King's Park Equine

King's Park Equine Kings park is an equestrian centre in Moorooduc offering spelling and rehab.

12/04/2023

Artwork by Jean Luc Cornille

05/04/2023

Kings Park resident Tommy trying out the Hidez compression hood. Applies pressure to acupuncture points, TMJ and endorphin release points to head and poll. Helps with anxiety, focus and behavioural issues. Thank you Horseland Mornington

04/04/2023

It's that season....

Fab course to improve your communication and understanding of equine body language. Can't recommend Steph Bolgie enough.
04/04/2023

Fab course to improve your communication and understanding of equine body language. Can't recommend Steph Bolgie enough.

šŸ“£šŸ¦„CLINIC ANNOUNCEMENT! šŸ¦„šŸ“£
Is My Horse Happy? Behaviour clinic for young horse owners (8-18y.o) 21st April, held at King's Park Equine in Moorooduc VIC

I will be running an interactive clinic on how to recognise your horses behaviour to tell if they are happy or not. Understanding behaviour is so important from a safety perspective āš ļø, early recognition of something not being right with your horse šŸ¤’, as well as developing a better relationship with them šŸ„°

I have put together an easy to understand, fun and practical clinic mixed with some interactive theory and practical exercises for young horses owners to improve their skills. Parents are also welcome to attend. Prices and further information can be found in the event listed on my page.

Feel free to message me with any questions.

Bot Flies scarring in the stomach.
03/04/2023

Bot Flies scarring in the stomach.

Scars on the stomach wall due to botfly larvae.

03/04/2023

CAN WRINKLES ABOVE THE EYE TELL US HOW A HORSE IS FEELING?

Horses communicate primarily using body language and they display a number of facial expressions.

Their eyes, in particular, can be very expressive and are thought to reveal how a horse is feeling. Many equine behaviourists and horse owners believe the wrinkles above a horseā€™s eye may be associated with discomfort, fear, stress or anxiety ā€“ they are often called ā€˜worry linesā€™. However, until recently, there has never been any scientific study researching the links between these facial expressions and the horseā€™s emotional state.

A team of researchers from Switzerland, the UK and the USA set out to examine whether eye wrinkles are caused by negative emotional states in the horse, or whether it was simply a case of humans interpreting these wrinkles as they would for themselves.

The wrinkles studied appear above the upper eyelid are a result of the contraction of the underlying inner eyebrow raiser muscles. These eye wrinkles are commonly seen, but may differ in shape, number and severity in different individual horses.

The team placed 16 horses at the Swiss National Stud Farm into two ā€˜positiveā€™ situations:
* Anticipation of a food reward;
* Being stroked.

And into two ā€˜negativeā€™ situations:
* Competing for food;
* Having a plastic bag waved nearby.

These four test conditions were chosen as they were situations the horses were reasonably likely to encounter in their day-to-day management.

Photos of the horsesā€™ eyes were taken while they were tested and the images analysed based on overall impression, shape of the eyelid, eye whites, number of wrinkles, markedness and angle.

In the situations presumed to be positive, the researchers found that while stroking did reduce the expression of eye wrinkles, wrinkles were sometimes seen when food was present. This may have been as a result of the horses being frustrated around food. The negative situations did increase the likelihood of the eye wrinkles occurring.

The researchers found the angle of the wrinkles changed, depending on the situation. The angle was wider in negative situations, compared to positive, due to a stronger contraction of the inner eyebrow raiser. More eye white was seen in negative situations.

The number and depth of wrinkles and how much white of the eye was shown revealed that some characteristics of eye wrinkling were affected by different emotional states.

Researchers concluded that a horseā€™s emotional state could be linked with their eye wrinkle expression and therefore this could be a potential indicator of horse welfare. However, the team indicated that further research was needed.

Research team: Sara Hintze (University of Bern and Agroscope, Swiss National Stud Farm, Switzerland); Samantha Smith (University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom); Antonia Patt (University of Maryland, United States); Iris Bachmann (Agroscope, Switzerland); Hanno WĆ¼rbel (University of Bern, Switzerland).

30/03/2023

Rugging & Temp: The ambient temperature range in which a healthy unclipped adult horse can easily maintain their body temp is between 5 & 25 degrees C, which is a lot wider than humans!

29/03/2023

Right now, Iā€™m focussed on Chilliā€™s mane. When she got sick last year, it started falling out in handfuls. Itā€™s still on the thin side and has rubbed in parts. I spend a lot of time worried about if thereā€™s something I can add to her diet. Meanwhile, that diet has been balanced by a nutritionist, making sure all her nutritional requirements are met. Thatā€™s after spending more in one shop on products for her than I spend on my hair in a year. And letā€™s not even start on what my diet looks like.

Chilli has a therapist coming out tomorrow to see her and Nuggie, because, you know, I donā€™t want them to be sore. Thatā€™s on top of joint supplements. Meanwhile Iā€™m over here, creaking and groaning, telling myself, Iā€™ll warm up and the kinks will disappear.

I think I want to come back as one of my horses, meanwhile, I'm going self medicate with chocolate and cocktails

There should be not compromise on this. It is an honour to ride a horse and we have a duty of care to do so without caus...
28/03/2023

There should be not compromise on this. It is an honour to ride a horse and we have a duty of care to do so without causing pain and trauma.

28/03/2023

šŸ“£šŸ¦„CLINIC ANNOUNCEMENT! šŸ¦„šŸ“£
Is My Horse Happy? Behaviour clinic for young horse owners (8-18y.o) 21st April, held at King's Park Equine in Moorooduc VIC

I will be running an interactive clinic on how to recognise your horses behaviour to tell if they are happy or not. Understanding behaviour is so important from a safety perspective āš ļø, early recognition of something not being right with your horse šŸ¤’, as well as developing a better relationship with them šŸ„°

I have put together an easy to understand, fun and practical clinic mixed with some interactive theory and practical exercises for young horses owners to improve their skills. Parents are also welcome to attend. Prices and further information can be found in the event listed on my page.

