Laurel Lake Farm

Laurel Lake Farm is located in Tyler Hill, Pennsylvania.

Our Web site contains photos of our horses for you to enjoy and links to informative websites.

We have three horses. Sargent and Delta are Quarter Horses. Relampago is a Colonial Spanish Horse.

Sargent, a.k.a. Sarge, became Annie's horse in July of 2006. He stayed at C&S Stables in Equinunk until we welcomed him to our farm at the end of September 2007.

Delta is boarded at C&S Stables where Annie rides under the watchful eye of trainer Sue Meyer. Delta Dawn is a registered Quarter Horse (BA Diamonds Commotion). Delta was born in Minnesota, but she lived most of her life in Wisconsin. While in the upper mid-west, Delta had two foals and worked at a ranch. Sue and Clarence Meyer brought her to C&S Stables from an auction. She's our girl now and lives at C&S Stables.

Annie said, "Without the Meyer Family (Sue, Clarence, Timmy, and Amy), I wouldn't have the opportunity to learn, ride, and enjoy the two boys and our girl Delta."

In the spring of 2008, Annie and Delta earned two blue ribbons at the C&S Stables Horse Show! Their first ribbon was in Horsemanship and the second one in Western Pleasure.

Relampago Rio Grande, A.K.A. Rompy, joined us in October 2007. He is a Colonial Spanish Horse of the Baca Chica strain of New Mexico and is registered with the Horse of the Americas. Sarge and Rompy live at our farm and are getting along really well together. We met Rompy in August 2007 at Red Road Farm in Vermont and visited him again in September. After careful consideration, Baca Horse Conservancy manager and trainer Stephanie Lockhart and Annie decided that Rompy would come to Pennsylvania to make his new home with us. 

Relampago made the early October 2007 trip from Red Road Farm in Vermont to Pennsylvania when Stephanie and her daughters Tory and Eliza with their Colonial Spanish Horses Morado, Ringo, and Adelantado stopped overnight on their way to the Horse of the Americas meeting in Indiana. Rompy and Sarge quickly made the adjustment and are a joy to watch. It has been a long journey for Rompy from the Baca Horse Conservancy in New Mexico via Red Road Farm in Vermont and finally to his home in Tyler Hill.

We invite you to follow the links page to learn more about Quarter Horses and Colonial Spanish Horses, America's first horse. Our photo album shows the story in pictures of Sargent and Relampago at Laurel Lake Farm and Delta at C&S Stables.