Rising Star Equestrian Foundation

Rising Star Equestrian Foundation Rising Star is a nonprofit organization dedicated to making a difference. Through horses we are helping people find hope and healing.

We have a very special farm located in Marietta....a place to get away and find yourself.

Summer Horse Camp…week  #1 Riding…donkey yoga…limbo…plank challenge…horseless horse show …and so much more 😎 Natallia Ry...
06/05/2026

Summer Horse Camp…week #1
Riding…donkey yoga…limbo…plank challenge…horseless horse show …and so much more 😎
Natallia Rybakova

Scenes from our horse show. It was a huge success 😊 Thanks Tammy Howlette and Jonathan for judging. Natallia Rybakova Re...
04/27/2026

Scenes from our horse show. It was a huge success 😊
Thanks Tammy Howlette and Jonathan for judging.
Natallia Rybakova Rebekah Bolton Keller De Aguero Miranda Lourdes Diaz Glenna Lusk Greene Becca Lusk Golden

Everest has a new friend 🥰 Noelle Hart Natallia Rybakova Rebekah Bolton Chris Macauley
04/14/2026

Everest has a new friend 🥰
Noelle Hart Natallia Rybakova Rebekah Bolton Chris Macauley

Desi is working with Everest to get him ready for some of our other riders. He’s such a lovely boy 😊 Keller De Aguero Re...
04/06/2026

Desi is working with Everest to get him ready for some of our other riders. He’s such a lovely boy 😊 Keller De Aguero Rebekah Bolton

He’s here! Everest arrived yesterday afternoon and we are so excited to have him join our family ♥️ Noelle Hart Sally Sa...
03/24/2026

He’s here! Everest arrived yesterday afternoon and we are so excited to have him join our family ♥️ Noelle Hart Sally Sachs Landers Rebekah Bolton Natallia Rybakova Chris Macauley Keller De Aguero

Evan had a little visit with Boone on Saturday. The weather has been lovely…perfect for spending time outside with our f...
02/16/2026

Evan had a little visit with Boone on Saturday. The weather has been lovely…perfect for spending time outside with our farm friends 😊 Larissa Flint

We lost our beautiful Abbie yesterday. She had 27 wonderful years on this earth and was loved by so many. She was kind a...
12/31/2025

We lost our beautiful Abbie yesterday. She had 27 wonderful years on this earth and was loved by so many. She was kind and patient and wise and she taught so many riders (big and small) not just how to ride but how to be better humans. Our hearts are broken but there’s peace knowing she’s running free again with Reggie, Rabbit and Rubicon.

Natallia Rybakova Chris Macauley Rebekah Bolton Noelle HartThey know what they’re doing 😊
12/23/2025

Natallia Rybakova Chris Macauley Rebekah Bolton Noelle Hart

They know what they’re doing 😊

🐴 The Muddy Horse: "YOU SEE DIRT. I SEE MY THERMAL COAT."
The visual focuses on a horse standing in a winter paddock, its coat matted with thick, dried mud "plates." An infographic overlay shows a cross-section of the hair: one side is clean and flat, while the other is mud-crusted, showing how the mud "tents" the hair to create a pocket of warm air against the skin.

YOU SEE DIRT. I SEE MY THERMAL COAT.

"Your grooming brush is stripping away my insulation. In the wild, mud isn't a mess—it’s a windbreaker. It seals my hair follicles against the biting cold and creates a barrier that parasites can't pe*****te. When you scrub me clean for the sake of a photo, you leave me shivering in the wind. Let me be 'dirty' so I can stay warm."

The Biological Reality: Horses utilize piloerection (the ability to fluff up their hair) to trap air. Dried mud acts as a physical sealant, reinforcing this air pocket and preventing the wind from "cutting through" the coat to reach the skin.

📰 FIELD REPORT: The Protective Crust
Angle: Dirt as a Functional Barrier.

[BIOLOGICAL EVALUATION] A horse's winter coat is a dynamic thermal system. When mud dries on the outer guard hairs, it creates a "shell" similar to a ceramic coating. This shell provides two critical unshown benefits: it prevents moisture (rain/snow) from reaching the dense, dry undercoat, and it acts as a "physical shield" against winter gnats and lice that struggle to navigate the hardened exterior.

THE ANATOMY OF THE WINTER "SHIELD"
1. Windproofing and Sealing
The Wind-Chill Factor: A clean, fluffy coat can be parted by a strong gust, allowing cold air to hit the skin directly. A mud-caked coat is "matted" into plates that deflect the wind like a suit of scale armor.

Thermal Retention: The mud acts as a secondary layer of insulation, helping to maintain a consistent skin temperature even when the external environment drops below freezing.

2. Waterproofing the Undercoat
The Shedding Effect: Dried mud often creates a "roofing" effect where snow or freezing rain sits on top of the mud layer rather than soaking into the skin. This keeps the skin dry, which is the single most important factor in preventing Rain Rot (a bacterial skin infection).

3. The Grooming Conflict
Removing the Oils: Over-grooming in winter can strip the natural sebum (skin oils) that provide waterproofing. When you brush off the mud, you often take these essential oils with it, leaving the horse more vulnerable to the elements.

THE "STEWARDSHIP" MANIFESTO
"Prioritize health over horse-show aesthetics."
Respect the "Gross" Look: A horse living outdoors in winter should look a bit rugged. That ruggedness is a sign that their natural defenses are working.

Targeted Grooming: Grooming should be limited to the areas where tack (saddle/bridle) will sit to prevent sores, leaving the rest of the body's "shield" intact.

🤝 Our Duty: Smart Winter Care
Coexisting with a "muddy" horse means knowing when to intervene and when to let nature take the lead.

The Action: The "Minimalist" Winter Protocol.

The "Tack-Only" Brush: Only remove mud from the girth, saddle, and bridle areas. Leave the mud on the flanks, back, and neck where it provides the most insulation.

Check for Skin Health: Instead of brushing, use your hands to "feel" under the mud. You are checking for heat, swelling, or bumps that might indicate an infection hidden beneath the crust.

The "Mud-Out" Shedding: Save the deep cleaning for the spring "shed-out." When the temperatures rise, the horse will naturally shed the mud and the winter hair together.

Provide a Dry Choice: Ensure the horse has access to a dry, bedded area. They should choose to be muddy, not be forced to stand in deep, wet muck that never dries.

A muddy horse is a horse that has successfully adapted to its environment. By leaving the "dirt" alone, you are respecting thousands of years of evolutionary wisdom that knows exactly how to stay warm when the mercury dips.

Some of our beautiful students have started an impromptu memorial display on Rubicons’s stall to show their love and gra...
11/16/2025

Some of our beautiful students have started an impromptu memorial display on Rubicons’s stall to show their love and gratitude for him. He was truly loved ♥️ 😢

Rubicon passed away today during emergency colic surgery at the UGA veterinary hospital. The doctors did everything they...
11/13/2025

Rubicon passed away today during emergency colic surgery at the UGA veterinary hospital. The doctors did everything they could but ultimately they couldn’t save him. We are beyond devastated. Our sweet big boy will forever be missed. We love you Rubicon ♥️

Address

1035 Blackwell Road
Marietta, GA
30066

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 8pm
Tuesday 8am - 8pm
Wednesday 8am - 8pm
Thursday 8am - 8pm
Friday 8am - 8pm
Saturday 8am - 3pm
Sunday 8am - 3pm

Telephone

(678) 992-5315

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