Wings and Hooves Overview and History

  • December 28, 2009 4:28 pm

Founded by Karen Cuneo, Wings and Hooves Therapeutic Riding, Inc. is the realization of a lifelong dream. With the purchase of Kingswood Farms in 2001, Karen began paving the long road to attaining her dream. Fixing the barn, acquiring appropriate equipment, becoming a local legend, and battling through a third kidney transplant, Karen set the foundation for a premiere therapeutic riding facility destined to change lives.

Karen officially incorporated Wings and Hooves Therapeutic Riding, Inc. (Wings and Hooves) on June 6, 2009. However, Karen had been changing the lives of individuals with various challenges since 2005 when she decided to informally provide therapeutic riding services to local community members. Word of Karen’s accomplishments with her riders spread rapidly in the community. As each family approached Karen and each rider achieved small successes, Karen realized her impact in the community could be much larger.

One of Karen’s most compelling reasons for incorporation and application for 501(c)3 status is Taylor, a nonverbal Autistic 4-year old whose mother learned of Karen through word of mouth. Taylor arrived to Karen with a wide array of challenges associated with the Autism Spectrum Disorder. Taylor’s mother shared stories with Karen regarding the child’s inability to talk, severe tantrums, anger management issues, lack of visible emotion apart from anger, and use of gibberish. It was as though Taylor was stuck in her own world of which no one, including her family, was a part. Doctors weren’t, and still aren’t, able to fully diagnose what Taylor struggles with on a daily basis. When Taylor and her family arrived to Karen, like many of Karen’s riders, modern medicine had failed them.

Taylor walked into the barn for the first time, hunched over, looking down to the ground, unable to make eye-contact, and extremely apprehensive towards people, as well as the horses. Her body language exuded a lack of desire to take part in any activity, much less horseback riding. During the first mounting of Tiffany, the half-Arabian pony selected for the lesson, Taylor ran away in disgust, throwing a temper-tantrum in the middle of the barn aisle. After some time and much persuasion, Karen and her volunteers were able to place a very disgusted Taylor on a very patient Tiffany’s back. Fearing the child would throw herself off the horse or refuse the sidewalkers supportive touch, Taylor surprised everyone when she immediately calmed down, looked up to the arena’s rafters and pointing to the birds, exclaimed, “Duck!”

The second week seemed a small triumph when Taylor mounted the horse with less apprehension. Little by little and lesson by lesson, Taylor achieved small victories. Over the course of the first month, Karen was bitten, spat at, and hit less often. In only two months, Taylor used words like “Whoaaaaa” and “Trot” while riding “Tiff,” as she so affectionately referred to the pony. After three months, Taylor began to verbalize words both at the barn and at home. In five months, she began to prepare her riding clothes and point to her riding boots, mumbling “boots boots boots,” before leaving for her weekly lesson. At some point, Taylor even began to show excitement when driving through the farm gate. After six months, Taylor verbalized additional words. Most remarkably, she showed love and compassion towards the animal – insisting on helping to tack Tiff up or help put Tiff away. She even pet, hugged, and kissed Tiff. Each week, Karen carefully planned lessons that incorporated sequencing tasks, speech therapy practice, and social activities. As time continued to progress, Taylor was grabbing her reins, placing her feet in the stirrups, and rocking her body to move Tiffany all on her own – exhibiting the correct sequencing tasks for mounting and cuing a horse to walk. Taylor would sit straight as an arrow on her horse, unlike her typical hunched stature. She eventually refused the assistance of sidewalkers, pushing their hands away from her legs. She yelled words like “walk” and “trot.” She excitingly gave out high fives to Karen, later taking her hand after lessons. Within the year, Taylor was applying the lessons she learned each week on Tiffany to her behavior at home. According to Taylor’s mother, riding “humanized” Taylor.

Most remarkably, Karen noticed a change in the pony, Tiffany, during the course of Taylor’s development as a rider. A pony plagued by intestinal issues that resulted in three stomach surgeries, multiple hospitalizations, and an early show retirement, Tiffany often appeared sad and irritable in the barn. With a limited exercise regimen and her former rider busy with high school, Tiffany was most likely bored and lonely. Taylor’s arrival, however, provided a new purpose for the once daily-ridden Regional Champion show pony. Karen watched as Tiffany’s health steadily improved, her demeanor changed, her eyes filled with life, and years left her face. Although Tiffany’s role as a therapeutic riding horse was drastically different from that of a show horse, it appeared as though Tiffany embraced her new job with enthusiasm and seriousness. Tiffany, when once she may have spooked in her show years, knew to stay still when Taylor threw a temper tantrum. When Tiffany’s owner would take the pony for her weekly gallop in the pastures, Tiffany bucked and kicked at loud noises, and yet she stood still for Taylor during thunderstorms. The mare understood that her behavior with Taylor had to be different than her behavior with able-bodied riders. The vet approved Tiffany’s limited activity for the lesson program and commented that since the lessons with Taylor had begun, the twenty-three year old pony looked ten years younger. Karen slowly discovered that the therapeutic riding lessons she found so beneficial for Taylor were helping the pony, as well. It was as though they had needed each other.

