Equine Ali - Clinical Equine Behaviour

Equine Ali - Clinical Equine Behaviour Empowering owners for better connections - An evidence-based approach to understanding and improving the relationship between horses and humans

Stolen and written for dogs but exactly the same applies to horses. Pretend the paw prints are hoofprints. We are just, ...
28/05/2026

Stolen and written for dogs but exactly the same applies to horses. Pretend the paw prints are hoofprints. We are just, on the whole, years behind the dog world in the horse world in terms of training approaches! But this sums it up nicely 🦄

22/05/2026

Am I bovvered? 🦄 this is habituation. When a stimulus or event that has no consequence is repeated we get used to them and don’t react any more. Same for animals and people - we learn in basically the same way. If the barking caused fear in the pony then the fear itself would be a consequence and he wouldn’t stay put voluntarily and might become more fearful and react more quickly or violently next time. He might become sensitised - the opposite of habituation. But at 29 Dru has been here many times and got several of these t-shirts and I think actually he really enjoys winding the dogs up 🙈🤔😂🤦🏼‍♀️

27/04/2026

Sharing this for 2 reasons.
1) same problems with behaviour - advice from the wrong (insufficient specific knowledge) people focusing on the wrong (too narrow an aspect of the whole) thing!
And
2) nutrition has a very definite effect on behaviour

This is VERY interesting!
24/04/2026

This is VERY interesting!

Beyond Behaviour (Part 1): The Internal Factors Driving Horse Performance

If you’ve been following along with my Collectable Advice series, you may have noticed I disappeared. Not dramatically. More in a “somewhere in Western Australia, covered in dust, horses, and catching up with good friends” kind of way.

So let me make up for it by a longer post with some important ideas.

This is something I believe is one of the most overlooked aspects of horse behaviour and performance.

Three years ago, I bought an Equestic Saddle Clip (see first comment for details). I come from a research background, so I like measuring things. It allows you to test assumptions, experiment and explore observations.🤓

The clip analyses a few aspects of motion but for this post I want to focus on its ability to examine trot symmetry. It can reveal the rhythm, landing force, and push-off between diagonal pairs.

I assumed riders would make horses more asymmetrical.

The data showed the opposite.

Horses consistently became MORE symmetrical when ridden.🤔

That sounds like improvement.

It isn’t always.😎

Around the same time, I came across Tami Elkayam, who helped shift how I see the horse’s body.❤

Horses are not designed to be straight. Asymmetry is normal. The goal is not straightness, but function, adaptability and ambidexterity.

This is where compensation comes in.

Compensation is not a flaw. It is how the horse maintains balance and avoids discomfort.

But when the cause remains, compensation becomes a pattern. Load shifts. Strain builds. Movement becomes less efficient.

What starts as a solution becomes a limitation and can eventually snowball into injury.

The clip showed me something I could not unsee and Tami helped me appreciate and respect it.

How a horse moves when it has choice, and how that changes when we take that choice away when we ride them.

This example is one case. One horse. One snapshot.

The horse did not appear lame. The concerns were behavioural, particularly contact and canter.

On the ground, the horse showed a clear difference between diagonals in the landing phase of trot. Around 19 percent, which is significant. The clip developers recommend any horse with a difference greater than 8% to seek veterinary assessment.

Under saddle, that difference almost disappeared.

The horse has produced a graph that is more symmetrical.

But the horse did not suddenly become sound.

The horse became constrained.

On the ground, the horse organised its body in a way that allowed it to cope by compensating.

Under saddle, that choice narrowed.

The rider introduced load and restriction. The horse reorganised because it had to.

The result was the horse forced to move with greater symmetry.

But not necessarily comfort or function and hence the deterioration of behaviour under saddle.

This is the blind spot.

Most people assess their horse under saddle.

But the moment you sit on a horse, you change the system.

You reduce its ability to compensate.

Movement becomes more organised, often more symmetrical.

