First Tour of the Year is a Resounding Success

0314_01

We were in Lexington, Virginia, at the Virginia Horse Center over the weekend putting on our first Walkabout Tour of the year. It was a great event with many new horsemen joining us and longtime members returning to continue to add to their knowledge. Throughout the weekend, Clinton and Professional Clinicians Kristin Hamacher and Jeff Davis worked with Clinton’s personal horses and several local horses in a colt starting demonstration, a trouble-free trailer loading session, a gaining respect on the ground demonstration and a riding with confidence session.

Throughout the event, Clinton gave away over $9,000 worth of training tools and equipment, including a saddle. It was a big weekend for our Ritchie Charity Ball Toss group Serenity Farm Equine Sanctuary as wellThe non-profit is dedicated to saving all equines and provides equine-assisted learning experiences for small and large groups, many of which are made up of at-risk children and individuals with disabilities. Thanks to the generosity of attendees, the foundation raised $4,771.

A big thank you to our sponsors, especially the Walkabout Tour featured sponsor, Ritchie Industries, and everyone who joined us in Lexington to make the event a huge success!

Two more Walkabout Tours remain on our 2023 schedule. Get all the details on our website.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1218_04

7 years ago

Loving the #MobileMethod

Thanks to the Downunder Horsemanship app and the digital training kits, it’s easier than ever to study the Method and…

Read More
1218_04

7 years ago

Take the Training Videos Into the Arena

Ever wish you had Clinton’s advice and troubleshooting tips in the arena with you as you’re working your horse? If…

Read More
0123_Tip

8 years ago

Training Tip: Ask Clinton: Letting Others Ride Your Horse

Q: A client of mine is a novice rider and has an ex-barrel racer that is too much for them…

Read More
FILES2f20142f102f1028_Tip.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Training Tip: Three Ingredients to a Truly Broke Horse

Many horses are rideable, but few are truly well broke. I define a well broke horse as one who is…

Read More