However, Karen experienced several health-related challenges that impeded the program’s natural progression to incorporation. Diagnosed with Lupus at 20 years old, Karen lost both kidneys at 31. After fighting for her life when her first transplant failed, Karen immediately found herself in the same situation as the second transplant failed in 2006. While waiting for a third kidney donor and attending dialysis, Karen continued to ride horses to stay “calm” and “hopeful.” Karen even conducted Taylor’s weekly riding lessons, refusing to impede the progress Taylor had already made. Assisted by dedicated volunteers, Karen gave lessons from a chair, also providing her the opportunity to forget about a failing kidney. Karen underwent a third kidney transplant in April of 2006. While on the long road to recovery, she continued to teach Taylor from her chair in the arena, becoming more and more determined to open Wings and Hooves in order to help others with challenges. Later that year, Karen enrolled in University of New Hampshire’s Equine Science program where she earned her North American Riding for the Handicapped Instructor Certification and will receive a BS in Equine Science with a concentration in Therapeutic Riding in 2010.

Additional riders arrived through word of mouth recommendations. When Tiffany eventually passed away, Karen enlisted the help of other retired show horses living in her barn. Riders continued to arrive, retired show horses continued to prove reliable and dedicated mounts, and success stories continued to unravel. Throughout it all, Karen remained steadfast in providing her services free of charge. Before she knew it, Karen had realized her dream.

Incorporating and applying for 501(c)3 tax exemption status was the next step for Karen. With a growing demand for her services, Karen decided she could help more people like Taylor if she enlisted the support of generous donors, the opportunity for federal grants, and most importantly, the advice of a diverse and experienced Board of Directors. When combined with passionate staff and a motivated volunteer base, Karen discovered that Wings and Hooves could be limitless.

Wings and Hooves is the culmination of a 169 acre farm in East Kingston, New Hampshire, months of dialysis, long trail rides in the woods, the Taylors, the Tiffs, ducks, “boots boots boots,“ three kidney transplants, the mysterious intelligence of Arabian horses, and a genuinely compassionate woman with a dream. It is a nonprofit dedicated to enhancing the lives of individuals with physical, emotional and developmental challenges by building confidence through equine-assisted activities and partnerships. It offers others, including retired show horses, the opportunity for a second chance. It allows volunteers to help others to fly hoof by hoof. And, it is only the beginning.

Karen Cuneo

  • December 28, 2009 12:37 pm

Return to the Wings and Hooves Staff page.

Karen Cuneo with friends

Karen Cuneo, Founder, President and Lead Instructor

Founder, Board President and Lead Instructor

Karen Cuneo is the founder and lead instructor of Wings and Hooves Therapeutic Riding, Inc. After returning to college to pursue an additional degree in Equine Science, Karen received her NARHA (North American Riding for the Handicapped Association) Instructor Certification in May, 2009. While working towards her degree, Karen has set up Wings and Hooves in order for riders with different challenges to excel. Karen, who has worked in the financial industry since 1983, discovered horses to be an excellent source of stress relief and relaxation. Karen has a successful show history, winning various blue ribbons in the Purebred Hunter Pleasure and Half Arabian Western Pleasure divisions. Karen now cheers on her daughter, Kristen, who is a very successful rider on the Arabian and Half-Arabian Regional and National circuit, earning multiple Regional championships and National awards. Karen subscribes to the saying, “When looking into the eye of a horse, he looks into your soul.” Karen believes equine activities bring out the best in people and allow individuals to soar while realizing their incredible potential. Karen resides in East Kingston with her husband, Paul, and daughter, Kristen, both of whom are vitally important in setting up and running Wings and Hooves.

Colleen Boylan

  • December 28, 2009 12:32 pm

Return to the Wings and Hooves Staff page.

