In October 2022, Asbury University completed construction on the Equine Program’s new 29,000-square-foot Henry and Elsie Bayless Arena, a new facility that includes 26 stalls and a Western riding arena on Asbury’s 343-acre Equine property.
“Asbury’s Equine Program has seen incredible momentum since its founding in 1997 and the launch of its first major in 2007,” said President Dr. Kevin Brown. “The program’s exponential growth has been a tremendous blessing both for this institution and the students we serve. Adding a new riding arena and boarding barn facility, which will be larger than the current three facilities combined, will enable us to accommodate more students, more classes, and more disciplines like Western riding. I am grateful for our donors whose generosity enabled us to take this pivotal next step and look forward to witnessing the continued expansion of Christ-centered equine education in this space.”
Since the program was launched with one simple barn, it has added multiple facilities, paddocks and training areas to accommodate students in several degree programs. The first major in Equine officially began in 2007 and has grown to include Equine Management, Equine Science, a pre-vet track, and an Equine Assisted Services major that focuses on utilizing horses across multiple disciplines like counseling or rehabilitation.
The Equine Program was founded and is still led by Professor Harold Rainwater, who noted that a lot of the growth in recent years came in Asbury’s Police Mounts program — a training specialization that prepares colts for police work. Asbury’s police horses can be found all over the nation, including in Lexington and Louisville. Seven of them served at the 2022 Kentucky Derby. Rainwater said this new facility will allow for the Police Mounts program to be housed in one central location, where it can continue to flourish.
“This new barn for me is just about as big as it can get,” Rainwater reflected. “This barn allows us to have police mounts, borders, all the programs we ever dreamed of having all in one arena at the equine center. I’m thankful and grateful to be a part of it.”
The 100-by-226-foot sand/dirt combination arena also will provide a training location for Asbury’s new Western Riding program, formally launching this fall.
“The synthetic surface we have in the present area, the poly track, Western horses don’t work on poly track,” Rainwater noted. “It sounds silly to a lot of people that that you need a different surface, but it’s like a basketball player, softball player and a soccer player – they all want a different surface.”
The facility also will have two bathrooms, storage and tack rooms, and space for portable seating. It frees up the three current barns for other uses in the growing program, including for the Equine Assisted Services major. The Henry and Elsie Bayless Arena also allows for more students to board their horses at the university, creating an additional revenue stream for the educational programs.