no spam ever; just an update on new blogs and candle promos
type below and hit enter
Thanks for being here. I write about caregiving, business, and the joys that connect horse life and beyond
Read more about me
Services just for equestrian businesses - let me help!
For most of my adult life, I believed I understood what community meant. I had colleagues, acquaintances, and a robust group of people I could call if I ever needed a favor. In other words: I had a network. And for a while, I thought that was enough.
But a network is not a community.
A network is transactional; a community is relational.
A network keeps score; a community keeps showing up.
The older I get, and the more deeply intertwined my life becomes with horses, the more I understand how stark that difference is — and why it matters so much.
Networking is easy. You exchange contact information, you nod politely, and maybe — if the situation calls for it — you help each other out a few times. It’s a list of names, a handful of introductions, a quiet hope for future usefulness.
Community is different.
Community is built through repeated presence.
It is curated through shared values, earned trust, and the long, slow work of knowing who stands with you when things go sideways.
My horse community — the one I’ve created and deliberately tended over years — is my most treasured community of all. Not because every person I meet at a barn or an event becomes a close friend, but because the ones who do form a constellation of people who love horses the way I do, care for them the way I do, and who move through the equestrian world with integrity.
Community is not accidental.
It is something we choose; we shape; we protect.
Real community rarely announces itself with fanfare. More often, it reveals itself in the quiet, unglamorous moments.
It’s showing up at the barn in clean “street wear”, ready for a casual visit, and finding yourself kneeling in the aisle helping a friend dress a horse’s wound because she’s inexperienced and nervous to do it herself. It’s three other riders drifting over — not to criticize or grandstand — but to offer supplies, reassurance, and thoughtful suggestions. No barking orders. No dominance displays. Just the soft hum of people who care.
It’s the social-media friend you’ve never met in person who has, for reasons you can’t quite explain, been a gentle, steady presence for years; the one who nudges you (kindly yet firmly) into attending your first Equine Affaire. And somehow, in those first real-life conversations, you find yourself hoping your actual personality hasn’t scared her away. To your delight and amazement, it hasn’t.
It’s the generosity of information shared not to impress or correct, but simply to help. Here’s what worked for my horse. Here’s what didn’t. Here’s what I learned the hard way. With absolutely no judgment if you choose a different path. That is the best kind of wisdom: the kind that arrives without an agenda.
True community often shows itself most clearly in moments of crisis.
When my horse Cosmo needed to get to a veterinary hospital and I had already sold my trailer, I sent a text to a rehab center who knew my horse. They responded in under five minutes. Just another five minutes later, transport arrangements were made. They were on it. Not only did they remember him, they cared about him. And there was zero hesitation, even knowing that I was moving across the country and there would be no future business from me.
That is not networking.
That is humanity.
My California horse community — built over ten years, many barns, and an evolving herd — showed me what deep-rooted equestrian relationships can accomplish.
The three horses I needed to rehome before moving east was tearing me up. Mini horses, especially, can end up in heartbreaking situations and I was a wreck about their future. But through my trainer, my vet, and a fellow barn mate, I found what can only be described as a dream home. A home that honored my wish to keep my minis together and all my hopes for them. At their new barn they are thriving with people who genuinely love them and receiving more attention than I ever had the time to give.
And my beloved quarter horse? That story still makes me smile. I had initially hoped she would go to a young rider I adored. But the more aware I became about my horse’s time off and the kind of ride she would be, the more I realized I couldn’t in good conscience place the responsibility for her on a hopeful kid who just wanted her first horse. Her mother understood completely when I reneged. No guilt. No pressure. Only grace.
Months later, when that same mother found the perfect horse for her daughter, she sent photos. She wanted me to share in their joy. And my mare? She ended up exactly where she was meant to be — with an experienced horsewoman and amazing person who completely cherishes her.
To this day, all these families send me updates. Photos. Stories. Little glimpses of the lives my horses now lead. That is community.
It’s the ongoing thread that doesn’t snap when circumstances change.
Of course, not every equestrian interaction is idyllic. Anyone who has spent time in a barn knows this. I’ve certainly had a few experiences that have taught me why the word curated matters.
Community does not mean everyone gets access to you. When values misalign, when judgment creeps in, when relationships slip into a transactional dance or feel like you’re not fully seen or respected — that’s when distance is healthy. Necessary, even.
Curating isn’t mean or gatekeeping; it’s simply choosing where to invest your energy, trust, and heart.
In a world that celebrates optimization and efficiency, where networking is framed as an asset, a skill, even a personal brand — I think we risk forgetting that human beings are not meant to operate as interchangeable contacts.
We don’t thrive through transactions.
We thrive through connection.
And in the horse world, where vulnerability is unavoidable and humility is required, community becomes more than a comfort. It becomes a lifeline. A fierce, reliable, incomparable source of strength.
When you have that — when you build it, tend it, and honor it — you can do anything. With your horse. With your riding. With your equestrian business. With your life.
Because you’re not doing it alone.
Hello!
Hiqh quality work you can afford, that gets the attention you deserve.
Read my full story
© 2025 Rosanna fay stable & fields. all rights reserved. privacy policy. site by stable & fields
I so agree with what you shared in this blog. I miss my California barn and my friends there, but I am building new friendships at my new barn and they will help me and I will help them. A young woman who has been at my barn for only a few weeks had a bad crash and will need time to recover. I have been there. So I send her videos of her horse in his pasture; so she can see him and know he is out with his new friends and doing ok. It makes me feel good to do it, and I know she appreciates the videos. A little kindness goes a long way.