Eagle Feather Riding

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By Jacqueline Louie

At Eagle Feather Riding, the horses know when their riders are on their way, and come running to greet them when they arrive.

That deep connection between horses and riders is part of the magic of Eagle Feather Riding, which offers bareback riding lessons from September through June, as well as summer camps.

Situated on land overlooking the foothills just west of Calgary, Alberta, Eagle Feather Riding makes learning to ride bareback and connecting to your mount, easy. A “copilot” — an experienced horse person — holds the rope for each beginning rider’s horse and accompanies horse and rider for every lesson, which is always at a walking pace.

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Photo: Eagle Feather Riding

Eagle Feather Riding owner Vickie Tait, who has taught riding for nearly three decades, started teaching using saddles and moved on to bareback in the late 1990s.

“My whole purpose was to have them slow down and feel the horse, and really understand where the feet were,” explains Tait, a physical education teacher in Calgary before she left her job to operate her riding business full-time.

Learning to ride bareback is unusual, she says, “because it is so vulnerable.”

Tait, whose mother was a Calgary Stampede Princess, grew up riding bareback in Alberta and Yukon. As an adult, Tait took up one of the challenges of GaWaNi Pony Boy, author of Horse, Follow Closely: Native American Horsemanship, to ride bareback for a year. She never went back to the saddle.

Bareback riding appeals to “sensitive, quiet, gentle people interested in a slow, deep connection,” says Tait. Bareback riding “is a beautiful way to begin and it often leads to a passion.”

Related: More Fun! And Why it's Important

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Riders learning to ride bareback with their copilots leading. Bareback riding “is a beautiful way to begin, and it often leads to a passion,” says Vickie Tait. Photos (above/below): Eagle Feather Riding 

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Eagle Feather Riding teaches all ages, from little ones to people in their 70s.

“If they can walk, they can ride,” says Tait. 

Related: Building a Horse's Confidence with Tarps, Part 1 

Holly Tait, Vickie’s sister, helps by taking out the more advanced riders.

“The most powerful thing is the development of the relationship with horses. They are great teachers, helping people learn to be comfortable with themselves and face their fears,” says Holly, a registered psychologist specializing in addiction recovery. “Learning to ride bareback with a copilot makes it a lot safer, because they don’t have to worry about controlling the horse — they just need to focus on finding their balance.”

Sara Bagg and her daughters, Charlotte VanGaalen age 12, and Esmé VanGaalen age 14, have been taking lessons with Eagle Feather Riding for several years.

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Sara Bagg and her daughters, Charlotte VanGaalen (left) and Esmé VanGaalen (mounted on Thor). Photo: Jacqueline Louie

When she first began bareback lessons, Bagg was “really scared” to get on a horse. She thinks that learning to ride bareback with a copilot is hugely beneficial. “Because there’s an experienced person who knows the horse you’re riding really well, all you really need is to trust in that person and the courage to get on the horse’s back.”

Bagg rides Thor, a Friesian gelding. Now in her relationship with Thor, she hardly ever touches the reins. “I can say, ‘Okay buddy, we’re going to go over here.’ He’ll pick up his head and go.”

She understands how some riders might want to be more task-oriented with their horse and “do all kinds of fancy stuff.” For Bagg, however, “it’s more about spending time with a friend.”

Amber Zierath and her daughters, Kyra Kariatsumari, age 12, and Kiyomi Kariatsumari, age 14, have been taking riding lessons with Eagle Feather Riding for several years.

“We gain so much more than just equestrian skills,” Zierath says. “What Vickie teaches is deep listening and gentle communication. So much is earning the respect of the horses. The more they trust you, the more willing they are to trust your direction. Riding bareback is a form of profoundly deeper connection with the horse.”

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Amber Zierath and her daughters, Kyra (left) mounted on Digger, a Norwegian Fjord, and Kiyomi mounted on Karma, the family’s palomino Quarter Horse that lives at Eagle Feather Riding. Zierath says the horses are “best buddies,” and has written a novel about Karma, titled Horse Karma, which will be published by Olympia Publishers in the United Kingdom and is expected to be released in the fall of 2022. Photo: Jacqueline Louie

A close-knit community is another hallmark of Eagle Feather Riding, which is home to a mixed herd of geldings, including Arabians, Quarter Horses, and draft horses. To have a horse stay there, owners are asked to volunteer for at least two hours a week.

“I have such a love of Eagle Feather Riding and Vickie,” says Zierath. “She is a remarkable person. She is a trail blazer.” 

“I really think Vickie has created an amazing community. That is a standout,” says Bagg.

Visit Eagle Feather Riding to learn more

Related: Adventures in Bitless Riding

Main Photo: Vickie Tait, owner of Eagle Feather Riding.Credit: Jacqueline Louie

 

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