Tarleys Place - Equine Hoofcare and Agistment services

Tarleys Place - Equine Hoofcare and Agistment services Barefoot Hoofcare and rehabilitation services, spelling agistment on 87 acres. Spring fed dam. Our horses have a clear run of 1km down the length of 75 acres.

Studied at the Australian College of Equine Podiotherapy


$65 per wk includes hay. $70 per week includes routine hoofcare as required. Tarleys Place - named after our first gorgeous mini.

85 acres of spelling agistment. 5 min from Gidgegannup Showgrounds. Plenty of shade. A spring fed dam they can and do swim/play in. Another separate 10 acres for grazing. We offer agistment at $55 wk/$60 wk wi

th barefoot trim and 2 x daily hay. They are physically checked every day. Daniel has been trimming for years. We welcome any enquiry.

20/02/2023

A friend said recently that horses really like a ’Long Hello’. That many horses feel immediately rushed by us, and this can really set us onto a path of misunderstandings and conflicts with the horse. 



Out on a trail ride the other day, my horse carrying me calmly, carefully, steadily, he waded into the river, and splashed his nose in the water, lifted into a Flehman’s Response, then pawed at the water. It made me laugh. The sun was shining. It was perfect weather, cool enough for a jacket, sunny enough to not get cold. I reached down and rubbed his shoulder. My body flooded with all the feel good things I almost always feel around horses.
"Thanks buddy”, I said.

Gratitude. 

I wake up. I go to my horses. I am grateful. Already won. Why?



There are plenty of voices out there telling us, and our horses, that they are not good enough. Not correct enough, fit enough, collected enough, shiny enough, natural enough, healthy enough, calm enough, cooperative enough.



It is enough.



I am grateful before the horse because that is my long goodbye to the horse. We never know when we will have our last moment with our horses. And under normal set of circumstances, we will all outlive our horses, and if we are REALLY lucky, we will be there with them, in gratitude and dignity, at the very end. 



So I stay grateful, so that I do not have to GET grateful. Because that is my long goodbye to my horses. No matter if it was to be today, or in 30 years from now.

There is a training principal that permeates equestrian culture at almost every level and wears many disguises. It is the principal of trying to win. It sets the human against the horse and see's the working relationship with them as something competitive. Who wins, who loses, who gets their way. Who gets what they want.

The reason why I try to steer away from that, and you should to, is that it sets you up on a pathway of diminishing gratitude. That diminishing gratitude will eventually leave you utterly burnt out with horses.

So what to do about it? How to express your gratitude to a horse in a way they understand?



1. When the horse doesn’t give you what you want, try smiling about it. Breathe-in. Wait. You can always repeat the question in a moment. And maybe they didn’t understand you, or can’t do that thing today. Or maybe their lesson for you today is not about you getting what you want, but something else



2. When the horse does give you what you want in two seconds or less, permit yourself to feel joy about that. Smile like a maniac. Don’t be entitled or demanding (Unless in an emergency of safety). Tell that horse, in your language, that it was wonderful what they did. And feel what you say, so that the horse feels you too. 



3. The 1-Minute Ride. Once in a blue moon (For established, hard working saddle horses). Catch, groom, tack, warm up, mount. Sit for one minute quietly. Get off. Finish. Say THANK YOU to the horse and give them some extra hay that day. 



4. When correcting a horse whom has problematic posture, movement issues, or behavioural issues. Remember that it is their body not yours. Maladaptive responses exist for a really good reason and taking those away from a horse too quickly and absolutely could deprive the horse from an important coping strategy that is holding them together. Go slower in your reformation of what you deem incorrect, so that the horse has a chance to contribute to it too. They may not adhere to the rules of the system you are using, so give them a chance to SHOW you, what they need. 



5. Give your horse the absolute best quality of life you can. Try to relocate if your barn doesn’t have good living conditions for your horse. Stop giving money to people who know better, but can’t/won’t do better. It doesn’t have to be perfect. But never give up trying to give your horse a life that they enjoy living, outside of their time with you. Even in the most compromised of conditions, you would be amazed what some creative thinking can do to totally change the environment, improving your horses life outside of training.

https://www.emotionalhorsemanship.com

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15/09/2019

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Here is a 16 year old QH Gelding who was kept shod for several years and is out of shoes for 6 weeks now. He is walking fairly well, but as you can see, the pastern joint areas are quite swollen. He is also very sore and disabled in his shoulders from years and years of bracing/protecting against the pain below.

There is an epidemic amount of ringbone in shod horses versus barefoot horses, and I believe it is due to the massive amount of torque that is forced upon the low-motion pastern joint when the hoof capsule is disallowed its natural ability to undergo torque and dissipate energy. The response to concussive and torque injury shows up with massive bony proliferation as the body attempts to heal the continuous sprain and strain in these areas. Just looking at those areas you can feel how the energy from above AND below stagnates in that area, blowing it up from within.

The good news is that horses with ringbone LOVE having functional, healthy, well-formed hooves that can once again do their job of absorbing concussion and taking up torque, rather than continuing to pass it on to the diseased pasterns. This boy will be fitted with Glove boots with half-inch pads inserted to help absorb even more concussion and reduce torque, until we can get the hooves to decontract and work the way they were intended.

It's a real testament when one paradigm can not only EXPLAIN what's going wrong, but also FIX what's happening. Traditional farriery only partially accomplishes the first part of this as it attempts to explain the causes, but then attempts to reduce concussion with shock-tamer pads, rim pads, aluminum shoes...on and on...and it makes the problem worse and worse. This is simply conduct that comes from false thinking. The natural hoof care paradigm recognizes that the HOOF must work for the horse to prevent AND allow for healing, and it provides the vital ingredients to the horse and owner to accomplish this. And it is why it will necessarily replace the old paradigm in due time.

16/02/2019
29/08/2018
Andreas beautiful donkeys
15/08/2018

Andreas beautiful donkeys

Horse Heaven
21/06/2018

Horse Heaven

Time for a walk and ride. 🐴
21/04/2018

Time for a walk and ride. 🐴

We have 2 places available! Contact Daniel 0408771570 or Jane 0437343123 or PM us! 🐴🐴
07/02/2018

We have 2 places available! Contact Daniel 0408771570 or Jane 0437343123 or PM us! 🐴🐴

Address

Gidgegannup
Perth, WA
6083

Telephone

+61408771570

Website

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