Mother and daughter walking a dapple-gray mare back from the pasture at golden hour, barn's red gambrel roof soft-focused in the background
Horse Boarding · Daycare · Bluegrass Pasture

Where Your Horse Is Somebody’s Favorite.

Ten acres of bluegrass pasture, hands that know every name, and a stall tucked in before the fireflies come out.

Tour the Farm
Ten Bluegrass AcresDaily GroomingFarrier CoordinationPasture RotationStall Bedding IncludedHay & Grain FeedingPony Club FriendlyVet On-Call PartnershipFly Control ProgramPersonalized Daily ReportsTen Bluegrass AcresDaily GroomingFarrier CoordinationPasture RotationStall Bedding IncludedHay & Grain FeedingPony Club FriendlyVet On-Call PartnershipFly Control ProgramPersonalized Daily Reports
A Walking Tour

Gate to Gate, Every Corner of the Farm.

Horse standing calmly at a wash rack with rubber mats, warm water running over its back, barn aisle visible in soft focus behind
Stop 01 — The Wash Rack

A Rinse After Every Ride.

The wash rack sits at the east end of the barn aisle — concrete floor, warm water, and a rubber mat your horse can stand on without fidgeting. Every boarder gets a post-ride rinse or a full bath, depending on the day. We keep a whiteboard above the crossties: your horse's name, their preferred shampoo, and any spots they'd rather you not rush.

  • Warm water year-round
  • Rubber non-slip mats
  • Individual product storage
  • Coat conditioner & fly spray included
Horse trotting freely in a sand round pen, late afternoon light casting long shadows across the fence rails, green pasture visible beyond
Stop 02 — The Round Pen

Turnout on a Schedule That Makes Sense.

Horses here go out in compatible pairs or small groups — never just thrown in a field. The round pen is where we get to know a new arrival before they join the herd. Pasture rotation runs on a six-week cycle so the grass stays honest. Your horse is out from sunup until the afternoon heat, then back in with fresh water and a fan running.

  • Six-week pasture rotation
  • Compatible pair/group turnout
  • Round pen introduction for new arrivals
  • Shade structures in all paddocks
Row of clean wooden horse stalls with deep shavings bedding, warm overhead lighting, hay nets hanging, peaceful barn aisle in evening light
Stop 03 — The Stall Barn

Tucked In Before the Fireflies.

Twelve 12×12 stalls, each one bedded with shavings that get stripped and refreshed twice a week — not just picked. Evening check runs at 7 PM. By the time the fireflies come out, every horse has a flake of hay, a full water bucket, and someone who's said goodnight to them by name. The barn doors stay open until 9.

  • 12×12 stalls, deep shavings
  • Full strip & refresh twice weekly
  • Evening check at 7 PM daily
  • Hay & water replenished at night
A Day at Paddock

Everymorning,someonewhoknowsyourhorse'snameisalreadyatthebarn.Everyevening,theycheckthewaterbucketbeforetheygohome.

10 acres
Bluegrass Pasture
12 stalls
Private Stalls
40+ years
Combined Experience
5x/day
Daily Check-Ins
6:30 AM

Morning Feed & Check

Every horse gets a visual health check before grain. Water buckets refreshed. Any concerns noted on the barn board before 7.

8:00 AM

Turnout

Compatible pairs and small groups head to their assigned paddocks. New arrivals go to the round pen first until we know their manners.

12:00 PM

Midday Check & Fly Spray

A full walk of all paddocks. Fly spray reapplied. Water troughs topped. Any lame or off horses pulled in early.

3:30 PM

Grooming & Bring-In

Horses come in from pasture, get a brush-down and hoof pick. This is when we notice the small things — a new scrape, a tight shoe, a mood.

7:00 PM

Evening Feed & Lights Out

Hay flake, full water bucket, stall check. Someone says goodnight by name. Barn doors close at 9.

Ready to Board?

Come see it for yourself.

A 30-minute barn visit is all it takes. Walk the stalls, meet the herd, ask every question.

Schedule a Visit
Voices from the Barn

The Horse Is Family Too.

First names only. Horse’s barn name in parentheses — because here, they’re both the client.

I drive past three other barns to get here. The first week, I got a text saying Captain had a loose shoe — they'd already called the farrier. That was four years ago. We're not leaving.

Sarah (& Captain)

Hobby rider

4 years
My daughter is eleven. She started here on Poppy in pony club. The staff know every kid's name and every horse's quirk. That's not something you find everywhere.

Michelle (& Poppy)

Pony club parent

2 years
Duke is 24. He needs extra feed, joint supplement, and someone who notices when he's a little stiff in the morning. The team here notices. They texted me a photo of him rolling in the pasture last week.

Robert (& Duke)

Retired couple

3 years
We tried two other places before Paddock. The difference is that when I call, someone answers and they know exactly which horse I'm calling about. No looking up records. They just know.

Jennifer (& Biscuit)

Working professional

18 months
Moose came to Paddock after a bad experience at a big facility. He was head-shy and nervous. Six months later, he walks right into his stall and puts his head down for the halter. That's the staff here.

Tom (& Moose)

Trail rider

2.5 years
Come See For Yourself

The Barn Doors Are Open. Come Walk With Us.

A 30-minute visit is all you need. Walk the stalls, meet the herd, ask every question. By the time you leave, you’ll know if this is the right place for your horse.

Red gambrel barn with open doors, gravel drive leading up, warm golden hour light, green pasture fields stretching behind
Paddock Farm — Est. 1986

Rather talk to a person?

(502) 555-0182

Mon–Sat, 7 AM – 7 PM

Schedule a Barn Visit

30 minutes. No pressure. Just a walk around the property.

We’ll confirm within a few hours. No commitment required.

Schedule a Barn Visit