riders *Year round
*Therapeutic riding for everyone
*Riding lessons
*Head instructor/multi-certified Specializing in english/hunter/jumper riding!

Offering Therapeutic horseback riding for individuals with special needs/abilities and beginner/intermediate/advanced riding lessons. Boarding and leasing available year round.

Great breakdown.......https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1QnxuMJqea/
01/18/2026

Great breakdown.......

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1QnxuMJqea/

If you pull on the inside rein, you'll do nothing more than turn your horse's head.

For correct bend, you need to use ALL your aids.

✅ INSIDE LEG at the girth.
This leg asks your horse to bend through his body, stimulating his intercostal muscles and encouraging him to shorten on the inside of his body and stretch on the outside of his body. Your inside leg also creates forward impulsion, encouraging your horse’s inside hind leg to step further underneath his center of gravity.

✅ OUTSIDE LEG behind the girth.
This leg guards your horse’s hindquarters. It prevents them from drifting outwards and keeps them on the curved line that you are following. By coming behind the girth, it also allows your horse’s ribs to expand on the outside, thereby working alongside your inside leg.

✅ INSIDE REIN asks for a small amount of inside lateral flexion.
This rein indicates the direction of bend and helps you to position your horse’s neck on the curved line. Your inside rein should not be used to turn your horse! This will result in too much neck bend and your horse falling out through his outside shoulder.

✅ OUTSIDE REIN controls the outside shoulder.
This rein helps to prevent too much neck bend, thereby helping you to control your horse’s outside shoulder, preventing him from falling out. Your outside rein is also used to control your horse’s tempo (speed of the rhythm) and give balancing half-halts.

✅ HEAD looking in the direction you want to go.
Your head should be up and looking ahead and around the circle, turn, or corner you are negotiating.

✅ WEIGHT in your inside seat bone.
You should have a little bit more weight in your inside seat bone and inside stirrup while remaining sat up straight; do not lean inwards. This small weight shift frees the outside of your horse’s body, allowing it to expand, and encourages your horse’s inside hind leg to step under your weight.

✅ SHOULDERS matching the angle of your horse’s shoulders
Your shoulders should be turned from your waist to the inside to match the angle of your horse’s shoulders.

✅ HIPS matching the angle of your horse’s hips
This should happen automatically as you position your legs correctly, as per above.

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Photo is a stock image.

This seems to mirror so many aspects in the horse industry now days. Sometimes its the blind following the blind...........
01/01/2026

This seems to mirror so many aspects in the horse industry now days. Sometimes its the blind following the blind........from horse training to horse care, experience doesn't seem to matter as much as someone's opinion. Yet people have stopped questioning, having conversations to learn why someone does something differently......if its not the norm....it must be wrong....from blanketing, feeding hay, to saddle fit and on and on. I will always continue to do what I have learned through failure and success what is best for our horses even if Facebook, Google, and all the new horse experts(I have a horse and read, or was told.....)say/think differently. Each person/owner has to choose to either follow the crowd or be willing to get out of the box and learn, fail, question, listen, flex, and cultivate what you find is best for you and your horses ❤️

Looking back to when I first graduated from veterinary school, prepurchase examinations were refreshingly simple. Horses fell into three clear categories: those with no apparent problems, those who were actively lame, and those who were what we called "serviceably sound." That third category has practically disappeared from modern veterinary practice, and I believe we're all worse off for it.

Serviceably sound horses weren't perfect specimens. They might have shown a little stiffness in one direction or carried themselves differently than a younger horse would. But these horses had been reliably doing their jobs for years, and there was every reason to believe they could continue for years more. Today, in our era of exhaustive radiographs, aggressive flexion tests, and what I affectionately call Scientific Wild Guesses about the future, I find myself wondering what happened to simply accepting a good, working horse for what he is.

The transformation hit me hardest about two years ago when I became the fourth veterinarian to examine a twenty-year-old warmblood mare. This horse had been subjected to every diagnostic tool modern veterinary medicine offers: MRIs, bone scans, ultrasounds, and radiographs of virtually every skeletal structure in her body. Multiple specialists from prestigious hospitals had weighed in with their professional opinions. The consensus was unanimous and dire: this mare should never be ridden again. The diagnostic reports left no room for interpretation.

When the owner called me, I honestly questioned what unique perspective I could possibly offer after such thorough evaluation by my colleagues. Still, I went through my examination process. I ran my hands along her legs and felt the subtle swelling in her stifle joints. When I flexed her legs, I noted the expected stiffness. Throughout the entire examination, this gentle, patient mare cooperated completely, never resisting or objecting to anything I asked of her. Then I requested to see her move. Her gait certainly wasn't expansive or effortless, but she moved forward willingly and, if I'm any judge of equine demeanor, happily.

I turned to the owner and asked a question that apparently none of my predecessors had considered important: "What do you want to do with her?"

The owner, who had clearly invested enough in diagnostics to fund a small developing nation, replied that she hoped the mare could give lessons to children.

