Margie Mitchell - Rider Biomechanics Coach

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The last sunset of '25. Onwards to the New Year!Wish you all the greatest of fun and learning with your horses. Tomorrow...
31/12/2025

The last sunset of '25.
Onwards to the New Year!

Wish you all the greatest of fun and learning with your horses.
Tomorrow could be the start of anything you set your sights at. Make the steps towards your goal realistic, small and adjustable. It can be surprising when you look back how much you've achieved.
But most of all, enjoy special time with your horse. Listening. Watching. Learning.
Happy days x

Good informative post
27/12/2025

Good informative post

The Vagal Nerve where the subconscious is king and lifestlyle is key

Its not a magic reset button, if your horse is in a crap situation then manually working on it may give you the illusion of calm yet chaos still simmers under the surface, forced relaxation is an impossible ask and could create more issues further along the journey

First let me say there are very little studies to show vagal nerve work in horses ( interestingly the study that struck me most was the one about how the most positive results came from the owner horse relationship and long term positive interactions with the humans in the horses life) and primarily this nerve has the same function in most Mammals' with slight variations, so we often cross over studies and bring what we find in humans and without any real study a lot of what is wrote is assumption (including mine)

But what we do know is that the subconscious often overrules 90 per cent of how it functions it is often only thought about in humans for the time we are working with it and then for the rest of the time it will function according to how our brains, bodies and genetics are wired

So lets put some human perspective on it, if you are a teeth clencher or breath holder then you will know most times you are not even aware you are doing it and we have to make a lot of effort to unclench our teeth or think s**t i need to breathe😀, why? Because clenching your jaw is an involuntary response, it happens subconsciously. We mostly do it say at night while asleep along with teeth grinding and often its either genetic or environmental factors it is also how you are wired to deal with situations (and why most therapists will give you a set of exercises and mine gave me only breathing exercises) but as we know when our tmj is held in a position over a long time that becomes our normal and to change is a daily struggle as we don’t like moving out of our comfort zone, and remember humans have a varied variety of reasons that horses just would never have
The biggest difference is when anything is done in the human world we have clear communication about what the outcome will be, we can be aware that a moment of discomfort will be beneficial in the long term, we find comfort in words of reassurance, we can see the moment of discomfort will bring a better tomorrow, we cannot tell horses tomorrow will be better if we are the instigators of discomfort they will remember that today we only brought something they didnt like and when we begin messing with the nervous system, then their subconscious might fight back.

There is alot of talk about the autonomic system and again the subconscious is king with this system this system is the basic function for life it works 24/7 and while as humans we can improve the quality of some of this system by consciousness actions the horse however predominantly needs a positive 24/7 environment to sustain that ying and yang swaying between all systems (I mean we can't ask a horse to pop in an ice bath and tell them it will be better after the initial shock)

Personality has a huge part to play, they all have different personalities yet often to get by in our world we demand they react all the same.

So back to the horse well first of the vagal nerve is the longest cranial nerve. it snakes through the body and blends in with some pretty important structures, these include head (which is where I start), neck, thorax, abdomen often it is referred to as the wandering nerve and you can see why, so it is a ying and yang it affects these areas but also these areas will affect the nerve, and remember we have a right and a left side and branches and many offshoots. It plays an important role in the nervous system and is responsible for involuntary sensory and motor functions,

Over simulating the vagal nerve is a real thing and often people will look for an increased blood flow in the caratoid artery as a gauge and reference to the vagal nerve but over stimulating will actual cause the blood vessels to dilate, so while we see an increased blood flow in the artery are we then causing dilation to other important structures, we can't go in w***y nilly in humans we can tell the practitioner if we have a history of any illnesses and caratoid massage in humans is usually only done by someone who has your full medical history as messing with the blood flow in a focused deliberate way can have repercussions, as bodyworkers we will often see an increased activity in the caratoid artery but often it is a result of working on the whole horse and often it's not only an increased blood flow but the artery becomes more visual as the posture changes, and we want to maybe see a slight increase for me I am not keen on seeing a huge pumping I almost feel if we were doing this on a human would they feel faint or light headed

Lifestyle is key to a better nervous, physical and mental wellbeing, allowing freedom to move appropriatly for the regualtion of all the above is paramount, First thing we must do when addressing the vagal nerve is to address the horse's environment, diet and general wellbeing because if those are not right then the 1 hour of bodywork, training or any of the other things that are promised as a cure will only just be that in the horse's life same as me when I was only doing the techniques to help my vagal nerve the minute I went to bed and my unconscious mind was at play the teeth clenching would still be there, we must always find the cause not only just treat the symptom

