Horse places to visit in Iceland, Scotland & Ireland

Don’t miss New Grange, an incredible pre-historic site north of Dublin. It’s one of the eeriest, most interesting places I’ve ever seen.

It’s not a horse place. But it is amazing.

I went hacking in Ireland. We were on a 21 day trip and definitely didn’t bring “riding” stuff - just long pants and blundstones that I was wearing other days anyways.

What an experience! Barn provided helmets. But to actually ride w/t/c in the open country side was so incredible that I strongly suggest booking a day trip out for a hack.

Worst part was the drive to the barn. Husband went golfing, and I drove the 10 minutes alone from course to barn… and it was a bit nerve wracking.

I mean, New Grange is not a horse place.

Do some googling, you might find county / regional fairs

I live in Glasgow and keep my horses just outside of the city, but can’t think of anything particularly horsey to do here. There may or may not be Clydesdales in Pollock Park, which is a large city park on the south side. They were there, then they moved, then the Glasgow city council made plans to refurb the stables and bring them back, but the Glasgow council could not find their arse with both hands, so who knows.

If you’re in Scotland around the 24th to 27th of August, there is a big international 3-day event at Blair Atholl, a town up in the Perthshire Highlands. It has a train station, and it’s about a two-hour train journey from Glasgow. Takes about an hour and a half to drive it (on a good day).

Happy to answer any other questions about Glasgow.

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Riding clothing, boots, helmets CAN be brought to Iceland, they just all have to be thoroughly disinfected before arrival. No tack.

That said, when I was there two months ago I just used the riding center’s gear because it was less hassle to disinfect and pack my stuff. They’re all well stocked. Standard hiking boots are perfectly fine.

In terms of Ireland, the Curragh is 10 min from the Irish National Stud in Kildare and is very uniquely Irish — it’s a massive open plain with a top racecourse plus training gallops (https://www.curragh.ie/training) and lots of space to just ride/hack out. Horses have been training and racing on the Curragh for thousands of years, it made me a little emotional to think about! I was lucky enough to hack out across the common land with a local friend, but you could have a day at the races and then go to the stud, or if you contacted the general office at the racecourse they might be able to give you some tips on how to see horses working in the morning on the gallops. Then hop over to Berney Bros in Kildare to buy some tack that will outlive you!

I went to Iceland a few years ago to ride for 4 or 5 days and brought my own gear, you just need to disinfect very carefully. I wouldn’t bother for a half-day hack but for a couple full days of riding, I like to be in my own stuff (helmet especially). My non-horsey Iceland tip is that the Blue Lagoon seems touristy but is actually a blast, so much better than I’d anticipated and an easy day trip from Reykjavik.

Oooh, Curragh sounds really cool! I’d love to go back with the National Stud with my horse loving wife instead of my bored relatives. Do you have a feel for how reasonable that is from Dublin by train (without a car)?

Looks like Dublin to Kildare Town is about 90 min via train, you might then need to take a cab or Uber from town to the track/Curragh.

The same bus line that serves the stud also serves the track, it is not much further on,. See Google maps

It might be worth going to see The Kelpie statues on the canal at Falkirk. They look to be very fine but so far I’ve not seen them in person. You could then carry on and visit Stirling, with its important castle.

If I didn’t want to visit Ireland someday anyhow, I sure do now!! That looks amazing!

Did you go with a booking agent / riding trip agent? Who did you use?

A friend and I are starting to tentatively plan things. We’re thinking 2ish weeks or less. Any suggestions? We’d like to ride daily (or almost daily) but also be able to visit places like the INS and Curragh if time allows.

Forgot about those. I’ve only seen them at 70mph from the motorway, but they would be cool to walk around.

When you know exact dates, it’s worth checking this calendar of agricultural shows - most of which are horse related in some way: https://www.farminguk.com/country-shows-and-events.

You’ll obviously need to have google maps open too to see proximity to where you are, but it’s a pretty good resource. Any thing that says it’s a show, or a county show will have horses, unless it says ‘sheep/Alpaca/something specific show’, so don’t just go by the picture in the calendar!

Shows tend to have a range of events showcasing different breeds of horse/pony - from tiny tots to traditional heavy horses and also often have show jumping classes too - as well as rural crafts and the agricultural classes

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I went to Blair last year and it was a blast. A little bit of everything for spectators, in addition to the international horse trials/eventing there is show jumping (not grand prix) and a variety of breed competions - highland ponies, draft horses etc and plenty of shopping. If you can’t make Blair, you could potentially head down to UK to the Burghley Horse Trials - one of 7 5* horse trials in the world right and great for spectating XC day woud be on Saturday but they might have some other competitions going like young event horse Thursday or Friday which is also dressage days, lots and lots of shopping, good food etc The grounds are gorgeous. Have to purchase tickets in advance and I’d suggest paying for the members tent and I think you can pay for the day or for the entire event.

