About Us

Learn more about what we do

Our Mission

To provide access to authentic connections with humans, horses, and nature

Our Values and Beliefs

Achievement

When we learn better, we are morally obligated to do better.

Commitment

When we get tired, we will rest or regroup not quit.

Competence

The greatest thing about knowing what, is understanding why.

Creativity

Gifts and talents can change lifestyles.

Empowerment

Knowledge is power.

Growth

Life-long learning is inevitable.

Individuality

Everyone should find and follow their own path.

Inspiration

Be the change we seek and talk about.

Integrity

Hold ourselves and each other accountable for our words and actions.

Responsibility

Each one should reach one.

Get to Know Our Equestrian Instructor

Tonya R. Beckett, PhD

Grew up on a 12-acre family farm in Lena, SC. When she was about six years old, her paternal grandfather, Horace Sr., bought a pony, Ranger. As an adolescent and teenager, she would often ask her father, Harry, for a horse. His responses were always the same. “A horse will kick the s^!+ outta ya.” And, “a horse is quick to die on ya.” Growing up, she vowed to one day own a horse that looked just like Barbie’s horse, Dallas (circa 1980). Over two decades passed. Then in 2002, 

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Our Equestrian Instructor

Then in 2002, Tonya’s mother, Rose Marie, spotted her Dallas driving home from work one afternoon. Fortunately, Rose Marie worked with one of the owner’s, Woodrow, daughters who made the connection for Tonya to see her Dallas up close, face to muzzle. Although Tonya had not been around a horse of any kind since Ranger, she was so excited of the possibility that maybe, just maybe, a horse really did exist that looked like Dallas.

To her astonishment, indeed, it was! It was Tonya’s dream horse. At the time, however, the foal was close to being a year old and Woodrow wasn’t sure that he would part with him as a yearling. Completely, but respectfully disregarding Woodrow’s strong insinuation about not selling the yearling, Tonya smiled at him and stated “I’ll be back in about a year to get my horse.” Woodrow through his head back and laughed with glistening gold teeth across his front uppers and pearly white teeth everywhere else, which ended with one of the most beautiful smiles ever.

From that moment until she got ready to leave, Woodrow and Tonya stood in the pasture exchanging small talk getting to know one another a little better. Sensing the seriousness of her intent, before Tonya left, Woodrow reminded her that he never agreed or said that he would part with the yearling. In response, Tonya chuckled, smirked, and reminded him that she would be back in about a year.

Over the following year, Rose Marie kept an eye on the yearling in her travels to and from work. On occasion, Tonya would send messages to Woodrow by way of her mother and his daughter. From all accounts, those messages would always make Woodrow laugh and result in that million-dollar smile.

Time passed and before Woodrow knew it, the yearling was old enough to be weaned from its mother and sold. Tonya sent one last message to Woodrow via her mother and his daughter. A few days later and as promised, Tonya returned to Woodrow’s home to behold the growth of her dream yearling with much more definitive flagrant markings and to discuss his sale. Even after the year had passed, Woodrow still found Tonya’s delightful persistence laughable and was even more determined not to sell the yearling. After about a month or so, Woodrow’s decision had not changed as the yearling was growing more beautiful and majestic with each day. When Tonya realized her dream horse was perhaps slipping away from her grasp, she shared her childhood horse fantasy with Woodrow and that made all the difference in the world. When Woodrow understood the reason behind Tonya’s perseverance, he could not keep the yearling. Woodrow sold and delivered the yearling as agreed. Barbie had Dallas, and Tonya, finally, acquired her dream horse, Prince.

Despite having not grown up with access to a horse or opportunities to develop equestrian skills as an adolescent, teenager, and young adult, Tonya’s affinity for horses never declined. If anything, it grew even more. When residents realized her affinity for horses, Tonya began getting messages about other owners’ who were reluctantly surrendering their horses to a good home. And, the rest of this story is not history, it is alive and well. DayDream Equestrian Center, “where dreams really do come true,” was established in May of 2020. Furthermore, to date, no horse has ever kicked the s^!+ out of her and only two have passed.

