Twisted R Performance Horses

Twisted R Performance Horses

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Western and English performance horse trainer specializing in AQHA, 4H, and IEA. Located in Whitney, TX. Message us today to come ride with us!

Photos from Twisted R Performance Horses's post 05/28/2026

What surprised YOU most about horse ownership costs?

Photos from Twisted R Performance Horses's post 05/27/2026

Coming to our tack swap in Robinson June 6th? Bring those clothing donations and be entered to win our home accessory goody bag! It includes an adorable boot pillow, slate coasters, and a Grey Horse Candle Co jar candle!

We are accepting clothing in any shape as well as shoes, hats, backpacks/purses, etc! Not just horse clothing either! So clean out those closets and get rid of the stuff you’ve been meaning to donate!

Drop off at Robinson arena June 6th from 3:00pm to 6:30pm. Can’t make it? We’d be happy to schedule a pick up!

05/26/2026

This!! Please! 😂

We spend a lot of time talking about what instructors owe their students such as good lessons, safe horses, clear communication, and a program worth paying for. All of that is true but the relationship runs both ways and there are a handful of things every riding instructor has every right to expect from the people they teach - regardless of age, level, or how long they have been in the program. Here is what that actually looks like...

1. Respect the schedule
Your lesson time starts when it starts. Not when you finish tacking up. Not when you finally find a parking spot. Not ten minutes after you were supposed to be mounted because you got caught in traffic. An instructor who has back to back lessons cannot absorb your late arrival without it cascading into every lesson that follows. Be ready and be on time. If life genuinely gets in the way, communicate early and not at the moment the lesson was supposed to begin. Last minute cancellations and no shows are in the same category. Your instructor may have pulled a horse from turnout, set up the arena, and reorganized their entire morning around your lesson. Treat their time the way you expect them to treat yours.

2. Pay on time, every time
Riding lessons are expensive and nobody knows that better than the instructor who spent years and significant money developing the skills they are now passing on to you. While riding might be a hobby or a luxury for you, it is a business for your instructor. They have the same bills, the same living expenses, and the same need for a reliable paycheck that every working professional has. Pay your invoice on time without being chased. It is a basic professional courtesy and it matters more than most students realize.

3. Respect the expertise
There is no shortcut to becoming a good riding instructor. It takes years of riding, training, teaching, continuing education, and a level of dedicated investment that most people outside the industry never fully appreciate. When you walk into a lesson, bring an open mind and leave your preconceived ideas at the gate. The student who arrives already convinced they know how it should be done makes the instructor's job significantly harder and their own progress significantly slower. Trust the process and the person who built it. You hired them for a reason.

4. Show up mentally not just physically
Riding is not soccer or swimming. It is a complex physical education that happens on the back of a living animal and it requires your full attention every single minute of the lesson. Your instructor is prepared to give you their best teaching so come prepared to receive it. Leave the work stress, the family drama, and the distracted scrolling in the car. The horse needs you present and so does your instructor. Frankly so do you because a distracted rider in an arena is a safety issue not just a teaching one.

5. Bring your best effort
Not perfection, not natural talent, but effort and a positive attitude. A genuine willingness to try the thing that feels uncomfortable and work through the thing that is not clicking yet. Riding is one of the most extraordinary privileges available to anyone who has access to it and it deserves to be treated that way. Your instructor is bringing their best to every lesson so bring yours in return.

None of these are unreasonable expectations. They are the basic professional courtesies that make the instructor student relationship work for both people in it. A student who shows up on time, pays promptly, respects the expertise, stays present, and gives genuine effort is a student every instructor wants in their program for years.

Be that student and your riding will reflect it.

Photos from Twisted R Performance Horses's post 05/24/2026

Summer is here!! Always wanted to try horseback riding? Now is the time! Ask about our new rider specials!!

05/21/2026

It do be like that sometimes 😂

05/19/2026

Macie is the construction supervisor we didn’t know we needed… 😂

Photos from Twisted R Performance Horses's post 05/18/2026

A new season of IEA - Interscholastic Equestrian Association is about to begin! Come join our awesome team for a fun and educational experience! Compete for scholarships, ride different horses, and show at different facilities… and the best part is you don’t need to own your own horse!!

Feel free to reach out with any questions! We are located in Whitney, TX.

Photos from Twisted R Performance Horses's post 05/15/2026

Join us June 6th in Robinson for a tack swap during a playday series event! Come set up to sell or consign with us. We are also taking clothing donations for our fundraiser. All proceeds go directly to our youth! Message me for a table to sell or for more info!

05/13/2026

What do you mean you don’t put your 14 year old student on your 3 year old horse for its 3rd ride!? Come on now!

05/08/2026

Happy to my most favorite donkey, Huck! I couldn’t imagine a better mascot for our barn!

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Whitney, TX