And remember fight and flight work alongside rest and digest horses need both to work in harmony not one tipping the balance in their favour, would you really want a horse about to compete in the rest and digest phase or would you want a bit of that sympathetic nervous system to be ready. We see this mostly in the field where they will be on high alert then the body will flip into rest and digest as it regulates, now think of a horse that can never get to the 10 in flight or fright will they then not be able to regulate that flip over and therefore forever be stuck in the high stress phase, I used own one of these horses so his environment has been adapted so he can go from one system to the other and even though he is in flight phase a lot you can see how by just adapting my environment to his needs how the body is able to regulate it a little better, I.e very little human interaction, only positive interactions and room and choice to leave if he wants, both systems are play a vital role to the well-being of the body we need both to work together

And remember like I say studies are scarce, so this is my own opinion on how I view it and how I address it I always see whole horse, and everything is part of something, and everything has cause and effect


The only thing for a better body and mind with alot of horses is realising their basic rights and needs just to live comfortable without fear or pain, for some it isn't even mountains of bodywork or training or trying to find solace with us but to give them friends of their own species to feel safe.

Finding trauma triggers can be often be an impossible task, trauma is a strong emotive word, we often equate stress as a trauma yet everyday in all species lives there will be mix of stress, relaxation, and other external and internal influences, horses have to be able to use the appropriate emotion for each situation, micro stresses and suppressed appropriate emotional reactions often leads to a explosive or shut down moment yet often the momentum for that moment was building up over a period of time, but simply providing the right enviroment and helping them to work in the world we have created for them can help them function better in the here and now.

I will say it again when horses feel unsafe they need to move yet when we feel unsafe around the horse we want them to stand still, we talk about nervous system regulation yet in that moment we are only regulating ours, and once again forgetting how different we are when it comes to regulating our systems.

Ronnie on box test for couple of days so set her some enrichment fun in the sun after she'd rolled and had a kick about....
26/12/2025

Ronnie on box test for couple of days so set her some enrichment fun in the sun after she'd rolled and had a kick about.
Great way to entertain her

PS. It's just a touch of mud fever so preventative measures to keep her legs dry and clean. Thanks for everyone's concern 💞@

What do you know? 🎄There's so much information on the internet ... some good, some maybe not so.  You have to pick your ...
22/12/2025

What do you know? 🎄

There's so much information on the internet ... some good, some maybe not so. You have to pick your way thru it. Follow those reputable knowledgable professionals, go on their courses and read their posts. The bar is set high - whether it's inhand, ridden, understanding behaviour, when to recognise a response when the horse is communicating 'no'.
So much to know. It can feel occasionally overwhelming, and if there's a conflict of ideas which one should you follow.
My mare gave me a 'no' yesterday. Now many years ago I might've taken the response of making her more compliant but this time I've got different ideas and reflecting on it later it I realised how far I'd changed and grown with my knowledge and approach.
Staying open to new ideas is refreshing for your skill set and your horse benefits from it too.
Occasionally taking in all this information can make you feel like an over soaked piece of blotting paper. I find that when I feel like that I stop reading stuff for a while. Take a breath and then come back to the good posts.
I want to be the best I can be for my horse but recognising you can't know it all and that the ideas of those gifted experienced folk are mutating and being finessed constantly means it's a forever circle of learning.

So be kind to yourself about how far you've come. Give yourself a pat on the back but don't become complacent. You shouldn't feel pressured. Learning should be an exciting prospect.
Have fun with your horses and continue the journey.

Happy Xmas
Love
Marg and Ronnie

Better hands make better horses
21/12/2025

Better hands make better horses

Hands and arms and fingers and toes.

Well, actually, no toes feature in this post but I didn’t want them to feel left out.

Whether we ride with a bit or not, most of us are connecting our hands to our horses head. Maybe their mouth, sometimes their extremely sensitive face. This means we need to take a great deal of care.

Here are some pointers from years of teaching other people and endlessly trying to improve my own riding.

You need your elbows - they are your friends. Without elbows our arms are straight and braced and it’s not a nice feeling for the horse. You also cannot follow the movement of your horses head and neck in an elastic way without your elbow joints.

There should be a forward feeling from between your shoulders, down through your upper arm, via your elbows, your wrists, and through your fingers to your horses mouth. Because even upward acting hands can have a backward and blocking feeling.

