Where Murrieta's sun-scorched arroyos demanded shade structures and drought-resistant paddock planning, Muskegon answers with the generous moisture of Lake Michigan's eastern shore, its cool maritime air settling over pastureland in a way that recalls the lush rolling fences of Prospect's own Rose Island Road corridor. Here the equestrian conversation shifts from arid conservation to abundance management — managing drainage across rich loam, channeling snowmelt away from barn foundations, understanding how a lakefront climate reshapes the rhythm of turnout and training seasons in ways a landlocked horseman might never anticipate. The 7909 Rose Island estate, with its carefully graded pastures and thoughtfully sited outbuildings, embodies precisely this kind of atmospheric intelligence, where every structural decision accounts for the interplay of water, wind, and open ground. It is a sensibility that travels remarkably well as the coastline bends southward toward the subtropical warmth of Myrtle Beach, where humidity thickens and the equestrian landscape must reinvent itself once more.