Our mission is to bring together people in the wild horse world to network, access knowledge from specialists in the field, and become more empowered as advocates, adopters, caretakers, trainers, and people of all backgrounds with wild horse wisdom.

Whether you’re just starting out in the wild horse world, or you’ve been here a while, you belong here. Our community is for:
Wild horse advocates & specialists
Mustang adopters
Wild horse trainers
Sanctuary & rescue workers
Photographers & videographers
Scholars and researchers in the field
Wild horse lovers of all backgrounds
Coming soon! The Wild Side members will be able to unlock exclusive access to online courses, live webinars, and educational content that you can't find anywhere else. Upcoming courses include:
Wild horse gentling
Sanctuary & rescue management
Wild horse photography & videography
Humane training methodology & application
The Wild Side is a safe space of tolerance and inclusiveness for all of its members. A few benefits of membership include:
Groups to bring members with similar backgrounds with mustangs together
Posts and polls to start and expand on conversations with other members
Events and virtual gatherings that allow for you to create and share your own events or stay up to date on happenings in the wild horse community

I first met wild horses at a natural horsemanship facility in Northern California in 2007. They may as well have been unicorns, because while they didn't seem real, I knew that they were magic. I learned the ways of the gentling process at this ranch, and over the course of two decades of practicing natural horsemanship, had the honor of working with many wild mustangs.
My training experiences with wild horses raised the question, where does the wildness in a mustang come from? Can we ever really "take it out" of them? And perhaps most importantly, how can we become more wild ourselves to find harmony with them?
During my postgraduate studies in Anthrozoology in 2018, I ventured deeper into the world of the American mustang in search of answers. Through my research, I found more questions and a path following the winding trails of the wild horse in the West that I became relentlessly devoted to.
From all my days spent chasing wild mustangs and countless hours logged studying them, one thing became perfectly clear: we don't just need the tonic of wildness, we need each other. Through the power of community and grassroots advocacy, I believe we can make the world a better place for the wild that exists in all of us, but lives on stronger and even brighter in the mustang.
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