Memphis Park Equestrian Services & Performance Horses

Memphis Park Equestrian Services & Performance Horses *Horse Riding Coach * Qualified Equinology Equine Body Worker (massage), Red light & Equissage *Hors Hello! Welcome and thanks for visiting my page!

My name is Crystal Ballard and I am the owner/operator here at Memphis Park Equestrian Services. Over the years Memphis Park has evolved from me being a rider/competitor in Dressage, showing and when I was younger Eventing and mounted games, to then a stud standing 2 stallions, breeding and showing Australian Stock Horses and now as a coach and Equine Bodyworker and in the background we are develo

ping a small equestrian centre with agistment. I am passionate about the benefits of natural therapies and progressive foundation training for horses and how in combination therapy and training can improve the performance and overall health and wellbeing of our Equine partners. In 2009 I completed my coaching accreditation with Horse safety Australia at the time I was coaching at a local riding club and helping riders of all ages and disciplines get a solid foundation in their riding. Along with this I initially mainly focused on training people with young horses (that we were on selling our horses to their new owners or other people who wanted help with their young horses) to get a solid foundation so that the horses were happy and content in their work and their owners were confident and relaxed. Allowing them to be able to choose whatever discipline they wanted. My focus was and still is to improve the relationship, between horse & handler/Rider from the ground up to ridden work by improving timing & feel opening the lines of communication. Then focusing on, having both horse and handler/rider in balance and harmony and then progressing the training using different types of exercises for suppleness, strength and stability. Combining cross training methods to develop both horse and rider/handler and to prevent boredom. Over the years I have utilised many therapies on my own horses including Equissage, Equine body work, Red Light, Acupuncture, Chiropractic, P3 treatments and Kinesiology taping and have seen the benefits first hand. Through study and learning from my own horses This in conjunction with core strengthening exercise programs including in hand work, stretching and specific pole work can all assist in having happy, healthy horses who are also sound, supple and strong to perform at their best. So a couple of years ago now I followed my passion into Equine therapy & Coaching and with my a back ground in Animal Health & Nutrition, 6+ years of experience with Equissage throughout Australia and NZ, plus 25+ years riding, training, starting my own horses under saddle and breeding I started to really focus on combining both into my business. Over the years I have completed my Rocktape (kinesiology tape) fundamentals course, Equinology Equine Body Worker (EQ100) qualification, attended Sharon May Davis Dissection, Equine Biomechanics seminars with Gillian Higgins and Angela McLeod and studying Photonic therapy through Equestricare as well as reading a lot of different literature about anatomy, Biomechanics, centred riding, rider biomechanics, training, rehabilitation, Saddlefit, nutrition, Equine management, hooves etc so that I can help not only my horses but my clients and their horses too. We are forever learning and in 2018 I commenced Straightness training (Straightness Training Academy) and this year (2019) I joined the online training with Ritter dressage and hosted Lucie Klaassen Balanced Horse and Rider Clinic and will also start her online training in May. I look forward to being able to provide horse owners, riders, competitors, trainers, breeders & lovers throughout the Northern Rivers, Clarence Valley and Southern Gold Coast and surrounds Equine Solutions either as a Coach and/or a Equine Therapist utilising a range of tools to best benefit their horses to assist them to live, perform and recover better! Hopefully I will get to meet you and your 4 legged fur babies! Cheers Crystal

Memphis Park was an Australian Stock Horse Stud and was established by Crystal in 2002

Memphis Park is a small stud where we are more conscious about breeding quality rather than quantity. Our aim is to breed horses that are stylish, easy on the eye, calm and responsive with a good temperament, conformation & movement. We breed with athleticism, versatility and trainability in mind. Resulting in a horse which is not only suitable to use as a pleasure horse but also one that has the presence and courage we all look for in a top level performance horse. This is all achieved by choosing horses to breed from that have good temperament, conformation and movement themselves as well as proven bloodlines and a natural ability that is adaptable to many different disciplines. We feel this allows you more freedom to choose the equestrian discipline you wish to excel in, whether it is Dressage, Eventing, Show-Jumping, Hacking, Polo / Polocrosse, working classes or Endurance; here at Memphis Park the bloodlines are proven! At Memphis Park we pride ourselves in our horses, every horse is part of a succession plan and is given the best opportunity to be a champion. This is achieved by carefully planned breeding, correct nutrition and management (worm, dental and hoof) and handling. Our horses are raised as naturally as possible by grazing in big paddocks with other horses.

Wishing everyone a happy New Year!
30/12/2024

Wishing everyone a happy New Year!

