Questions often arise as you consider stepping into this work. 

You’re welcome to explore here—or simply reach out and begin a conversation. 
 

  • Fertile Sol Ranch offers a horse-guided, body-based practice rooted in Equine Supported Yoga Therapy. 
     
    This work brings together somatic awareness, breath, and the reflective presence of horses and land to support you in reconnecting with your inner rhythm and clarity. 
     
    It is not about fixing or improving yourself, but about remembering—through direct experience—what is already alive within you. 

  • This work often calls to those in a season of transition—when something is shifting, ending, or quietly beginning. 
     
    You may be navigating grief, identity changes, motherhood, adolescence, relationship transitions, or a deeper question of direction and meaning. 
     
    You don’t need to have clear answers. Only a willingness to slow down, listen inwardly, and be in honest relationship—with yourself, the horses, and the land. 

  • The best place to begin is with a conversation. 
     
    We start with a discovery call to get a felt sense of one another and to explore what is present for you. From there, you’ll be guided toward the next step if it feels aligned. 
     
    This work is relational. Fit matters—not just logistically, but energetically. 

The Experience

  • Equine Supported Yoga Therapy is a relational, somatic practice that integrates body, breath, awareness, and reflective dialogue within the presence of horses. 
     
    It draws from yoga therapy, nervous system awareness, and embodied relational work. 
     
    Rather than directing or prescribing change, it creates the conditions for awareness to arise naturally—through sensation, presence, and relationship. 

  • This work is therapeutic in nature, but it is not psychotherapy or clinical mental health treatment. 
     
    I am not acting as a licensed therapist, and the horses are not tools for diagnosis or treatment. 
     
    Instead, this is a space for resourcing your own inner awareness—through the intelligence of your body, your lived experience, and your relationship with the natural world. 

  • Horses live in a state of attuned presence. 
     
    As prey animals, their nervous systems are highly responsive to what is happening in their environment—and in us. They sense incongruence quickly, responding not to what we say, but to what is true beneath the surface. 
     
    Because of this, they offer a kind of reflection that is immediate and honest, yet free of judgment. 
     
    In their presence, we are invited into a more authentic form of contact—first with ourselves, and then with another being. Patterns that are often difficult to see begin to reveal themselves through relationship: how we approach, where we hesitate, how we hold tension, where we override or withdraw. 
     
    At the same time, horses are deeply regulating. 
     
    Their steady, grounded presence—hooves on the earth, breath in rhythm with the natural world—can support the nervous system in settling and reorganizing. In this space, it becomes possible to slow down enough to feel, to notice, and to respond rather than react. 
     
    They do not ask us to perform, explain, or be anything other than what we are in the moment. 
     
    And in that, something begins to shift. 
     
    In the presence of the horse, we are met in real time—and often, remembered back into ourselves.

  • Winnie and Sol are not pets—they are members of our family, and at times, therapeutic partners. 
     
    Their participation is never mandated. When we are with them, we are inviting them into relationship, never making or requiring. 
     
    Their sovereignty and safety matter as much as our own. Often, part of the work is exploring how to remain in connection while honoring both. 
     
    While our horses are ridden outside of program work, even for us, riding is a privilege—not a promise. When we do ride, our intention is to support their well-being and to stay in a conversation rooted in connection, not force. 
     
    Riding is not part of the Equine Supported Yoga Therapy container. 
     
    Instead, this work invites a different way of being with horses—one that moves beyond the saddle and into relationship, presence, and mutual respect. 

The Journey

  • The Journeybook is a companion to your experience at Fertile Sol Ranch.  
     
    It is not something to complete, but something to live with. 
     
    Rooted in the same principles that guide our work with the horses and the land, it offers gentle invitations, reflections, and practices that support you in tracking what is unfolding within you. 
     
    Woven throughout are elements of yogic philosophy, offering both resource and ground to deepen and seed the work beyond our sessions. Alongside this, you’ll find embodied practices, meditations, and reflections that support integration—allowing what is experienced in session to continue to unfold in your daily life. 
     