Colleen Boylan

Colleen Boylan with Emily Caron, friend and rider of Wings and Hooves

Executive Director

Colleen Boylan arrives to Wings and Hooves with nonprofit experience and a personal passion for horses. Colleen has worked with several nonprofit organizations in various capacities, but most recently as a case manager with an international mentoring agency. She has shown Arabian and Half-Arabian horses competitively, winning several Regional and Reserve National Championships, including a 2009 United States National Championship in the Half-Arabian Park Amateur to Ride division. Colleen admires the reliable work-ethic of a retired show horse and respects the horses’ desire to accept new responsibilities associated with therapeutic riding. Colleen enjoys working at Wings and Hooves primarily because of the awesome people she gets to meet and work with every day, but also because her retired show horses are right next to her office! Colleen believes in the natural, therapeutic value of an equine partnership and looks forward to facilitating many more through Wings and Hooves. A resident of Derry, New Hampshire, Colleen enjoys running with her two dogs and reading a good book.

Calypso

  • December 28, 2009 12:31 pm

Return to the Wings and Hooves Staff page.

Say hello to Calypso

Say hello to Calypso

Hi, I’m Calypso!

A little about me:

My Registered Name is Calypso.

I am Loved by all of Kingswood Farm.

My birthday was a long time ago, and I am a 26-year old Quarter Horse gelding.

I don’t know my real parents, but was lovingly adopted by Karen, Paul, and Kristen.

My favorite thing in the world is Kingswood Farm where I can play outside with all my horse friends, get groomed all the time, and eats lots of good treats that Trixie picks out for us.

My Past Riding Experience:

I’ve had a different past than most of the horses here. I used to round cattle at farms out West for my job. Since I was so good at it, I competed at horse shows in the Team Roping and Cattle Penning divisions. I was pretty good at it and enjoyed the responsibilities of making sure all the cows got to the place they needed to be. Although some cows can be stubborn, I have a knack for speaking cow and reasoning with them.

My Most Favorite Memory:

My most favorite memory is the day Karen decided I could help out at Wings and Hooves. After having an important and steady job for so long, it was nice to know that I was needed in a different capacity. I may be old and arthritic, but I’m still really useful and can help the therapeutic riding program in whatever way they need me.

My Job at Kingswood Farm:

My job here is to be a loving companion to any horse at Kingswood because I get along with everyone. (Probably because I’ve met so many cows and horses during my lifetime!) I’m also responsible for helping riders become confident and successful. It’s so nice to know that I’m needed here at Wings and Hooves.

Loki

  • December 28, 2009 12:30 pm

What’s Up? I’m Loki!
A little about me:
My Registered Name is Loki – it means God of Mischief and fire in Norwegian.
I am Loved by the Cuneos and everyone else who meets me.
I am a 6-year old Fjord gelding.
I was adopted by Karen, Kristen, and Paul Cuneo in Maine.

My favorite things are everything. I really like to play jokes on people the best, but I can have fun doing anything!

My Past Riding Experience:
Since my arrival to Kingswood, I’ve learned so much! I first came here without knowing one thing about how to be ridden! Now, I know a lot and am learning more and more each day. I can’t wait until I’m ready to help out at Wings and Hooves. I think I’d make a good candidate for their program because I am so super silly and can make all the riders and volunteers smile.

My Most Favorite Memory:
Oh wow. I mean, there are so many since I got to this awesome home. I think I especially like the days I lose my halter in the pasture and all the Kingswood people have to go looking for it! It’s so funny watching them search and search and search…

My Job at Kingswood Farm:
Right now, I just work hard to make people laugh. But, lately I’m buckling down so that I can become a resident therapeutic riding horse at Wings and Hooves. I’m too fun to ride not to be in the program!

Wiser

  • December 28, 2009 12:29 pm

Return to the Wings and Hooves Staff page.

Mr. Wise Guy (Wiser)

Mr. Wise Guy (Wiser)

Hi, I’m Mr. Wise Guy!

A little about me:

My Registered Name is Mr Wise Guy (some people call me Wiser).

I am Loved by Kristen and Karen Cuneo.

My birthday is April 25, 1988, and I am a 21-year old Arabian gelding.

My mom’s name is Scarlet Wind and my dad’s name is Wisdom.

My favorite things to do are showing in the English and Costume divisions, playing with my best friend (Lordy) in the paddocks, getting my withers scratched, eating treats, and hanging with my girl, Kristen – She’s so beautiful and such a talented rider.

My Past Riding Experience:

I started showing as a Purebred English Junior horse and have quite a lengthy resume of blue ribbons in the English Pleasure Open, Amateur, Junior to Ride, and Walk-Trot divisions. I have roughly 12 Regional Top Five, Reserve Championships, and Championships combined. I’ve also ridden to several US, Canadian, and Youth National Championship Titles, including 5 Top Tens, 4 Reserve Championships, and 2 Championships! I still really enjoy going to shows and winning blue ribbons with my girl, Kristen and some of the newer riders. I even received a Legion of Excellence award to recognize my many achievements as show horse! Kristen rode me with my old trainer at a show to receive the award!