But what we are seeing is what the horse can produce under constraint, not how it actually functions.

The bigger the difference between those two states, the more pressure is placed on the system.

And that pressure shows up as behaviour.

Spooky. Sensitive. Rushy. Reluctant. Inconsistent. Resistant. Difficult.

Not attitude.

Coping.😕

This is why it can vary day to day.

Surface, workload, fatigue, gut comfort, and environment all influence what the horse can tolerate.
The window shifts.

The behaviour follows.

Sometimes, without meaning to, we create the problem.

We guide the horse into a posture that is technically desirable, but not yet tolerable. We reduce its ability to compensate and increase the load on areas it has been protecting.

And then we call the response a behaviour problem.

I want to be clear - Good training matters. Clarity matters. Reducing external tension matters. This is a big part of helping horses.

It is what I do.

But it is not the whole picture.

If there is an internal issue, training sits on top of it.

It may help, but many times it is not enough because it may not remove the cause.

This is where we get it wrong.

We focus on what we see and overlook what the horse is experiencing.

Then we mislabel the result.

A horse that is restricted and compensating becomes “naughty” or “difficult” or "sensitive".

It is neither.

It is coping.

So when the supplement, the pole work, or the latest gadget does not fix the problem, pause.

Those tools are not necessarily the issue.

But if the root cause remains, adding more DEMAND will not solve it.

It will often make it WORSE.

Before you add something new, ask:

What is the horse already managing?

Because real change comes from understanding the WHOLE system.

Inside and out.

Because sometimes riding a horse and forcing it to move more symmetrically is magnifying their struggle.

Collectable Advice 198/365. Please hit SHARE or SAVE. Please do not copy and paste.

We all have days like this 😂 and this is not the day to try and achieve much! Don’t forget that how you feel will affect...
19/04/2026

We all have days like this 😂 and this is not the day to try and achieve much! Don’t forget that how you feel will affect your horse - horses are beyond compare when it comes to reading others! If you’re having one of those days, ditch the idea of training and just spend time with your horse - you’ll both feel better at the end of it

17/04/2026

Training is so important - if you approach it in the right way the horse will love it and it will have huge benefits beyond just the horse doing what you want!

16/04/2026

“Modern horsemanship [is] driven not by tradition or charisma, but by scientific understanding ……The future of horsemanship is not a rejection of tradition, but a refinement of it through the lens of science, ethics and empathy” Dr. Stephen Peters

Not sure if this will work - trying to share something from linked-inhttps://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.li...
12/04/2026

Not sure if this will work - trying to share something from linked-in

https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.linkedin.com%2Fposts%2Fphillippa-christie_equinewelfare-tackdesign-share-7449009592770035712-otgh%3Futm_medium%3Dios_app%26rcm%3DACoAAGQIy5UBqnoZVdbwMPW7tX8_hMsnqEccktI%26utm_source%3Dsocial_share_send%26utm_campaign%3Dmessenger%26fbclid%3DIwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAc3J0YwZhcHBfaWQPNDM3NjI2MzE2OTczNzg4AAEevyjhhS-hD4Hb1CTTrvIqi0s0DG-tZjQ-x2ylHSXIaFi2mQObFOs-5lDLv_k_aem_uL-dfdJnXBkCreVqXdAYUw&h=AT7zFKBisoZOt7vvX8nxRYY5QzVfo0D9sZUFCHn7iISTl2YQ9oMbQkLy-KszNuntrRMWwOLzzEmtkgQ8vMky97_iBvx9_y36zwxxBKegQOkCYdR9DMiWJ4G2Rbgf4ts&s=1

THE DUNNING-KRUGER EFFECT: A Silent Threat to Equine Welfare ? 🐎 In the world of horse training and tack design, what we don’t know can hurt—not us, but the horse. The Dunning-Kruger Effect is a cognitive bias where people with low mastery of a subject overestimate their ability. In the eques...

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