Little Oaks Ranch

Little Oaks Ranch Little Oaks Ranch is a non-profit 501(c)(3) ministry located in central Indiana, 30 miles west of Indianapolis.

At Little Oaks Ranch we provide a safe and peaceful atmosphere where at-risk youth and women can find a reprieve from the chaos of life. Most people who come to the ranch have never experienced horses and are a bit awestruck at first. There is something powerful about stepping out of your comfort zone that provides a unique opportunity for impact. At Little Oaks Ranch learning to care for and ride

the ranch horses, playing games, and helping others translates into life lessons including empathy, courage, responsibility and unconditional love which flow over into everyday life. It is our hope and prayer that those who come to Little Oaks Ranch will be blessed by their experience and feel their connection to creation, of which they are wholly a part.

I met this horse many years ago at Crystal Peaks Youth Ranch.
05/22/2026

I met this horse many years ago at Crystal Peaks Youth Ranch.

". . . My sorrow over the loss of my equine friend was eclipsed by a sense of wonder. To his literal dying breath, Hero’s life story went out like a weapon of radiant hope declaring the Gospel of Christ . . ."

To read the most recent newsletter, follow this link: https://crystalpeaksyouthranch.org/newsletter/

05/10/2026

If we seek control, we will be shown just how much we do not have it.

If we seek harmony within the natural world, we will surely find it.

A student asked me recently about a horse’s behavior on a cold, windy morning. We were riding much earlier than normal, and the weather was brisk. She was feisty and energetic.

“Shouldn’t this work make a horse reliable?” he asked me.

It’s a very valid question. Good work should make a horse more consistent, but at the end of the day, a horse is still a horse, governed by natural principles far more deeply rooted than human desire can ever fully reach.

Heat cycles, weather, the strong need for safety and security, the need for a herd, their natural psychology — these things can never truly be overridden. Yet surely we try, and we are constantly sold methods and products that promise to do that.

We use medications to interfere with cycles. We carefully manage turnout and herd dynamics. We use artificial lighting to prevent winter hair growth. We create all kinds of systems we believe are clever enough to make horses more predictable, more manageable, more convenient for human expectations. We see and practice training methods that promise obedience with just a few simple, repeated steps.

But these instincts are ancient, strong, and beautiful. They can be suppressed, but never completely eradicated. They burrow underground and emerge elsewhere — in tension, anxiety, explosiveness, shutdown, illness, or quiet unhappiness.

Nothing is truly under our control.

We can work within the nature of the horse. We can help them feel secure with us. We can make their bodies feel balanced and comfortable beneath the rider. We can provide consistency, clarity, and emotional steadiness so they reliably seek the same place within us day after day.

But true horsemanship is not the art of overpowering a horse’s nature.

It is the art of understanding it so deeply that we learn to move within it.

We study their instincts, sensitivities, rhythms, and desires for safety and connection until our timing, energy, and expectations begin harmonizing with theirs instead of constantly opposing them. A good horseman does not force a horse to stop being a horse. He learns how to blend into the horse’s nature so the horse no longer feels trapped in a battle against him.

We can guide a horse, influence them, support them. But we can never replace the instincts nature placed there, and it would be folly to believe a single human could ever replace a horse’s need for a herd.

And perhaps this is part of what horses are here to teach us.

If we truly love horses — and not merely the illusion of power and control we are so often tempted by — then why would we wish to strip away the very thing they have symbolized to humanity for centuries?

Freedom. Wildness. Life lived honestly within nature itself.

Perhaps what draws us to horses so deeply is not our desire to dominate nature, but our longing to return to it ourselves.

A horse reminds us that we are natural beings too, with rhythms and cycles dictated not entirely by us, but by something much larger than ourselves. We are not separate from nature, nor masters over it. We are part of it.

We can either move within that greater current, or spend our lives exhausted from fighting against it — grasping desperately for small fistfuls of control that inevitably crumble in our hands.

Truth
05/06/2026

Truth

Nobody grows up doing barn chores and stays soft.

You learn to show up when you don't feel like it.

You learn that something alive depends on you — and that matters more than your mood.

You learn patience. Consistency. Humility.

You learn that the work is never really done. And somehow that becomes enough.

Barn kids grow up different. Not better than anyone else.

Just… more prepared for the parts of life that don't care how you feel that morning.



04/26/2026
04/24/2026
04/20/2026
Levi and Abigail got a sweet letter from Mavis, formerly Last Call, today. Last Call caught our attention at the rescue ...
04/06/2026

Levi and Abigail got a sweet letter from Mavis, formerly Last Call, today. Last Call caught our attention at the rescue where we got Levi and Abigail, but my partner in crime, Kendra Van Winkle, urged me to pick Abigail. We were so excited when Ramona Seymour brought Mavis home to Indiana. Congratulations Mavis, you are no longer “Last”. 🥰

Address

461 E County Road 825 N
Bainbridge, IN
46105

Telephone

+17655224203

Website

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