Tack Stores in Indiana

 
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Home > Western and English Tack Shops by State > Your Local Tack Store in Indiana

 

 

 

Would you like to find a saddlery or tack shop in Indiana? Locate shops stocking feed for your horse, supplies you'll need around the barn or stable, or outfit your horse from head "to hoof" with a new show saddle, pad, sports medicine boots or silver bit, with with this nationwide, city by city listing. Whether you ride English or western, endurance or trail, show or simply train, you'll find the right tack store here on these pages. Here are a few examples:

 

Q: My kids outgrew their horses! Now how do I track down a saddlery in Seattle, OR that'll take our used saddle and tack on consignment?
A: Click "By Your Location" (left) and then "Oregon" for a directory of shops offering consignment tack shops near you. Stores selling both new and used tack quite often accept consignment sales on both english and western gear.

 

Q: I'm a cheap son of a gun with 6 horses so I'd like to find a place near me in Indiana that has cheap horse stuff for sale. What do you recommend?
A: Selling a few horses! You didn't mention, western or english riding? Regardless, you'll find discount tack shops in Indiana by following the links (scroll below) on this very page.

 

Q: You know a saddle clearance would be kinda cool to find 'cause I show gymkhana, equitation and pleasure and it's costing me a fortune. What have you got near me in the way of saddle deals or clearance sales? Is there a listing for a tack outlet or discounter in Texas?
A: To locate tack retailers in Texas, just follow the appropriate links (left of this page). You'll be led to outlets offering deals, whether through savings on used equipment, random sales or the occasional closeout sale. With thousands of listings, you'll certainly find countless inexpensive saddles, discount tack shops and yes, "cheap stuff for horses."

 

 

 

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Your city by city listing, find Tack Stores in Indiana:

 

ALEXANDRIA ANDERSON ARCADIA BEDFORD
BLOOMFIELD BREMEN CASTLETON CHARLESTOWN
COLUMBUS Connersville CROWN POINT DANVILLE
DECATUR DIANAPOLIS DILLSBORO ELKHART
EVANSVILLE FAIRLAND FERDINAND FORT WAYNE
FREEDOM GOSHEN GREENCASTLE GREENFIELD
GREENWOOD HOBART HUNTINGTON INDIANAPOLIS
KENDALLVILLE LAFAYETTE Lake Village LIBERTY
MADISON MEDORA MISHAWAKA MONTPELIER
NASHVILLE NEW ALBANY NEW HAVEN NEWBURGH
NOBELSVILLE NOBLESVILLE ODON PEKIN
PENDLETON PLAINFIELD PLYMOUTH RICHMOND
ROCKVILLE ROLLING PRAIRIE ROMNEY RUSHVILLE
SCOTTSBURG SEYMOUR SHIPSHEWANA TRAFALGAR
VALPARAISO WEST COLLEGE CORNER WINCHESTER YORKTOWN
ZIONSVILLE

 

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Round Pen First Steps
Horse owners and riders: If you'd like to put a solid foundation on your horse - or finally put an end to a nagging training issue, I would suggest the investment of $5.99 in one of my downloadable books:

 

- Download and print from your home computer
- 5 days, 5 chapters
- Learn at your own pace

 

An excerpt from "Round Pen First Steps":

 

Stand there in the center, looking ahead. Do not follow the horse by turning your body. The horse is a prey animal. He's terrific at reading body language and assimilating the messages you send. He's programmed to believe that "he who causes the other to move his feet" is the boss. Keep that in mind and stay as still as practical. Listen to the fall of the hooves as he travels behind you. It's funny how they'll try and break their stride behind you at this point, when you're not looking. You actually want the horse to break stride (to slow to a trot or walk) at this point because it hands you a chance to correct the horse and thus tell him "this is what I'm looking for." What you're looking for is for the horse to continue to move – and in the same direction – until you tell him to stop. The horse will most likely try to change direction and that's just fine. Because, once again, it gives us a chance to tell the horse what we expect. Horses that just "happen upon" the right answer haven't learned it as well as the horse who's made a hundred mistakes first. That horse has learned 99 things that don't work and will be better trained in the long run. (rpt)

 

Read more or purchase

 

Other available courses include:

Your Foal: Essential Training
Stop Bucking (reviews)
Round Pen: First Steps (reviews)
Rein In Your Horse's Speed (For Owners of Nervous or Bolting Horses) (reviews)
Trailer Training (read the reviews)