“After my first couple of horses, I stepped away a little bit to help my mum to keep me in the game and keep the interest there,” Aaron remembers.
“I considered giving up a number of times, especially back in 2013 when I had my last horse myself.
“I was about to give it away, I told mum that as I had no success and I did not want to waste peoples time, the people that were teaching me, if I did not have what it took.
“Mum talked me into getting a new horse that we could work on together and we went from there.
“I got tipped out in track work one day, that was some time after, and that made me wonder if I could bounce back from that as it hurt me pretty bad.
“There was probably four or five times I thought about pulling the pin and that was right up until I got this mare, Floorless.
“We have not looked back since with Floorless.”
Despite being born into the sport, Aaron did not feel like he had a direct path when he was a teenager.
Grandfather Cliff had stepped away from training after being in the code from the 1960s all the way through to the 80s and his mother was just an off and on again trainer.
He did not compete in mini-trotters as a youngster, which others his age did, and therefore provided direct entry into the industry and a clear route.
“I always wanted to have an interest in the horses and wanted to be involved since I was a young kid,” he said.
“But, we had no one in our family in the game at the time, it was hard to progress into it.
“There is heaps of people in the industry now who have followed their parents or other family members into it.
“I would have liked to do mini trotters."
Redcliffe participants such as Doug and Keith Schmidt, who leased stables from Aaron’s grandparents, as well as Tracey O’Sullivan helped guide him at times in his younger years as he gained knowledge.
Eventually, when Aaron was 24 years of age, Aileen made the call to get back into the pacers and it progressed from there.
“I learnt the ropes from her as I kept going along,” he said.
“My mum over the last few years has started to wind down a little bit and suggested to me that I would need to jump back in if I wanted to give it a crack.
“We found this horse at the right time and it was the knock on the door to get back into the training game.”
Aileen still has a few horses in work up on the Redcliffe Peninsula.
Aaron is hopeful that his family might just produce a fourth-generation harness racing participant in the coming years.
All three of his sons - Zac, Connor and Daniel – compete in mini trotters and help wash gear or help out with those odd jobs around the stables.
Busy with work and family commitments, Aaron does not think he will get a bigger team of horses in the near future but would like to consider it later in life when he has a bit more time on his hands.
“I wouldn’t be able to still do the horses without the support of my family including my wife Michelle, mum Aileen and kids Zac, Connor and Daniel,” he said.
“Even my grandad Cliff, who part owns Floorless, with myself and my wife Michelle never misses a meeting.
“Unfortunately, my nan Joyce and dad Greg both passed away a couple of years ago and they were both big supporters and they were both on my mind when I crossed that finish line."