
The Happy Equine Athlete
Megan Compton Dressage
Welcome to my passion project...
The Happy Equine Athlete
I want to help you achieve your goals with your horse while maintaining their dignity, respecting their own unique personality, and honoring their specific learning style.
Along the way, I have had the opportunity to have mentors from all across the equine industry from cowboys to 3 Day Event riders to classical Dressage masters.
What I've encountered is that there's a lot of knowledge around a specific sport and riding focus, but not that much support in how to get to your desired end result. Maintaining training, sometimes doesn't feel like it aligns with honoring your horse.
I want to help you turn your frustrations into your fascination by teaching you how to bridge the gap between correct training and truly communicating with your horse.
Through changing your mind set and adhering to truly simplifying the work, let's achieve your goals together!
About Megan...
Megan Compton is a USDF Bronze and Silver medalist on horses that she has raised from the time they were weaned and trained up the levels through her empathetic and classical system. She is also a USDF L Graduate with Distinction and judges several schooling shows in the Southeast each year.
Throughout the years, Megan has grown to love working with the "problem" horses, restarting horses under saddle, teaching riders of all levels, and starting young horses under saddle. She has been blessed to learn from some amazing riders, trainers, and judges including: Walter Zettl, Charles de Kunffy, Janet Foy, Courtney King Dye, Debbie McDonald, Sara Lockman, Lehua Custer, Kate Phillips, and JJ Tate. Megan highly prioritizes her own education knowing that increasing her education means increasing her students' education.
With her sights set on the future, Megan hopes to develop her own horses to the international levels of competition as they mature enough for the demands of top sport. Megan's priority in the show arena is to be able to represent what can be possible when your training focus isn't just the movements and the test, but protecting your horse's dignity and helping the horse find joy in the work.