One great way to check is to get photos or videos of yourself from behind (Whilst riding a horse, obvs). If your elbows are coming back behind your rib cage (even a tiny bit), or flaring out away from your trunk - you know there is a backwards feeling in your hands and arms. This is hard won knowledge which can make a huggggeee difference to your horses

Philippe Karl says a rider needs the fingers and wrists of a concert pianist - mobile and dexterous. I have also found that a soft fist around the reins is significantly preferable, rather than just holding with one finger and a thumb. We may think this is light, but horses often find it tight.

We also need to consider soft and secure rather than light and limp. Hands and fingers which are sooo light can feel rather peculiar to horses who would take great comfort in knowing where you actually are.

There is one specific thing which has helped change the relationship between my hands and my horses mouth the most, and it’s all thanks to Jane Pike. It’s a seemingly tiny change but has a huge impact. And that is - pushing your little finger towards your horses mouth when holding the reins. It’s a humdinger.

Because of the way we practice using our hands in life (we’re pulling little monkeys) even with our thumbs on top, we can be drawing our little fingers backwards. Most of us are. This creates a ‘tiny to us but huge to our horse’ backwards feeling against their tongue. They don’t like it.

Just by changing this one thing - push your pinkies forward - I have seen a whole horses body free up and be able to move.

Something to experiment and practice over the winter months. Your horse will thank you.

Photo shows Nicola on her extremely sensitive Spanish mare. If Nicola has even the tiniest fraction of backward action this horse jacks her head up in the air and hollows. She is an excellent teacher.

20/12/2025

Sleep debt in horses is real.
And it changes behaviour long before it looks like a big deal.

Horses do not need to lie down to rest, but they do need to lie down to enter REM sleep. While horses can achieve slow-wave sleep while standing, REM sleep requires full muscle relaxation and temporary loss of postural tone. That is only possible when a horse is lying down.

REM sleep is not optional. It is where the nervous system processes stress, consolidates learning, regulates emotional responses, and restores neurological balance. Most horses require roughly 30–60 minutes of REM sleep per day, usually in short bouts when lying flat.

When a horse cannot lie down safely or comfortably, they accumulate sleep debt.

This is rarely about stubbornness or attitude. It is almost always about safety or comfort.
The surface may feel too hard, slippery, or unstable.
The environment may feel too exposed.
Herd dynamics may prevent full relaxation.
Pain, discomfort, gastric tension, or musculoskeletal strain may make lying down feel risky.
Or the nervous system may be living in a state of chronic vigilance that never allows complete letting go.

The nervous system does not prioritise sleep when it perceives threat. A horse carrying sleep debt is not “naughty”. Their nervous system is exhausted.

Behavioural changes linked to sleep debt are often subtle and confusing.

You may see increased spookiness or sudden overreactions.
Poor focus or inconsistent responses in training.
Irritability, defensiveness, or a shorter fuse.
Reduced tolerance for novelty.
Shut-down, flatness, or dissociation that is mistaken for calm.

In more severe cases, horses may experience brief postural collapses during drowsiness, sometimes described as sleep attacks. This occurs when the brain forces entry into REM sleep despite the horse being unable to lie down, and it signals significant neurological exhaustion.

These are not training problems. They are signs of a nervous system that has not had adequate restorative sleep.

Sleep deprivation lowers stress tolerance, impairs emotional regulation, and reduces a horse’s capacity to process pressure, learning, and social interaction. The margin for overwhelm becomes much smaller, even in horses who previously coped well. This is why behavioural changes can appear to come “out of nowhere”.

From a nervous-system perspective, sleep is not a luxury. It is a biological requirement for regulation. And this matters: you cannot train a sleep-deprived nervous system into better behaviour.

No amount of consistency, clarity, or repetition can override neurological fatigue. Continued demands often deepen dysregulation rather than resolve it.

When behaviour shifts, sleep must be part of the conversation.

Is the horse lying down regularly?
Do they feel safe enough in their environment to fully let go?
Is pain or internal discomfort making rest inaccessible?
Is the nervous system living in a state of constant low-grade vigilance?

When sleep improves, behaviour often softens without force.

The body stabilises.
The nervous system recovers.
Learning becomes possible again.

Behaviour is never just about what the horse is doing.
It is about what their nervous system is carrying.

And a tired nervous system will always speak through behaviour.

This is just the surface. Over on the WHJ subscriber page, we go deeper into sleep debt, why it develops, how to recognise it early, and what supports genuine nervous system recovery. We include a comprehensive "Sleep Audit"to assess your horse's sleep.

