Thanks to the amazing Gaby Reutter for showing me around and having a very fun interview!
You can find Gaby on instagram @gabriela.reutter

My name is Esme and my Channel ‘This Esme’ is where I vlog my life living in the Countryside with a passion for fashion, beauty, fitness and horses. Follow me as I navigate life in my 20s while running a business as well as being an author and TV Presenter!

Disclaimer I am an Ambassador for Fairfax and Favor and a Sponsored rider AD for Redpost Equestrian + Voltaire Design + Baileys Horse Feeds + Charles Owen + LeMieux + Lister + Bloomfields + Equito, however all opinions are my own.
I am also supported my Drimee, Silvermoor Haylage
Hey everyone, you can now join my channel and get extra perks! Thanks for supporting the channel it really mean so much to me!
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCyvB6v89RVGuU1-9fvB73zQ/join

Share.

23 Comments

  1. im an egyptian but i know english more than arabic. So when i tell someone at the stables any tool in english they tell me, what who, but my trainer is the only one who understands meπŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚

  2. Difference between breeches and jodhpurs: jodhpurs: for 12yo and younger, used with garter straps, are commonly used in the hunters, are a thicker material, and have straps for them to be pulled over the boots. Breeches are thinner material and is used for everyone older than 13.

  3. I always ride in hair nets when I am not schooling at home! Thats another thing in the US. Everyone wears a hairnet then they are over 13 years. But a lot of people do just put their hair in the hairnet and flip it into my hairnet. It does itch but I've gotten used to it.

  4. I LOVE this type of videos! I love just sitting down and having a fun chat while also having a good laugh! and I love when you make a bit longer videos like your "my horses try new foods" video!

  5. I think half the cultural disconnect is because you're in wellington lol, so from a could-never-afford-wellington american rider: jodhpurs are kid's breeches (over the boot), the 18-wheelers aren't common enough to have a horse-specific term yet, field shelters are called run-ins (they're a very common alternative to barns with stalls), barns without an internal aisle are still just barns, and most people do not train in hairnets. In ny where it'll be below freezing for weeks no one uses rubber in their arenas and they never freeze, idk what marketing convinced the uk that was necessary. split leases are pretty common in lower tax brackets, and there are lots of small private farms with english riders throughout the east.

Leave A Reply