Not who you asked, but a horsey friend and I also did about 2 weeks in Ireland in fall of 2018 and our riding portion was 4 or 5 days at Flowerhill Equestrian Center in Galway. We did mostly XC, a drag hunt, and a real hunt. XC days included morning and afternoon sessions plus an optional lunchtime hack (on three different horses every day). We didn’t really get what I would call instruction, but the horses know their jobs really well and they let you do decent-sized jumps. It was a really good confidence-builder and cemented my decision to buy an event horse with some experience the next year! Here are some of the jumps we did:


We rented a car, and I planned the rest of our trip myself (I’m an amateur travel agent lol) and did all the driving. I’m happy to send you more info if you want! Ireland is absolutely gorgeous and very easy for self-drive, IMO.

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Thank you! I would love more info, I’m sending you a DM.

It looks like my friend is interested in this tour:
https://www.irelandequestriantours.com/dublin-city-country-estates-rugged-north-coast-6-nights

Dates would be in October 2023.

My perfect vacation trip would be something where I could ride daily over varying terrain, would love to do a few XC sessions (with instructor preferably) and would be amazing to ride with the hunt.

So our trip was ~$3,000/person, all in, which I think is pretty reasonable for 10 days in Europe including a lot of riding. Per person that broke down to:

$756 - Flight (not sure if this is remotely attainable these days)
$145 - Insurance (trip and health, which was recommended or maybe required by Flowerhill)
$132 - Car rental for 10 days (manual transmission Mini Cooper)
$553 - Lodging ($373 of that was the nice B&B associated with the XC outfitter; the remainder was Airbnbs at $50-130/night and the two of us shared a room)
$871 - Riding (4.5 days total, including the 2 days of hunting)
$255 - Additional for 2 days of hunting (capping fees and shipping I think?)
$111 - Other activities and random stuff (bus passes in Dublin, bicycle rental, park admission, etc)
$49 - Fuel for 10 days of driving (it’s expensive but nothing is far away by our standards here)
$193 - Food (we didn’t eat out a ton and chose lodging where we could cook for ourselves sometimes; breakfast and lunch on riding days was provided by the B&B; lunch on other days was typically some bread, deli meats, fruit, etc from a grocery store)

Our itinerary was:
Day 1 - fly to Dublin
Day 2 - arrive in Dublin, explore the city in the PM
Day 3 - pick up rental car, drive 3 hrs west to the Dingle Peninsula with sightseeing on the way
Day 4 - rent bicycles and do 30-mi ride around Dingle with stops for picnic lunch/sightseeing
Day 5 - drive north to Galway via Cliffs of Moher and the Burren with stops for sightseeing/hiking etc
Day 6 - Connemara Loop (5-hr sightseeing drive with stops for hiking etc)
Day 7 - XC AM, lunchtime hack, XC PM
Day 8 - same
Day 9 - drag hunt
Day 10 - live hunt
Day 11 - XC AM, drive to Dublin
Day 12 - fly home

This sounds morbid but we scheduled the riding for the end of the trip in case one of us got hurt, haha. Also a fun thing to look forward to I guess! Of course there’s a LOT more horsey stuff you could do in Ireland. I had visited the Irish National Stud on a previous trip.

Regarding the riding, I have mixed feelings about Flowerhill. Like I said above, you get a lot of riding and jumping, and it was a good confidence-builder. There was hardly any instruction though, unless you really screwed something up. It was more just “go jump this, go jump that.” We went out in a largish group (8-12 people maybe?) and cantered jumps in a spread-out line. It was mostly in pasture-type fields with some stretches through the woods, but wasn’t incredibly scenic. I suspect the link you posted is much more scenic, but of course less XC…

As for the Flowerhill horses/tack, they were safe but nothing special. I was loosely horse shopping and although I didn’t make time for it in the trip, I was open-minded about falling in love with one of my mounts and bringing it home, which is a thing I’ve heard has happened to other people riding in Ireland. On a previous XC vacation years ago I would absolutely have bought at least two of the horses I rode! I didn’t feel remotely that way about any of the Flowerhill horses. And the horse I was put on for the live hunt was the roughest, most uncomfortable jumper I’ve ever sat on–I was jostled almost to the point of falling off over every fence. I have no idea what he was doing…it was almost like the front end and back end were doing separate things. Thankfully another woman had to head in early and she suggested I switch with her because she had ridden the horse I was on before and knew how uncomfortable he was. If I hadn’t switched it would have been an utterly miserable day. I actually don’t remember/know if that was a Flowerhill horse or provided by the person who took us hunting though… The live hunt was arranged through Flowerhill but we met someone else there and the horses might have been his.

I wouldn’t do exactly the same trip again but I think it was good value and we did get a ton of jumping time. We also went in October and got absurdly lucky with the weather. I think it rained lightly once or twice but that was it!

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