My response was simple: "Why don't you give it a try?"

The owner's brow furrowed with concern. "But what about all of those reports?" she asked, gesturing to the stack of dire professional opinions.

I looked at the mare, then back at the owner. "Don't let her read them."

Three years have passed since that conversation, and that supposedly unrideable mare continues to give lessons to children regularly and happily. She doesn't move quickly or for extended periods, and she benefits from occasional pain-relieving medication. But she has a purpose, she's adored by countless young riders, and by all observable measures, she's content with her life.

Another case stays with me just as powerfully. An eighteen-year-old gelding had been through the complete diagnostic circus: MRI, nerve blocks, radiographs, medication trials, and therapeutic shoeing adjustments. All of this was in response to a hoof issue that caused a slight forelimb lameness, particularly noticeable when circling. I drove well beyond my normal practice area to evaluate this horse and review the mountain of accumulated data. After my examination, I asked the owner about the horse's current use.

"I take him out for walks on the trail two or three times a week," she explained.

My recommendation seemed almost too simple: "Why not give him a small dose of pain reliever before your trail walks and let him enjoy walking around this beautiful arena the rest of the time?"

The owner's immediate concern revealed how deeply the culture of worry had taken root. "But won't the pain reliever destroy his stomach?" she asked anxiously.

"No," I assured her.

That conversation happened four years ago. I encountered the owners at a lecture I presented about a year later, and everyone involved was thriving. As far as I know, the gelding's stomach remained intact, and the arrangement continues to work beautifully for both horse and owner.

I share these stories because the commercial side of the equine industry seems determined to convince horse owners that anything less than perfection is unacceptable. Words like "optimum," "ideal," and other carefully chosen marketing language imply that every horse harbors some hidden pathology just waiting to manifest as catastrophe. The message being sold is dangerously binary: your horse is either perfect or doomed.

This relentless pursuit of flawless equine health is, in my professional opinion, largely harmful. The constant anxiety, the hours spent researching potential problems on the internet, the fear of what might go wrong—all of this robs horse owners of the fundamental joy that should come with horse ownership. When a horse glances at his flank, it almost never means he's experiencing intestinal torsion. When a horse receives appropriate nutrition, he's not teetering on the edge of some nutritional catastrophe that only the latest miracle supplement can prevent. Excessive worry leads to unnecessary diagnostic testing, wasted money on veterinary and other services, and a futile quest for reassurance through endless interventions and products.

Understanding and monitoring your horse's health is certainly important. But there's a vast difference between reasonable concern when your horse shows signs of illness or injury and perpetual anxiety about potential future problems. Constant worrying about a healthy, normal horse creates problems primarily for the owner, not the horse.

Just recently, a seventy-year-old client brought me her nineteen-year-old gelding. She'd acquired him from a riding school and was concerned because someone had mentioned he was limping. I watched him trot and confirmed there was a slight irregularity in his gait.

"What do you do with him?" I inquired.

"I enjoy walking on the trails with him on weekends with my friends. Or maybe every other weekend," she replied.

I palpated his pastern and felt a minor enlargement. I was fairly certain he had some degree of osteoarthritis, commonly called ringbone.

Here's what I didn't recommend: radiographs, bone scans, MRIs, joint injections, joint supplements, specialty shoeing, liniments, platelet-rich plasma therapy, or stem cell treatments.

Instead, I gestured toward her seventy-five-year-old husband Fred and asked, "How's Fred doing? Is he moving around like he did when you two got married fifty years ago?"

She laughed. "No, definitely not."

"Thinking about trading him in?"

"Only sometimes," she said with a smile.

I suggested she continue enjoying those pleasant long walks and perhaps give the horse—not Fred, as I don't prescribe human medications—a pain reliever if he seemed uncomfortable. Several months have passed and everything continues to go wonderfully. I actually saw them both just the other day. The situation is ideal for everyone involved. Nobody moves with perfect soundness, Fred included. But everyone is functional, serviceable, and most importantly, happy.

So what does "serviceable" actually mean? To me, it means the horse can perform the work being asked of him without suffering. Horses typically go out and give their best effort—it's one of the qualities we treasure most about them. Our responsibility is to care for them, but that responsibility doesn't include achieving the impossible goal of perfection. A horse can be imperfect and still be wonderful.

Mark Twain captured a certain wisdom about horses when he wrote: "I preferred a safe horse to a fast one—I would like to have an excessively gentle horse—a horse with no spirit whatever—a lame one, if he had such a thing." (Roughing It, Chapter 64)

I rarely view situations in absolute terms. I believe firmly that the perfect is the enemy of the good. A horse isn't simply good or bad, serviceable or worthless. The equine world is full of wonderful horses who might have some minor flaw or imperfection but who will nevertheless be the best horse their owner could ever hope for. Don't pass by one of these treasures simply because he doesn't match someone else's arbitrary definition of perfection. He might not be flawless, but he can still be serviceable, useful, and even absolutely great.