My Most Favorite Memory:

One of my most favorite memories is meeting Kristen when she was only 9-years old. I loved being able to take such good care of a little girl while learning how to be a successful walk-trot horse. Together, we rode to a Top Ten at 2005 Youth Nationals in the Arabian Costume Division! I taught my girl a lot, but also learned a bit. Now, Kris and I have fun riding on trails, going to local shows, and teaching others.

My Job at Wings and Hooves:

I love my new job at Wings and Hooves! I’m in charge of helping more people build confidence through riding. It’s a lot of fun to teach our riders all about horses, riding, and showing. Due to an old injury, there’s some nerve damage in my tongue, which is why it hangs out of my mouth sometimes. It doesn’t bother me. In fact, I like that I’m different because I can relate to some of my riders and show them that even with challenges, we can all be really, really, really successful at whatever we put our mind to!!

Memory Maker

  • December 28, 2009 12:28 pm

Return to the Wings and Hooves Staff page.

Memory Maker says hi!

Memory Maker says hi!

Hi, I’m Memory Maker!

A little about me:

My Registered Name is Memory Maker.

I am Loved by Annie Boylan.

My birthday is May 24, 1991 and I am an 18-year old Half-Arabian gelding.

My mom’s name is Dream Dream and my dad’s name is Cologne.

My favorite things to do are to eat grass in the pasture, be ridden bareback, and ride patterns with my Equitation riders. I also really, really love to eat peppermints. The farm even calls them “Memmy Mints” because I love them so much. Sometimes my person takes a handful of them from restaurants to sneak back to me.

My Past Riding Experience:

I’ve had lots of experience in the show ring! I’ve shown in the HA Hunter Pleasure Amateur, Junior, and Walk-Trot divisions. I’ve also shown as a Halter Horse because I’m so handsome and as an Equitation horse because I’m so comfortable to ride. I’ve earned lots of ribbons, including 3 Regional Top Five titles and a Region 16 Reserve Champion Title in the Half-Arabian Hunter Pleasure Amateur Owner To Ride Division.

My Most Favorite Memory:

The most exciting memory for me was when my person, Annie, and I were Half Arabian Hunter Pleasure Junior to Ride 13 and Under Reserve Champions at 2003 Youth Nationals in Albuquerque, New Mexico! I love to look at my many ribbons and trophies because they remind me of how hard Annie and I worked together to become so famous.

My New Job at Wings and Hooves:

I now enjoy my new job at Wings and Hooves because I get to teach new riders how to ride and have fun. I sometimes like to challenge my more experienced riders and show them that they can do whatever they set their mind to doing.

Khlassic Statement

  • December 28, 2009 12:28 pm

Return to the Wings and Hooves Staff page.

Khlassic Statement

Khlassic Statement

Hi, I am Khlassic!

A little about me:

My Registered Name is Khlassic Statement.

I am Loved by Karen Cuneo.

My birthday is February 11, 1997, and I am a 12-year old Arabian gelding.

My mom’s name is Khalico and my dad’s name is Statementt.

My favorite things to do are going in the paddock with Trixie, running with the wind, getting scratched behind my ears and on my neck, and teaching people how to ride.

My Past Riding Experience:

I’ve had a lot of success as a show horse. Because my parents are so beautiful, I was a halter horse in my first year of showing. I then became a really good Arabian Hunter Pleasure horse. I have received a lot of blue ribbons and still sometimes go to horse shows so that my riders and I can practice our skills. My newest job is becoming the star therapeutic-riding horse here at Wings and Hooves.

My Most Favorite Memory:

I’ve been a lucky boy and have lots of favorite memories, but I make new, happy memories every day! Some of the best include the nights my person, Karen, would spoil me rotten with long brushings and lots of horse cookies. Some of the new ones are the times I go to horse shows, when I meet new riders, and or when I play with my many friends in the pastures!

My Job at Wings and Hooves:

I’ve got a big responsibility at Wings and Hooves as the star therapeutic equine. My person, however, believes in me and thinks that I am a good horse for the job. I love helping new riders become great riders. I’m especially helpful at building riders’ confidence so that they can do anything they set their mind to -I believe that anyone can be successful! My riders rock!

Wings and Hooves Flickr Test

  • December 22, 2009 5:03 pm
Powered by Flickr Gallery