Meet Method Ambassador Serena Bowman

0718_03

When Serena was 9 years old, she paid a dollar in quarters for her first horse. Sunny was a 5-year-old stallion with a nasty attitude and a lot of baggage. He’d been headed to an auction when Serena intervened.

Although the ill-mannered pony was a challenge, he met his match in Serena, who’d been in the saddle before she could walk. Her grandmother, who lived just up the road, introduced her to horses, and Serena’s older sister, Shawnea, who is 10 years older than her, loved to ride, too. “I spent every free minute I had at my grandma’s barn. I’d quickly do my barn chores and then get in the saddle,” Serena says. “I started by riding my grandma’s and sister’s trained horses, and when I got a little older, I remember my sister using her rodeo queen money to buy a pony I could ride. She was a killer pony, straight up horrible, but she taught me a lot.”

By the time Serena was skilled enough to take on a project like Sunny, Shawnea had been to her first Walkabout Tour and was hooked on the Method. “I remember her coming back from the tour with a green halter, lead rope, stick and string for me. She taught me what she’d learned and helped me with the first two weeks of Sunny’s training,” Serena remembers.

Soon, the sisters were religiously watching Clinton’s training program on RFD-TV together, and learning everything they could about the Method to better their skill set. “I’d grown up around horses, but as soon as I started using the Method and saw the results I could get, I was all in,” Serena says. “It wasn’t just about the horses getting better, either. I loved the potential I saw in myself.”

Serena spent her middle-school and teen years taking in free horses with problems and flipping them with the Method. “I loved how quickly I could get results and that the horses remembered what I taught them,” she says.

Attending the Academy and becoming a Method Ambassador was a natural choice for the dedicated horsewoman. “There is nothing I love more than training horses and helping people learn how to work better with them,” she says. “When you realize what you and your horse are truly capable of, it opens up a whole new level of enjoyment and fun.”

Serena is based in Farmington, Arkansas, where she trains horses for the public and teaches private lessons and clinics that focus on the Fundamentals level of the Method. Learn all about Serena on her website and contact her directly at 707-357-2326 or [email protected].

More News

Back to all news

See All
FILES2f20162f052f0531_Tip.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Training Tip: Correct a Crabby Loper

Until they’ve been taught to move forward off a gentle squeeze of your legs, some horses get crabby when asked…

Read More
0426_02

4 years ago

Needed: Performance Horse Day Help in the Texas Area

To season his performance horses, Clinton is hauling them to Texas once a month to ride at different facilities for…

Read More
Phoenix_header_baby-got-back

6 years ago

Fundamentals With Phoenix: How to Train Your Human

Lesson 4: Baby Got Back Quarter Horse, Thoroughbred, Mustang, Akhal-Teke, Spotted Saddle Horse … no matter our breeding, we all…

Read More
0214_05

9 years ago

An Unforgettable Experience

If you love the Method and are dedicated to improving your horsemanship, the Ranch Rally is a must-attend event. The…

Read More