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How is it almost Jan?? Ugh....after being sick with pneumonia for the past 4 1/2 weeks I feel like Ive missed everything...
12/29/2025

How is it almost Jan?? Ugh....after being sick with pneumonia for the past 4 1/2 weeks I feel like Ive missed everything. G, Dev and Barb have been amazing keeping things running and slowly getting our updates done. We are so excited for 2026!
In process-
**White barn-
*lights getting installed
*Tack lockers finished
*tie stalls
*Tack moved down
**Red barn-
*Feed/shop door/done
*outside light installed
**New Run in shelters 🎉
**Hot tub/Cold plunge/DONE(Did you know this is included with riders club and boarding?🎉)
Coming this Spring- *Lay up stall
**4 horse walker installed
**Swimming pond finished
**Patience pole installed
**Addiional auto waterer
**Obstacle course on the track

Thanks everyone for being part of the Limitless fam, we love you all, and love that you are part of the journey building this oasis. Its hard to remember 7yrs ago this was all a corn field. Here's to an amazing 2026 with all of you ❤️

Available- 2001 Sundowner Trail blazer 2, 4 horse slant, with mid tack and collapsible rear tack. We love this trailer, ...
11/07/2025

Available- 2001 Sundowner Trail blazer 2, 4 horse slant, with mid tack and collapsible rear tack.
We love this trailer, but needed a larger one for shows. If we could keep this and the new one we would!
Pros:
Auto jack
Great mid tack
Escape door 1st stall
Drop down windows one side
Slide windows other side
Hay rack on top
Super cute and comfortable living quarters
A/C (living quarters)
Fridge, micro, sink
Toilet/shower
Extra storage cabinets
Newer tires (last yr)
Solid floors/mats
Spare tire
Stored the last few winters

Cons-
*Some screens could be replaced on windows in horse area
*1 slant has a loose k**b, shouldn't be a big fix
*We didn't get it power washed before cold weather 😒
*Not super pretty on the outside, was acid washed, but certainly not bad.
Frederic, Wi
$26,500

Please PM, comments are hard to keep up with.

11/03/2025

🥰 Raise Her in the Barn

Put your daughter in the barn —
where mornings smell of hay and hope,
and every sunrise whispers a new lesson. 🌾

Let her chase the dust motes that dance in the golden light,
and learn early that hard work doesn’t ask for applause —
it rewards you quietly, in confidence and calm.

Let her stand beside a 1,000-pound teacher
who never speaks a word,
yet teaches her patience, trust, and courage —
one soft nudge, one small victory at a time. 🐴

Watch her learn that balance isn’t just for the saddle —
it’s for life.
That when she falls, she’ll stand taller.
That respect is earned, not demanded.
That responsibility isn’t heavy when it’s done with love.

Let her feel the rhythm of hoofbeats echo in her heart —
the heartbeat of strength, grace, and quiet resilience.
Let her find beauty not in perfection,
but in muddy boots, messy braids, and a heart full of grit.

Because in that barn,
she’s not just learning to ride —
she’s learning to live.

One day, when the world calls her forward,
you’ll see it — that unshakable calm in her eyes,
that kindness in her hands,
that courage in her soul.

You’ll smile and know —
she was raised where hearts beat in rhythm with hooves. ❤️🐎

So proud of these girls! They worked their butts off this last year and it shows!  Super fun night at the  "Kentucky Der...
11/02/2025

So proud of these girls! They worked their butts off this last year and it shows! Super fun night at the "Kentucky Derby" WWHSA year end awards banquet.

10/04/2025

These babies are growing so well, can't wait to get them started ❤️
*Priya(Montana/Wylder)
Haflinger, quarter horse, fjord
*Justice (Liberty/Wylder)
Haflinger/Gypsy vanner
*Skywalker (Kahlua/Crush)
Haflinger, quarter horse, Arabian
*Dash (Gracie/Unknown)
Kill pen in Texas

09/16/2025

Oh Priya......you goofball

09/08/2025

After much deliberation, we are canceling this year's show. We will miss seeing you all terribly. We have a few things going on that we just can't get around. We hope to see you all next year!

and loving our partners (animals) through their not Perfect days as they love us through ours❤️ This 1000%......... I th...
09/06/2025

and loving our partners (animals) through their not Perfect days as they love us through ours❤️ This 1000%......... I think the true meaning of showmanship has been forgotten/re-defined and its hard to watch.

Those of you who have been thinking of leasing a horse, leases close Sept 1st. So get ahold of me to get signed up :)
08/28/2025

Those of you who have been thinking of leasing a horse, leases close Sept 1st. So get ahold of me to get signed up :)

That face says it all.....Katie Reibe and Tyrian ❤️
08/14/2025

That face says it all.....Katie Reibe and Tyrian ❤️

Address

2631 80th Street
Frederic, WI
54837

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