
Brookside Stables
3 Cross Country Cir, Wilmington, VT 05363
Brookside Stables is a family-run stable offering boarding and riding programs. The property features well-maintained facilities in a relaxed, supportive env...
Marlboro is a small hill town in Windham County in southern Vermont, set on the wooded highlands between Brattleboro and Wilmington. The village is known primarily for the Marlboro Music Festival, but its agricultural character — rocky hillside farms and sugar maple woodlands at elevations approaching 2,000 feet — provides a setting that has quietly supported small-scale horse operations for generations. Southern Vermont's equestrian community is small but genuine, rooted in the working-farm tradition and the kind of independent horsemanship that suits remote hill country.
Facilities in the Marlboro area offer the basics — outdoor arena access in a scenic Vermont hill setting — without the show-circuit infrastructure found in lower-elevation parts of the state. This suits horses and riders who want a quieter boarding environment with access to Vermont's extensive network of logging roads, private trails, and Green Mountain terrain. The climate is genuine four-season New England: summers are cool and pleasant, fall is spectacular, and winters require proper preparation. When evaluating boarding here, ask specifically about winter management — elevation increases snowfall and extends the cold season, and facilities in hill towns need robust protocols for water, footing, and horse care in extended below-zero conditions.
Here are the boarding options currently available in the Marlboro area.
Marlboro is a small hill town in Windham County in southern Vermont, set on the wooded highlands between Brattleboro and Wilmington. The village is known primarily for the Marlboro Music Festival, but its agricultural character — rocky hillside farms and sugar maple woodlands at elevations approaching 2,000 feet — provides a setting that has quietly supported small-scale horse operations for generations. Southern Vermont's equestrian community is small but genuine, rooted in the working-farm tradition and the kind of independent horsemanship that suits remote hill country.
Facilities in the Marlboro area offer the basics — outdoor arena access in a scenic Vermont hill setting — without the show-circuit infrastructure found in lower-elevation parts of the state. This suits horses and riders who want a quieter boarding environment with access to Vermont's extensive network of logging roads, private trails, and Green Mountain terrain. The climate is genuine four-season New England: summers are cool and pleasant, fall is spectacular, and winters require proper preparation. When evaluating boarding here, ask specifically about winter management — elevation increases snowfall and extends the cold season, and facilities in hill towns need robust protocols for water, footing, and horse care in extended below-zero conditions.
Here are the boarding options currently available in the Marlboro area.

3 Cross Country Cir, Wilmington, VT 05363
Brookside Stables is a family-run stable offering boarding and riding programs. The property features well-maintained facilities in a relaxed, supportive env...

703 Brattleboro Rd., Bernardston, MA 01337
Fall River Stables is a beautiful boarding facility located on 11 acres of open field with large pastures, run in sheds, stalls, and miles of surrounding tra...

211 Cemetery Rd, Dummerston, VT 05301
Maple Row Stables offers a friendly and professional environment for all types of riders.

35 Private Driveway, Marlboro, VT 05301
Swallow Stables is a boarding facility offering matted stalls, daily turn out in small groups, an outdoor arena and access to trails.
Marlboro offers a quiet, rural hill-farm boarding environment in southern Vermont. It's a small-scale, unpretentious equestrian setting — well-suited to pleasure horses and trail-oriented riders who value Vermont's scenic landscape and low-density boarding over show infrastructure. The community is small, and facilities tend toward personal, hands-on management.
Southern Vermont's network of logging roads, Green Mountain National Forest access, and private trail connections provide good riding opportunities for those based in the Marlboro area. The wooded highland terrain builds balanced, trail-savvy horses. Ask facilities about trail access from the property and the condition of routes through mud season.
Marlboro winters are more severe than lower-elevation Vermont — expect earlier first frost, more snowfall, and longer periods of sub-zero temperatures. Facilities need robust water management (heated tanks or lines), quality hay storage, and shelter adequate for the elevation. Ask specifically about how facilities handle ice management in high-traffic areas and extreme cold snap protocols.