Family-run · Climate-controlled · Since 2004

Your horse,
calm and
cared for.

From backyard barns to national show grounds — we haul with the same care a mother mare gives crossing a stream.

Read our story
4,800+ horses hauled38 states servedFamily-owned

Every load, the same care.

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Climate-controlled trailersEquine first-aid certified driversPhoto updates every stopPersonal quote within 4 hours4,800+ horses hauled safely
Climate-controlled trailersEquine first-aid certified driversPhoto updates every stopPersonal quote within 4 hours4,800+ horses hauled safely
Climate-controlled trailersEquine first-aid certified driversPhoto updates every stopPersonal quote within 4 hours4,800+ horses hauled safely

Origin Story

Twenty years.
One family.

2004

One truck. One promise.

Dad bought a used two-horse straight-load from a retired quarter-horse trainer in Lexington. We didn't have a website. We had a phone number painted on the side of the truck and a handshake that meant something. That first summer, we hauled 14 horses. Every single owner met us at the gate.

1 / 5
2007

The first foal.

A breeder in Ocala called — she had a mare, eleven months along, needed to move her 400 miles north before the foal came. Mom rode in the back the whole way, talking to the mare the entire drive. The foal was born three days after we arrived. They named her Journey.

2 / 5
2012

Christmas Eve, I-40 westbound.

An ice storm closed the highway outside Amarillo. We had four horses on board — two show hunters, a pregnant warmblood, and an old Thoroughbred who'd raced at Belmont. We pulled into a truck stop, ran the generator for heat, and stayed with them until the roads cleared at 4 a.m. We didn't charge for the extra hours.

3 / 5
2018

The daughter takes the wheel.

My sister Elena started dispatching routes from the kitchen table when she was nineteen. She memorized every client's horse by name before she'd ever met the animal. She still answers the 2 a.m. calls when a horse colics mid-transit. She's the reason people call us back.

4 / 5
2024

Six trailers. Same family.

We run six climate-controlled rigs now, all named after horses we've carried. The newest one is called Journey. We've hauled to 38 states. We've never lost a horse. We still answer our own phones.

5 / 5

Inside the Trailer

What happens between
loading and arrival.

Interior of a clean, well-lit horse trailer with padded walls and ventilation
01

Climate control, always on.

Our trailers maintain 60–72°F year-round. In summer we pre-cool before loading. In winter we pre-warm. A horse that arrives calm arrived comfortable.

Close-up of a horse eating from a hay net inside a trailer, appearing relaxed and calm
02

Hay net in, phone on.

Every horse travels with a full hay net and fresh water. Our drivers text you a photo within the first hour on the road — and again at every rest stop.

A driver checking on a horse through the trailer window at a rest stop on a sunny day
03

Drivers who know horses.

Every Haul driver holds a current equine first-aid certification. Most of them own horses. When something feels off, they pull over and check — before it becomes a problem.

20+

Years in service

4,800+

Horses hauled

38

States served

0

Horses lost in transit

Voices

From the people
who handed us the lead rope.

"

I've hauled with five different companies over twelve years. Haul is the only one where I didn't spend the whole drive refreshing my phone. They sent a photo before I even thought to ask.

Portrait of a woman in her 40s smiling, wearing a barn jacket outdoors

Margaret Calloway

Amateur eventer, Middleburg VA

Rides Copper Dune, a 10-year-old Irish Sport Horse

"

We moved two pregnant mares from Kentucky to Oregon in February. Elena called the night before to walk through the route stop by stop. No one had ever done that for us before.

Portrait of a man in his 50s in a barn setting, wearing a flannel shirt

Tom Birch

Warmblood breeder, Versailles KY

Selle Français mares, 10 and 11 months in foal

"

We coordinate six horses for the HITS circuit every spring. The logistics alone would give most haulers a headache. Haul doesn't flinch. They've never been late to a show.

Portrait of a woman in her 30s in professional attire, confident expression

Diana Reyes

Barn manager, Wellington FL

Six A-circuit hunter/jumpers on seasonal rotation

Ready when you are

Tell us where your horse
needs to go.

We'll call you back within four hours with a personal quote. No automated system. A real person who wants to know your horse's name.

We've answered the 2 a.m. call. We'll answer yours too.