UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — From a young age, Gillian Warner knew she wanted to work with horses. With the resources and encouragement from her peers and mentors at Penn State, Warner has pursued a full-time career operating her own business and traveling around the world training and teaching horseback riding.
After graduating from Penn State’s College of Agricultural Sciences in 2021 with a bachelor’s degree in community, environment and development (CED), and minors in international agriculture and anthropology, Warner went on to open Warner Equine out of Tadpole Lane Farm in Pennsylvania Furnace in 2022.
Raised in State College, Warner said she always was drawn to horses and agriculture. For as long as she can remember, she felt joy in interacting with horses, inspiring her to ride. In middle and high school, Warner traveled around the country to train and compete. She would spend winters in South Carolina to continue her training. She said these experiences in high school helped shape her desire to pursue riding professionally.
“After begging for the opportunity to ride, my parents finally gave in and let me have my first pony ride when I was four, and it’s been nonstop since then,” Warner said. “I knew early on that I wanted to work with animals and always planned to do so in some capacity, but it wasn't until my freshman or sophomore year of high school that I saw riding professionally as a possibility.”
In addition to her on-campus courses, Warner said she also enjoyed completing an embedded course in Belize during her first year.
“I adored the experience I had while studying abroad,” Warner said. “The college offered an embedded course program, which allowed me to study indigenous knowledge in agriculture in Belize. I always thought studying abroad required a whole semester, which always felt unavailable due to the commitments to my horses. The embedded course allowed me to stay at Penn State for the semester but included travel over spring break.”
Through Warner’s experiences in Belize, she decided to see more of the world to learn about agriculture.
“Not only did I meet some of my closest, lifelong friends on that trip,” Warner said, “but I also caught the travel bug! I have since pursued opportunities to take my passion for agriculture abroad and have explored Mongolia, Argentina and Germany by horseback. My experience in Belize made me so curious to experience agriculture in different countries around the world.”