Calm and Collected Equine Behaviour Consultant

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Calm and Collected Equine Behaviour Consultant If you are experiencing problems with your horse don't let it spoil what should be a remarkable and rewarding partnership.

Visit our website on www.calmandcollected.co.uk and see how we can help

Something I am passionate about
21/01/2025

Something I am passionate about

You cannot escape ground reaction forces - and what I mean by this is you cannot escape the way the horse's hooves interact with the floor.

Your horse's hoof shape directly influences how they interact with the floor and equally the shape of their hooves directly influence their muscular recruitment and therefore their postural development.

As an example of this, here is a diagram of the horse's superficial retraction myofacial chain. This chain supports the retraction - i.e. the drawing back - of the horse's forelimb via connections from the solar surface of the pedal bone, through the back of the forelimb and shoulder, over the ribcage and over the top of the neck.

If there is loss of development, and therefore loss of depth, in the caudal hoof - i.e. the back third of the hoof - you're effectively creating 'fascial drag' which contributes to shortening the topline of the horse's neck and compression of their ribcage.

You can visualise how, if the heel drops, the whole fascial chain is suckered down.

Creating the appearance of a hollow horse with a short neck and perhaps overdevelopment of the underneck muscles.

Now of course you can bias your training for length and elevation through the neck, flexion through the back and expansion of the ribs; but if your horse's heels are low then you will be creating conflict.

Because you're asking that horse to inflate into restricted fascia which is being further implicated by ground reaction forces.

In doing this, you will contribute towards making movement uncomfortable - which lets be honest, poor training practices already do a good job of this(!)

You will perhaps bias towards the risk of injury or reinjury - which is slightly oxymoronic if you've chosen that movement plan as a means to rehabilitate or develop healthy posture.

Your horse will be spending more time practicing poor posture, which is more time teaching their nervous system that this is homeostasis.

And since movement and emotional health are intertwined, you may also be contributing to a negative emotional state.

Fascial chains do of course work both ways, so you can bias your training for healthy movement and it may help with caudal hoof orientation, but you cannot escape the influence of the ground and so, if you're not including your horse's hoof care within that picture, you are only giving your horse half the chance for success.

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For this month's webinar, I am delighted to be joined by the wonderful Beccy Smith of Holistic Equine, where she will be discussing what healthy hoof morphology really is, the factors that influence it and what you can do to help your horse.

Beccy is an Integrative Equine Podiatrist who truly considers the whole horse with respect to hoof health. Her keen eye and attention to detail is second to none in the hoofcare sphere and I cannot wait for this webinar!

27.01.2025 19:00 GMT

Recording available if you can't make the live ❤️✨️

Welcome to Jack, our stunning new arrival. Very much looking forward to getting in the saddle tomorrow 😀
18/01/2025

Welcome to Jack, our stunning new arrival. Very much looking forward to getting in the saddle tomorrow 😀

09/01/2025
Day off for the horses today
05/01/2025

Day off for the horses today

Wow what a year, so many amazing owners and horses seen, a fabulous network of professionals worked alongside with some ...
01/01/2025

Wow what a year, so many amazing owners and horses seen, a fabulous network of professionals worked alongside with some complex rehabilitation cases and although we didn't win, reaching the final 4 in the Equestrian Business Awards Behavioural Trainer 2024 simply blew me away. To all of you out there I thank you sincerely for entrusting your beautiful horses to my care. Heres a snippet of some of the horses. May 2025 bring you all health, happiness and everything you desire.

The men in my life just chilling
22/12/2024

The men in my life just chilling

Merry Christmas 🎅
21/12/2024

Merry Christmas 🎅

Something I am passionate about
21/12/2024

Something I am passionate about

15/12/2024

Cob morning at the gallops with Timber, Oscar and Stevie so nice to have my lorry back 🥰

Week off for Wotsit who needed a top up on his hocks. Never a lame step but wasn't moving with his normal zest. Thanks t...
13/12/2024

Week off for Wotsit who needed a top up on his hocks. Never a lame step but wasn't moving with his normal zest. Thanks to Mike at Towcester Vets for coming so quickly 🥰

07/12/2024

Stay safe out there everyone in this crazy weather

Wow
05/12/2024

Wow

STIRRUP FORCES DURING EXERCISE

Seeing as there was quite a lot of interest in the post on girth tension, I thought I would follow up with an example of the changes in total stirrup force (sum of left and right stirrup force) over the course of a stride in fast canter when the rider is in a 2-point/jumping position.

The riders mass is fixed. It's always the same. So under gravity (1g) the riders mass is 70kg. But weight is mass x gravity. So if the rider accelerates down onto the horse at 2g, the riders weight becomes 2 x 70kg = 140kg.

As you can see the effective weight of the rider varies with the acceleration of the horse and the rider, from as little as 30kg when the rider is still going up and or the horse is going down/not changing height, to as much as 130kg when the rider is coming down and or the horse is going up/not changing height.

So the effective weight on the horses back changes by a factor of over 4x during the course of a fast canter. No wonder horses have so many back problems!

Storm had a great week at boot camp and has learnt voice aids and lunging like a pro. Left this afternoon to return home...
01/12/2024

Storm had a great week at boot camp and has learnt voice aids and lunging like a pro. Left this afternoon to return home and polish up these skills with his owners before the next stage of training 🥰

A wonderful 8 weeks with this wonderful gentle giant who left for the next chapter this morning. We will miss him 🥰
01/12/2024

A wonderful 8 weeks with this wonderful gentle giant who left for the next chapter this morning. We will miss him 🥰

Little and large
29/11/2024

Little and large

26/11/2024

To small for the fencing height and the other horses are high blowing wondering what he is so staying in the yard 🤣. Introducing the bit and long reins next

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