07/09/2025
Your horse is not just a body 🐴
I’m always talking about how behaviour is never standalone and we should be looking at the whole picture including addressing any pain/discomfort. But we can also get lost here, becoming so focused on “fixing” the horse’s body that we lose sight of the rest of their needs.
I often meet horses who are extremely averse to being touched by humans due to previous experiences and trauma, yet in our effort to help their bodies feel better its tempting to go all in with the bodywork. As you may have experienced yourself, sometimes massage and bodywork is uncomfortable, especially if you’re sore and tense. A horse cannot understand this they just know they hate it. Its scary, unpleasant and they aren’t being listened to. In these cases it is best to work on helping them feel better around humans first and then choosing a body worker who understands behaviour and has more in their toolkit than hands on work to support you.
Another huge frustration of mine is how quick we are to prescribe box rest as if there aren’t huge negative consequences to it. Confining a horse to a tiny box, often alone, for days at a time not only affects the horse emotionally, it also negatively impacts every system in the body. Horses thrive on movement, as soon as we restrict that we are putting them under a lot of stress. Maybe your horse's leg will heal faster, but at what cost to the rest of his health? There are much better alternatives to box rest if we think outside the box a little, pardon the pun.
A client horse of mine had become extremely sharp and dangerous to handle and ride, he was diagnosed with kissing spine and they went through with recommended surgery. They were given a rehab plan with the physio of building up long lining and various hills and raised poles etc. Throughout this the horse was aggressive in the stable, they had to cross tie him to do anything with him and he would frequently rear when they were trying to do his rehab. The physio was coming out every 4 weeks and “releasing” the soreness in his back, he was cross tied and restrained for this as he would try to kick and bite. They were essentially told they needed to stick to the 12 week rehab plan to the letter as it was the only thing that would help him and if it didn’t work the kindest thing was to put him to sleep.
They contacted me as a last resort, seeing as nothing had “worked” and we were at the end of the road, I asked them to humour me and just stop everything. No poles, no hillwork, no physio, no long lining. They had a horse who had been extremely chronically stressed, who had been in pain, who then went through a traumatic surgery, was screaming at everyone that he didn’t want to be touched and wasn’t comfortable, and being completely ignored because they were told this was the only way to help him and it was for his own good. Because of how he was feeling, all of the exercise they were doing simply wasn’t helping as he was so braced up he was just putting more tension back into his body and making his back feel worse.
We tweaked his management so he was out with his friends as much as possible, had ad-lib forage when he came in through the days and put him on some gut support. We added simple enrichment to his stable like slow feeders and carrot/treat hunts. The only thing they did with him for several weeks was to play treat scatters with him and some bucket games, where all he had to do was walk to the next bucket and eat out of it. The aggression stopped, he started to relax and his body started to feel better.
We then added a bodyworker back into the mix but with great care to listen to him and work within what he was comfortable with and started to do gentle in hand walking prioritising his emotional state. The great thing about working with the emotional state first is that, as if by magic, the horse starts to move better. We did lots of enrichment type activities where he could explore movement without it feeling anything like the training he was used to and then started using positive reinforcement training to ensure we didn’t slip back into his old negative associations.
He is currently comfortable out with his friends, happy to come in and spend time with his owners going for hand walks, clicker training, doing enrichment activities and being groomed, he never pulls faces anymore. They have decided not to try riding him again which I agree is the right decision in this case. 🐴
(This story is not about the horse in the photograph)
I will be doing a series of free Facebook lives discussing topics like this with Yasmin Stuart Equine Physio , the first one is tomorrow at 7pm, I will add the link in the comments. Hope to see you there :)