
Cedar Rock Farm
146 Estabrooks Rd, Hampton, CT 06247
Cedar Rock Horse Farm is a boarding, training, and recreational horse facility.
Dayville is a village in the town of Killingly in Windham County—the Quiet Corner of northeastern Connecticut—along the Quinebaug River near the Rhode Island border. This corner of Connecticut is among its most rural, with a textile and manufacturing heritage now largely faded, leaving a landscape of wooded hills, farm fields, and river valleys that makes for pleasant New England trail riding territory.
Trail riding and pleasure horsemanship are the focus of the Dayville area's equestrian community, with lesson programs serving a local rider base. The proximity to Rhode Island and Massachusetts gives riders in the area connections to the broader southern New England trail riding network, including Natchaug and Pachaug state forests with their established equestrian trail systems.
Find boarding options throughout the Dayville area below.
Dayville is a village in the town of Killingly in Windham County—the Quiet Corner of northeastern Connecticut—along the Quinebaug River near the Rhode Island border. This corner of Connecticut is among its most rural, with a textile and manufacturing heritage now largely faded, leaving a landscape of wooded hills, farm fields, and river valleys that makes for pleasant New England trail riding territory.
Trail riding and pleasure horsemanship are the focus of the Dayville area's equestrian community, with lesson programs serving a local rider base. The proximity to Rhode Island and Massachusetts gives riders in the area connections to the broader southern New England trail riding network, including Natchaug and Pachaug state forests with their established equestrian trail systems.
Find boarding options throughout the Dayville area below.

146 Estabrooks Rd, Hampton, CT 06247
Cedar Rock Horse Farm is a boarding, training, and recreational horse facility.

85 South Bedlam Road, Mansfield Center, CT 06235
Full service equine boarding facility located on 140 acres in Mansfield Center, Connecticut.

218 S. E. Main Street, Douglas, MA 01516
Golden Moon Farm in Douglas, Massachusetts, offers horse boarding, arena rental, events, photography services, and rare seeds. The facility includes both ind...

233 Woodchuck Hill Rd., Canterbury, CT 06331
Horse Power Farm is a 9-acre facility deep in the woods of Canterbury, Connecticut, owned and operated by Ann Bowie, BHSII(T). The farm is one of Eastern Con...

189 Plainfield Pike, Foster, RI 02825
Located in rural Rhode Island, Red Rock Farm features beautiful stone walls, fields, and historic spaces. The farm co-locates a horse boarding business with ...

144 Indian Hollow Road, Windham, CT 06280
Silver Bear Farm is a peaceful countryside facility offering a variety of accommodations including run-in sheds, stalls with paddocks, and pasture options. T...

91 Lake Rd, Dayville, CT 06241
Valley View Riding Stables is a full service equestrian facility offering boarding, lessons, pony parties, trail rides, and summer programs.

245 Hartford Pike, Dayville, CT 06241
Whispering Acres Horse Farm in Dayville, Connecticut is described by reviewers as a hidden gem with a beautiful facility where the owner takes the best care ...
Trail riding and pleasure horsemanship are the primary equestrian activities near Dayville, with lesson programs available locally. The Quiet Corner's state forest trail systems—particularly Natchaug and Pachaug—give riders access to established equestrian trails with horse camping nearby. The area's focus is recreational rather than competitive.
Pachaug State Forest, the largest state forest in Connecticut, is located in the Dayville area of Windham County and has dedicated equestrian trails. Natchaug State Forest to the west also has horse trails and camping. This concentration of state forest trail access makes northeastern Connecticut one of the better trail riding regions in the state, and Dayville's location puts it in the center of it.
Dayville and the Quiet Corner offer Connecticut's most rural and affordable boarding environment. The trade-off is distance from major competition venues and urban commercial resources. Horse owners who prioritize trail access, scenic New England countryside, and a quiet community over metro convenience are the natural fit for this part of the state.