THEY have talent to rival the likes of the Queen's granddaughter, Zara Phillips.
Now, horse riders Laura and Stephanie Milner are celebrating after landing a sponsorship deal.
The sisters, who have scooped top prizes in national and international competitions, have been offered support by Equiform Nutrition and Baileys Horse Feeds.
They will receive special clothing and advice on what supplements they should give to their 20-strong team of horses.
Laura, 18, who started riding at the age of eight, said she was "delighted" to have secured funding.
She said: "I dropped out of my A levels to focus on my training and I really love it.
"Stephanie and I ride, breed and train our horses almost every day of the week.
"We also compete regularly in regional, national and even international competitions.
"We're absolutely delighted that all our hard work has been recognised and rewarded."
Laura trains her horse, Bouncer, in a custom-made arena at their family's stud farm, South Grange, in Huggate.
She specialises in dressage, an event that sees the rider and horse perform a series of movements from memory.
She said: "I'm a bit of a perfectionist, so dressage seemed like the natural path for me.
"It is basically teaching the horse to dance, which obviously isn't something an animal would usually do.
"I have picked up a lot of great tips from international dressage rider Andrew Gould, who I trained with for six months last year.
"I am also hoping to travel to Holland next year for further training."
Laura, who competes nationally at advanced level, also spends one day a week teaching youngsters how to ride.
She said: "I train them on all sorts of events, from jumping to cross-country.
"I get a real buzz from teaching and love watching their confidence increase every week."
She also runs her own equestrian rug-cleaning business, Merlin Equestrian, but said her "dream career" would be to represent Great Britain in the Olympics.
Her younger sister, Stephanie, 16, has already had international success – helping the country scoop a gold medal at the Junior World Trophy championships in Austria last year.
Stephanie, who specialises in carriage driving, said: "I'm really hoping to compete for Great Britain again in Budapest next year.
"Austria was such an amazing experience and I loved representing the country.
"It made all the hard work and dedication worth it."
The student, of Woldgate College, Pocklington, has just been accepted on to a beauty therapy apprenticeship.
Stephanie said: "It might make fitting in training and competitions hard, but I'm sure the sponsorship will help. I could never give up carriage driving. I love it too much."
But the girls have competition – younger sister, Katie, 13, is racing ahead in her second season of grass track competitions.