Merry Christmas to all of our clients, friends and family! We hope you all enjoy some special time with loved ones πŸŽ„πŸŽ…πŸ»Ma...
24/12/2024

Merry Christmas to all of our clients, friends and family! We hope you all enjoy some special time with loved ones πŸŽ„πŸŽ…πŸ»

May all your dreams and wishes come true in 2025! Wishing you good health, wealth & happiness 🫢🏻

This πŸ‘ŒπŸ»πŸ‘‡
17/08/2024

This πŸ‘ŒπŸ»πŸ‘‡

"Because you can’t, it doesn’t mean the horse can’t: a talk about accepting responsibility for what You do not know"

We run into this often. I know most quality training barns out there do, as well.

A horse in a program knows how to load, pick up all 4 feet, accepts fly spray, neck reins, respects personal space, canters safely, stands to be mounted. . . You name it, the horse does it, or maybe he does most of it, and then he goes into a NEW home, and the truth is, the adopter or buyer typically will be less skilled than the professionals selling or placing the horse from an adoption program (though they will often not adopt it),and things unravel.

You get a call or email in 3 weeks or 3 months, and it goes like this:

β€œNelly won’t load. No one can load her. I doubt she ever loaded.”

You suggest they remember the day Nelly loaded from the facility like a gem, but they do not see how that matters. They insist the horse cannot be loaded now, and therefore, no one can load her, and the horse is the problem.

Let us try another scenario:

β€œNelly runs me over every single time I open the stall, she won’t stand to be mounted, and she bucks the minute I try to get on.”

You suggest they remember the day they came to meet Nelly, and you remind them how you went to the stall, took her out, how she stayed out of their space, how you put the fitted tack on her, how she stood like a gem, how they then mounted and rode her off nicely. They insist it was a fluke. It isn’t the horse they have now. They end up never asking for lessons to fill the deficit in knowledge they, not the horse, have in their skillset.

This is how good trainers get a bad reputation, this is how good horses end up neglected and discarded, and this is how a novice (even if long time) horse owner never really takes responsibility for what they do not know and need to learn.

If someone else accomplished something with a horse, the HORSE KNOWS. If you cannot recreate the same things with your horse, then you do not know, and as a result, you can undo a good horse quickly with ignorance and with mistakes, both large and small.

I’ve seen so many horses come into the rescue as surrenders because the owners DID not know enough to keep the horses in order. I’ve seen it hundreds of times.

For instance, one year a horse was turned over for bucking. He bucked like a bronc, and a trainer took months to undo this bad habit. It is hard to say what caused it: Poor saddle fit, rough handling, mixed signals or maybe all of that, but a good trainer fixed his issue. Undoubtedly, it would happen again, with an unskilled person. It is unlikely the unskilled person will realize or admit the problem is Not the horse.

Horses get labels that are unfair because of this.

We receive horses called dangerous all of the time that never show us a dangerous side, and it is important to understand a HORSE KNOWS what you know and what you do not. So sometimes, months of training isn’t even needed to fix behaviors; sometimes, the horse simply realizes he is being handled fairly and correctly, and he responds in the way he learned to respond years ago – as a partner. And the truth is, forcing a horse to endure ignorant treatment without responding isn’t realistic or kind, either.

Please never make the mistake of limiting the horse to WHAT YOU know. He usually knows more than you.

So if you saw a trainer ride the horse W/T/C without an issue, load the horse, back the horse, pick up all 4 feet, receive respect on the ground or whatever else you’re not seeing now, then be fair to the horse, and spend your time assuming the shortcomings belong to you, not him.

11/07/2024

REST PROMOTES LEARNING

A common feedback on my clinics is that participants are amazed by the amount of rest the horses are allowed in between exercising and that it seems to help them make a fast progress.

In fact, rest is important for both the human and the horse. We might have a quick grasp on a task intellectually but we still have to form new neural pathways to perform it well.
A study carried out by Leonardo G. Cohen, M.D, and colleagues of the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland USA, shows that the resting brain repeatedly replays compressed memories of what was just practiced. In the study, volunteers were asked to learn a new skill (piano scales) while in a functional MRI, which allows researchers to map brain activity during the learning process. They found that rest seems just as important as practice itself.

β€œOur results support the idea that wakeful rest plays just as important a role as practice in learning a new skill. It appears to be the period when our brains compress and consolidate memories of what we just practiced.” (Leonardo G. Cohen, M.D)
While horses’ brains show some important differences to human brains, we are both mammals and our brains are similar enough to assume that this is also what happens in horses’ brains when they learn a new skill. As far as I know, it is not possible yet to put horses in a functional MRI while they are alive, just the severed head after death. (But I also remember reading that this might be possible soon).
What does this mean for our training?

