KINE EQUUS PHILOSOPHY
About me
I’m Medi Mewes, and horses have been part of my life for as long as I can remember. It was never a passing hobby. It was something I knew deep inside.
As a child, I would spend hours in the stables simply observing. Learning without even knowing I was learning. Waiting with excitement for the next session, not just to ride, but to be close to them.
That early passion became a vocation. And that vocation became a project. That is how Kine Equus was born.
That is where everything began: no rush, no pressure… just connection.
A different way of seeing the horse
For years, I felt that I didn’t fully fit within the traditional equestrian world.
It wasn’t a matter of technique. It was a matter of perspective.
While many spoke about performance, I spoke about balance. While others looked for quick results, I was observing processes. While people talked about “making the horse do”, I was trying to understand what the horse needed.
To me, every horse is an individual. With a story. With sensitivity. With their own timing.
And I realised that if I couldn’t find that space… I had to create it.
Ethical, coherent, and respectful training
My work is rooted in ethical, coherent, and conscious training, where communication replaces imposition.
It is not about dominating. It is about building a solid relationship. Supporting instead of forcing. Listening before asking. Reading before correcting.
Many people arrive looking for “natural horsemanship” or “natural training”. I understand the term, but I also feel it is important to name things honestly: a horse in freedom is not something to be “broken” or “made” — for me, what is natural is not the label, but the coherence with their body, their mind, and the way they learn.
That is why I prefer to speak about ethical training, coherent training, and conscious training: a way of educating without breaking, without rushing stages, and without losing the essence of the horse.
I work with young horses through physical preparation and proprioception, making sure the body is ready before asking for movement or performance.
Because a horse that is physically balanced is also mentally safer. And when body and mind are aligned, learning flows.
Physical preparation and body awareness
A large part of my approach includes:
- Proprioception work
- Development of natural balance
- Progressive physical preparation
- Biomechanical understanding of movement
I am not looking for a horse that simply “functions”. I am looking for a horse that understands its own body. One that gains stability. One that moves with freedom. One that builds confidence from within.
This approach is directly connected to respecting the horse’s biomechanics and offering real support. Nothing is separate. Everything is part of the same process.
A space for real growth
The horses that grow here do so in a herd.
They live, develop, and learn in a way that respects their social nature. Environment matters. Management matters. Coherence matters.
When the moment of the first ride arrives, we are not looking for immediate obedience. We are looking for trust. We are looking for understanding. We are looking for emotional balance. That is the true beginning of the partnership.
More than selling: coherence
The horses that are born or shaped here are not simply handed over to the highest bidder.
For me, it is not enough that someone can afford them. I need to feel that there is coherence. That they will still be allowed to be horses. That herd life will remain part of their world. That there will be continuity in respect and in the way of working.
I am not looking for buyers. I am looking for possible partnerships.
My philosophy
Listen before asking. Prepare before demanding. Support before accelerating.
Kine Equus stands on three pillars:
Coherence is what holds everything together. And that coherence begins with me.
If this resonates with you…
Perhaps you are not looking for speed. You are looking for depth.
Perhaps you are not looking for a horse that simply obeys. You are looking for a solid, conscious relationship.
Nothing is separated here: relationship and biomechanics go hand in hand. Movement and awareness do too.
Shall we talk?
If you feel that your way of understanding the horse deserves a different kind of space, I would be happy to listen.
No rush. No pressure. With coherence.
No commitment — No rush
