Don’t Miss the Method in Missouri This Weekend

0822_01

Clinton is bringing the Method to Lake St. Louis, Missouri this weekend for our last Walkabout Tour of the year! Presented by Ritchie Industries, the tour will take place at the National Equestrian Center and feature a new lineup of training demos that includes:

  • Colt starting
  • Training on the trail
  • Introducing a horse to obstacles
  • Advanced riding
  • Training a performance horse
  • Advanced groundwork
  • One-on-one student lesson
  • Desensitizing a spooky horse
  • Trailer loading

Saddle Up for St. Jude will be joining us as our Ritchie Charity Ball Toss organization. The group will sell tennis balls throughout the event to audience members in order to raise funds for their program. All proceeds raised go straight to the program. On Sunday, audience members who purchased the tennis balls will toss them into the arena trying to be the closest to a pre-determined marker. Those closest to the marker will win Clinton’s instructional DVDs and Downunder Horsemanship training tools.

No Worries Club members receive five FREE tickets per year to attend tours, and non-members can purchase tickets for $25/weekend. Learn more about the Walkabout Tour on our website.

More News

Back to all news

See All
FILES2f20152f082f0901_06a.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Help Us Help You

Downunder Horsemanship invites you to let your voice be heard and participate in our Equestrian Retail Market Survey – participants…

Read More
ritchie_blog

3 years ago

Ritchie. Because every saved drop matters.

The benefits of adding a Ritchie to your operation extend far beyond saving you time, money, and water. By choosing…

Read More
FILES2f20152f112f0922_06.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Vetericyn Offering Scholarships

The makers of Vetericyn products are excited to announce the 2016 Vetericyn’s Future Innovators of Agriculture Scholarship! Three $1,000 scholarships…

Read More
1130_Tip

4 years ago

Training Tip: How to Stop a Horse From Putting His Tongue Over the Bit

Question: I have a 3-year-old Quarter Horse gelding that I bought just over six months ago. He was already “broke”…

Read More