    Rather than telling you what to do, it helps you stay in relationship with your own process—so that what is becoming has space to take root and grow. 

  • The Season of Becoming is a six-week immersion designed to support slow, honest, and embodied change. 
     
    Each session is held here on our 35-acre ranch that you are invited to be in relationship with yourself, the horses and the land throughout your time here. 
     
    You’ll have access to walking trails, a dedicated temple space for yoga therapy sessions, quiet places for journaling and meditation, tea and nourishing snacks, access herb gardens, a small creek and all the animals and critters who roam here in addition to the horses, including our Golden Retriever, Blue. Time with Winnie and Sol is woven throughout, alongside the Journeybook,  recorded meditations and email support.  
     
    Each session is held in a spacious, unhurried rhythm—often felt more like a series of six mini retreats than appointments or clinical sessions.  
     
    This is not a quick fix. It is a process of tending—of staying with what is long enough for something true to emerge. 

  • Returning to rhythm is the process of coming back into a relationship with your natural pace, your breath, and your inner knowing.  
     
    Rather than pushing or forcing change, we begin to listen—to the body and to the cycles of life moving through you. 
     
    From this place, clarity arises. 

  • Unlike traditional therapy, this work is held within a defined container of time. 
     
    The Season of Becoming is designed to support a meaningful shift—from where you are into a new way of being that reflects your intention and inner truth. Within this container, we work slowly and with depth, allowing what is ready to emerge to take root in a way that can be lived beyond our time together. 
     
    When the six weeks come to completion, the work itself does not end—it continues to live within you. 
     
    The awareness, practices, and relational experiences become something you carry forward, woven into your daily life and the way you meet yourself and the world around you. 
     
    For many, this container is complete in itself. 
     
    And, for those who feel called to ongoing support, I do offer individual sessions for clients who have completed the Season of Becoming. These sessions are available as needed—to reconnect, recalibrate, or continue deepening your process in a way that honors your autonomy and integration. 

Logistics & Next Steps 

  • Fertile Sol Ranch is located in Colorado, held by the land, the horses, and a quiet, natural setting designed to support slowing down and deep listening. 

  • The first step is a discovery call. 
     
    This is a simple conversation to explore what you’re moving through and sense whether this work feels like the right fit. 
     
    From there, you’ll be guided into the next step. 

The Foundation

  • Each session is grounded in the somatic practice of yoga therapy, where the body becomes both our anchor and our guide. 
     
    We begin with a centering practice—an opportunity to arrive, notice what is present, and set intention for the session or the week. As we often say, intention is the mother of manifestation. From here, we listen to the body—because the body does not lie. 
     
    Through this process, we begin to notice patterns, tensions, habits, and edges—the places where awareness deepens, and meaningful shift becomes possible. Using supported postures, intentional touch, and non-prescriptive dialogue, we stay with what is present long enough for new awareness to emerge and for the body to begin to open, release, and reorganize. 
     
    From this grounded place of embodied awareness, we move into relational work with the horses. 
     
    All work with the horses takes place on the ground—sometimes through observation, sometimes through direct contact. In these moments, the horses reflect what is true beneath the surface, offering a clear and immediate mirror of how you are relating—to yourself, to others, and to the world around you. 
     
    Together, this creates an opportunity to recognize familiar patterns and begin to gently shift them—toward ways of being that feel more aligned with your intention. 

  • No, this work does not involve riding. 
     
    Our time with the horses is entirely ground-based. This allows us to stay in a place of presence and relationship, rather than performance or control. 
     
    Being on the ground creates the conditions for a different kind of connection—one where you can listen, notice, and respond in real time. 

  • No experience is needed. 
     
    You are not expected to know how to be with the horses. In many ways, not knowing allows for a more honest and open experience. 
     
    The horses respond to presence, not performance. They meet you exactly where you are. 

Entering the Work 

If your questions aren’t answered here, you’re welcome to reach out. 
 
Sometimes clarity comes through conversation.