We need more breaks.
Now think about a regular dressage training session. From the moment the rider gets on to the moment when the training is finished, often after a very long 45 or 60 mins, the horse is asked to move, move, move, and to perform one exercise or arena pattern after the other. If rest is allowed, the horse needs to keep moving in walk.

How often do you see riders just stand with their horses, without interacting with them, so the brain has time to replay what was just practiced? And to wait until the horse is finished processing?
During my first internship at Bent Branderup’s place in Denmark, I noticed that Bent had a different way of structuring the lessons as I was used to. He asked me to take lots of breaks, actually asked me to β€œtake a break and tell the horse he was good”. While the horse was standing, he continued to talk to me and told me about the biomechanics background of what we just practiced. While I listened, my horse could stand and process. I had never made so fast progress in the training in my life. While it was certainly also due to Bent’s excellent teaching, today I know that taking frequent and long enough breaks is an important factor as well.
Here is the link to the study if you are interested: https://www.cell.com/cell-reports/fulltext/S2211-1247(21)00539-8?_returnURL=https%3A%2F%2Flinkinghub.elsevier.com%2Fretrieve%2Fpii%2FS2211124721005398%3Fshowall%3Dtrue

Picture of Weto and I during lessons with Bent. I’m listening and Weto has time to process.

www.academicartofriding.pl

It’s that time of year when it starts to get colder and I change from ground linseed and millet to linseed and millet po...
14/06/2024

It’s that time of year when it starts to get colder and I change from ground linseed and millet to linseed and millet porridge.

I love this combo as a body conditioner, for hooves, hair, skin, tendons and to help clean the gut

AGISTMENT AVAILABLE We currently have availability to take on horses for agistment short/long term on our 80 acre proper...
29/02/2024

AGISTMENT AVAILABLE

We currently have availability to take on horses for agistment short/long term on our 80 acre property with 40 acres set up specifically for horses with safe Stockguard fencing & woodshield posts and all paddocks having rotational paddock side by side. We use regenerative farming methods and have overseeded paddocks with mixed horse grasses and implement Equicentral methods.
- private shared paddocks 1-2.5 acres (suitable for owners with 2 horses or 2 friends)
- shared multi horse paddocks (4-6 horses) 5-10 acres

Whole property is flood free, all paddocks have shade & shelter (either or both trees or purpose built horse shelters) Bitumen road to gate, Onsite storeage sheds for feed and tack, Concrete tie ups, 60x20m sand dressage arena, 18x18m sand square yard, large grassed riding area (with poles, cavalettis, jump wings and cones), short trails on property. Prices start at $55 per week self care. Part care and full care options also available.

Located Wardell/Meerschaum Vale
20 minutes Ballina Bunnings
17 minutes Alstonville

Contact Crystal to view 0418807580

Happy horses 🐴 grazing the first of our seeded paddocks! We still have seteria but good to see the mixed grasses through...
21/02/2024

Happy horses 🐴 grazing the first of our seeded paddocks! We still have seteria but good to see the mixed grasses throughout 🌱🌾

πŸŽ„πŸŽ…πŸ»πŸ¦Œβœ¨πŸŽπŸŽ„πŸŽ…πŸ»πŸ¦Œβœ¨πŸŽπŸŽ„πŸŽ…πŸ»πŸ¦Œβœ¨πŸŽ MERRY CHRISTMAS AND HAPPY NEW YEAR!! Sending warm wishes your way for a great holiday season and a su...
23/12/2023

πŸŽ„πŸŽ…πŸ»πŸ¦Œβœ¨πŸŽπŸŽ„πŸŽ…πŸ»πŸ¦Œβœ¨πŸŽπŸŽ„πŸŽ…πŸ»πŸ¦Œβœ¨πŸŽ MERRY CHRISTMAS AND HAPPY NEW YEAR!!

Sending warm wishes your way for a great holiday season and a super fabulous year ahead!

Eat, drink & be merry & stay safe! xoxo

Art - May Wilson

πŸŽ„πŸŽ…πŸ»πŸ¦Œβœ¨πŸŽπŸŽ„πŸŽ…πŸ»πŸ¦Œβœ¨πŸŽπŸŽ„πŸŽ…πŸ»πŸ¦Œβœ¨πŸŽ

Address

Tugun, QLD

Telephone

+61418807580

Website

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