Here’s exactly how we approach safety — for the horse, for the road, and for the documentation that protects everyone involved.
Rinor’s box-truck driving experience is the foundation here, and both of us drive the same way when there’s a horse on the trailer. A horse trailer is a live load — the animal shifts weight, reacts to movement, and can be injured by hard braking or sharp turns. We drive accordingly:
Diego’s experience with horses is the foundation here, and both of us approach every horse the same way — from loading to handoff at the destination:
We verify documents at pickup — not just because it’s legally required for interstate hauls, but because it’s how you know the horse you’re getting on the other end is healthy and hasn’t been exposed to disease.
If paperwork isn’t in order at pickup, we cannot load the horse. This protects you, the receiving party, and every other animal we haul. Plan ahead — your vet needs notice to issue a health certificate.
Full state-by-state guide to Coggins and health cert requirements →
We are putting full commercial coverage in place before our first commercial haul — commercial auto liability and motor-truck cargo coverage with a live-animal endorsement, plus care, custody & control (CCC) coverage. Proof of insurance will be available on request once policies are bound.
Note: CCC coverage protects the horse while in our care and custody. It does not replace your own equine insurance. If you have a high-value horse, we recommend you carry your own mortality and major-medical coverage and confirm it applies during transport before booking.
Ask us anything before you book. We’d rather answer ten questions upfront than have a problem on the day.
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