Feel free to message me with any questions.

23/03/2023

The average circulation time for blood to circulate through a horse's body is approximately 25-30 seconds. This means that it takes about 25-30 seconds for blood to travel from the heart to all the organs and tissues in the body and return back to the heart. Average speed of circulation can vary depending on factors such as the horse's age, health, and activity level.

*Heart image provided by Horse Community Journals Inc. with reprint permission.

Helping horses of all disciplines improve performance and stay sounder and happier longer.

*Contact me today to schedule a Massage for your horse.

Koper Equine, LLC
Equine Massage and Bodywork
Happy, healthy horses.

Top Line Rocking Exercises - Equine Massage Therapy
https://youtu.be/dbKoe62nByY

Simple ways to Improve Straightness, Swing and Bend
https://youtu.be/LaleULdKt_k

*Ask your Vet if Massage could help your horse.

The slow insidious demise of the worlds best equine institute started 20 yrs ago when the Austrian Government brought in...
22/03/2023

The slow insidious demise of the worlds best equine institute started 20 yrs ago when the Austrian Government brought in private non horse personnel to make profit. Enough horses world wide are treated as commodities to fulfil human greed. Tragic that it is happening here. So much respect for the riders who have walked and stood by their principles.

Andras Hausberger, chief rider at the Spanish Riding School in Vienna, has been fired effective immediately after forty years of service on 7 March 2023.

Resident junior staff learning to give injections and dental. Blessed to have equine dental vet extraordinaire Paul Owen...
21/03/2023

Resident junior staff learning to give injections and dental. Blessed to have equine dental vet extraordinaire Paul Owen on our team

08/03/2023
Sound advice
02/03/2023

Sound advice

Apparently itā€™s March... already!?
Our wonderful, tidy calendar says itā€™s autumn now too. And so here is my annual ā€œItā€™s not actually autumn yet ā€“ donā€™t deworm your horses straight away!ā€ spiel.

Autumn is the No. 1 time of year to worm your horses, because it ties in best with breaking the bot-fly life cycle. A bot flyā€™s lifecycle is 12 months, so treating just once a year will break that lifecycle (and overtime decrease bot fly populations). By mid-autumn/early winter, the entire population of bot flies will be inside your horse, which means you can target all the bots on your property with a single dosage of a boticide dewormer (ivermectin, abamectin, moxidectin).

If you deworm your horses too early in autumn, you will not be targeting all the bot flies as they are often present well into autumn, laying eggs on your horses coat. If you deworm on the 1st of March, there will be bot flies, and subsequently bot eggs and larvae that come after the treatment and will remain within your horse for the year.

Therefore, hold off on the autumn deworming a little longer, if your horses are in good condition. Wait until the nights cool down and the bot flies disappear before deworming ā€“ and make sure that the dewormer you purchase is active against bots, otherwise it will all be in vain. If your horses need to be treated now, do so, but make sure you target bot flies again in early winter.

So thatā€™s my bot-fly spiel. Normally I write about strongyles (my favourite), and so I shall of course make a mention of them here too.

I always recommend a mid-late autumn deworming for ALL HORSES because it a) cleans out any bots and b) all horses really should have a strongyle clean out once a year as well. I may be against deworming for the sake of deworming, however that is only if you are doing it 3 or 4 or more times a year.

Strongyles can have a lifecycle of as little as 6 weeks. In addition, at any one point, about 90% of the strongyle population is living on the pasture, not in the horse. Therefore, the concept of using chemical dewormers inside the horse to break the lifecycle of strongyles would not work. At all. So, we chose our annual deworming-clean-out to line up with as many other parasites as possible.

All boticide dewormers are also effective against strongyles so deworming in autumn is a 2 for 1 type deal. You should also consider using a dewormer that also contains praziquantel to treat for tapeworms to get a complete clean out, just in case tapeworms are present. If your horses are only being treated once a year, it is good to do as complete a treatment as possible.

Lastlyā€¦ wait, second lastly.. this is a topic to complex to get into here, but: this time of year is key for larval cyathostomins, where encysted larvae have mass emergences from the intestine wall, in response to changes in weather (eg in VIC as it cools and becomes wetter again). Deworming and removing adult populations of worms can act as a trigger for larval re-emergence, which is also why I often baulk at deworming horses now. The larvae may slowly re-emerge coming into the cooler weather and treating in mid-late autumn may be a safer bet to remove adults and emerged larvae. The research on this is sketchy as best, however these are patterns shown in cattle and hypothetically should translate over into horses.
And lastly (pat on the back for reading this far): just because Iā€™m recommending deworming all horses does not mean I am not recommending FECs in autumn. A FEC will tell you important things about your horses health, and pick up anything odd that may be happening (eg tapeworm you didnā€™t know about). It will also allow you to test drug efficacy. Autumn should be a key time for everyone to do a FECRT (faecal egg count reduction test), where you get FECs done before and after deworming to make sure that it worked. If you only deworm once a year, then youā€™ve only got one chance for a FECRT, and you cannot, I repeat, you CANNOT do a FECRT without a FEC before to compare to.

If youā€™d like to organise FECs and FECRTs for your horses this autumn, check out the website (link on the FB page) for postal submission and drop off points/events.

Address

485 Mornington Tyabb Road
Moorooduc, VIC
3933

Telephone

+61407064107

Website

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