Poraiti Pony Club

Poraiti Pony Club Poraiti-Puketapu Pony Club is a small club based at the Papakura Domain, Sandy Rd, Meeanee. We are lucky to have a small friendly club.

We have a range of rider ages and abilities from young beginners to older riders working towards their B certificate.

Jumps are getting higher in these shots - 60-100cm
17/05/2026

Jumps are getting higher in these shots - 60-100cm

I know some of you have been waiting for the next upload of photos from today, so here they are.  So exciting to see all...
17/05/2026

I know some of you have been waiting for the next upload of photos from today, so here they are. So exciting to see all these riders and ponies improving with every round. Mahi pai!

Thank you so much for coming everybody and supporting our club fundraiser.  We had a great time and we hope you did too....
17/05/2026

Thank you so much for coming everybody and supporting our club fundraiser. We had a great time and we hope you did too. Enjoy the photos.

16/05/2026

30cm riders are underway 😁

A great reason to take rugs off during the day at the moment
16/05/2026

A great reason to take rugs off during the day at the moment

Social contact is more than just being able to see another horse. Even if horses are in separate living spaces (for grass intake management for example), they will still find ways for physical contact. Allo-grooming is a comfort behaviour, a social behavioural need, as well as having functional reasons such as maintaining skin health and fly control.

Rugs create a barrier to horses being able to groom as they need to - so if horses are rugged for management or climate reasons- its important to get them off as much as possible for enabling normal social interactions and positive mental health.



What a great initiative!  Thanks Dressage Hawke's Bay (NHB)
16/05/2026

What a great initiative! Thanks Dressage Hawke's Bay (NHB)

Young Riders take note!

Lucy Cochrane (GP young dressage rider) and Gill Morley (A List National Judge) will be hosting a fun seminar on June 5th!

All young riders welcome so spread the word and RSVP by June 1st to Lucy!

What a great idea!
16/05/2026

What a great idea!

JOIN OUR PONY CLUB AUTUMN CHALLENGE

Our NZPCA Autumn Challenge is here!
A fun and flexible way to stay connected with your horse through the cooler months while building skills, confidence, knowledge, and great horsemanship habits.

✔ Mix and match activities
✔ Swap days to suit you and your horse
✔ Enjoy riding, horse care, learning, and fun challenges
✔ Share your progress with your club and friends

Get your club together and see who can:
✔ complete a line
✔ finish all four corners
✔ or complete the whole board!

Good horsemanship starts with care, knowledge, and understanding.

Download your free Autumn Challenge Planner now:
https://www.sporty.co.nz/asset/downloadasset?id=3b4c2be8-80df-4f2d-8185-fdaaf6e18434

For more resources:
🌐 www.nzpca.org/members-hub/rider-resources

!

Something for us all to think about over here too
13/05/2026

Something for us all to think about over here too

Picture this: you’re at a rally, muster, competition or clinic. Horses are tied to floats and rails while people catch up, walk courses, gear up, spectate, or help elsewhere around the grounds. It’s a very normal part of horse sports.

Some horses are perfectly happy to stand quietly tied up all day. That’s often a combination of temperament, training, experience, and good preparation.

But others genuinely struggle with being tied for long periods, particularly in busy or unfamiliar environments. They may become anxious, agitated, hypervigilant, sweaty, vocal, fidgety, or escalate into pawing, weaving, pulling back, or panic behaviours.

This is why Pony Club Australia’s Horse Welfare Policy states that members must not:

“Leave a stressed horse tied (whether to a float or a fixed rail) without constant supervision and attempts to reduce the stress.”

In other words, it is not appropriate to tie up a horse, leave them in a state of escalating stress, and walk away in the hope they will eventually “get over it” or simply stop reacting.

Horses are flight animals, and movement is one of their natural coping strategies. When tied, they lose the ability to move away from things they may be struggling to cope with, including isolation, noise, unfamiliar surroundings, or mounting pressure and arousal.

Without intervention, stress can continue to build and escalate into panic, injury, or conflict behaviour.

Good horsemanship means recognising when a horse is no longer coping and intervening early.

Attempts to reduce stress may include:
• staying with the horse and monitoring them closely
• moving the horse to a quieter or less overwhelming area
• tying the horse near a calm companion horse where appropriate
• using calm, predictable handling rather than punishment or force
• giving the horse a break from tying if stress continues to build
• untieing the horse and finding somewhere they can settle more comfortably, such as a yard if one is available
• asking a parent, friend, or another trusted person to help supervise the horse if you are unable to stay with them yourself

In some cases, recognising that the horse is struggling and changing the plan is the most appropriate response.

Active supervision means continuing to monitor the horse’s behaviour and welfare while they are tied up, and responding appropriately if they begin to show signs of stress.

Address

Sandy Road Meeanee
Meeanee

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