Tonya is a 23-year professional educator who is licensed in FL, GA, SC, and NC as a Business Education Teacher, Career and Technical Education Director, Secondary Principal, Secondary Supervisor, Superintendent and in Educational Leadership with endorsements in Reading to Succeed and Gifted and Talented. Tonya’s experience includes teaching, training, curriculum, instruction, assessment, strategic planning, grant writing, and grant management. She has earned an AA with a concentration in Office Information Systems, a BS in Information Systems Technology, and a MAT in Business Education all from the University of South Carolina, and a PhD in Educational Administration from Capella University.

In addition to over 17 years’ experience caring for and managing horses, Tonya has registered over 33 riding hours, 40 hours in equine handling, 40 hours in working with individuals with disabilities in an equine environment, and 30 hours of supervised teaching from four Professional Association of Therapeutic Horsemanship (PATH) International (Intl) Premier Accredited Centers in the southeast. In addition, Tonya is certified by the National Council for Behavioral Health to provide Mental Health First Aid and certified in Adult and Child CPR, AED, and Basic First Aid by the American Safety & Health Institute.

Learn more about

Our Facility

DayDream Equestrian Center encompasses approximately 10-acres of prime farmland with an estimated 1,408’ of galvanized perimeter fencing 5’ tall, a 24’ x 71’ open barn with five 12’ x 10’ stalls, an adjoining 12’ x 12’ tack room, a generous 60’ round pen, a spacious 52' x 52' holding pen, a magnanimous 96’ x 176’ arena, an 8’ x 8’ free-standing restroom with a laundry area, and two 12’ x 5’ areas for grain and hay.

Pastures

DayDream Equestrian Center has four expansive and manicured grass hay pastures that are rotated regularly and treated for weeds and parasites during its renewal period. Each pasture is planted twice a year with rye grass and oats for year-round grazing. Pastures are regularly maintained to ensure clean 40-gallon stock tanks with automatic watering systems and access to free-standing supplemental mineral blocks.

Barn

DayDream Equestrian Center features a spacious 24’ x 71’ open barn certified to withstand hurricane winds up to 140 mph with eight 8' 8,500 lumen LED lights, five 12’ x 10’ stalls each with an adjoining 12’ x 10' turn out, and a 12’ x 12' tack room.

Stalls

DayDream Equestrian Center's 12' x 10' stalls are equipped with a 30" high velocity fan, a large square bale hay net, a 16-qt grain feeder, and a 4-gallon automatic watering system.

Tack Room

DayDream Equestrian Center's 12' x 12' tack room, adjoined to the barn, is accessible and equipped with helmet hangers, whip holders, 6-arm horizontal saddle pad racks, heavy duty 5-arm vertical blanket racks, three-tier saddle racks, bridle brackets, a horse first-aid kit, a human first-aid kit, a shared (humans and horses) and secure first-aid mini-frig, and a separate beverage mini-frig.

Arena

DayDream Equestrian Center features a magnanimous 96' x 176' open riding arena equipped with barrels, cones, and cavalettis as well as four 10,000 lumen LED security lights for a controlled riding experience even at night.

Round Pen

DayDream Equestrian Center features a generous 60' round pen that can be used for many forms of training or exercise to promote greater interaction between a horse and its owner or a participant.

Holding Pen

DayDream Equestrian Center also features a 52' x 52' holding pen equipped with a large square bale hay net, a 16-qt grain feeder, and an automatic water tank for short-term containment, loading and unloading, or to reduce stress or anxiety.

Wash Stall

DayDream Equestrian Center features an open 12' x 10' wash stall for bathing horses or treating injuries.

Grain Area and Hay Bay

Horses at DayDream Equestrian Center are fed beet pulp, oats, pellets, sweet feed, or a combination of concentrates along with a feed-thru fly control as well as quality grass hay pastures and legume hays according to their dietary needs.

Restroom

DayDream Equestrian Center features an 8' x 8' accessible horseshoe accessorized restroom with a 19-gallon utility sink, a comfort height tiolet, space for a washer and dryer, and a framed wall mirror.

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