The importance of reading what your horse is trying to communicate and responding appropriately ... not ignoring and mak...
19/12/2025

The importance of reading what your horse is trying to communicate and responding appropriately ... not ignoring and making your horse comply regardless. A good post.

"He's fine once I'm on" 🐴

Often when I’m taking history from a new client they will list behavioural issues like turning away when they bring their tack in, pulling faces when tacking up, refusing to stand still at the mounting block, throwing their head up and bracing as you put weight in the stirrup. This is very often followed by “but he’s fine once I’m on”.

If our horse is communicating all of this discomfort in the lead up to us getting on, I guarantee what we’re experiencing once we get on board isn’t a horse who is “fine”, it is a horse who is compliant and knows that once you’re in the saddle there are no other options on the table and he has to just get on with it.

Horses are very compliant animals, its actually really easy to make them do stuff they don’t want to do and there are countless tutorial videos to show you how to make them, they’re just dressed up as “building connection/being a good leader/teaching respect/building confidence”.

Your horse isn’t moving away from his tack because you’re not a “good leader”, he’s moving away from his tack because he finds what comes next uncomfortable/scary/painful.

Usually we have already made it quite difficult for the horse not to comply by applying pressure until they do the thing we want them to do, so for them to still be trying to communicate their discomfort to us is very telling.

This is one of the main reasons I believe giving horses real choice is so important in training. Tapping a horse with a stick/putting pressure on the reins/flapping a flag and only stopping when the horse does the “right” thing is not giving the horse a choice. It is telling them there is only one choice if they want the uncomfortable thing to stop. If we’re persistent enough, and it doesn’t have to be high pressure just persistent, most horses will eventually give in and comply, despite often being in pain or frightened.

If instead, we prioritise listening to the horse communicate with us and set up training scenarios where they can give us those clear answers, we may really not like those answers, but this is how we train ethically and also how we can start to actually problem-solve.

The inconvenient truth is most behavioural issues are rooted in chronic stress and/or pain. A lack of explosive behaviour is not a green light to continue, “gently” ignoring their communication is still ignoring their communication, I have a post I really want to write on this but I can’t quite get the words out today so I wrote this one instead.

I do not ride horses unless they’re fine before I get on. If we want to train ethically we need to get really good at reading our horse’s communication and then using that information to make appropriate choices, not trying to figure out how to make them comply despite it. 🐴

19/12/2025

Fascial Slip: Why Tissue Play Matters

Fascial slip, also referred to as tissue play or tissue sliding, describes the natural ability of individual structures — muscle bellies, tendons, ligaments, fascia, and even bone surfaces — to move freely and independently of one another.

Healthy tissues glide with minimal friction.
This small but essential micro-movement supports normal biomechanics, fluid exchange, neurological regulation, and pain-free motion.

When that glide is lost, the issue is rarely a “tight muscle” in the traditional sense.
More often, it is the interface between tissues — the layers that should slide — that becomes restricted.

These inter-layer restrictions, not the muscle fibers themselves, are one of the most common causes of myofascial pain.

Why Loss of Tissue Play Causes Pain

When tissues cannot glide freely:
• Localized strain increases, as muscles must work harder against adhered or compressed neighboring structures.
• Mechanoreceptors and nociceptors become hyper-responsive, creating sensations of tightness, burning, pulling, or sharp pain.
• Movement compensations develop, spreading tension along fascial lines far from the original restriction.
• Blood and lymphatic flow decrease, slowing recovery and reducing resilience.
• Muscles fatigue more quickly, because they are pushing through unnecessary resistance.

In short:

The body often hurts not because the muscle is injured, but because the layers around it are no longer communicating or sliding well.

How Tissue Play Becomes Restricted

Common contributors include:
• Repetitive movement patterns or training overload
• Poor posture or habitual bracing strategies
• Scar tissue, micro-tearing, or previous injury
• Chronic inflammation
• Dehydrated or stiff fascia
• Stress-driven sympathetic activation that increases tissue tone
• Trauma or compression (e.g., saddle pressure, tack, rider imbalance in horses)

The Role of Manual Therapy

Manual therapies — massage, myofascial release, fascial glide work, tissue mobilization — do not mechanically “break up adhesions” in the literal sense.

Instead, they:
• Restore hydration and fluidity to fascial layers
• Improve sliding surfaces between tissues
• Normalize neurological tone and reduce protective guarding
• Re-establish elastic recoil and healthy tissue dynamics
• Increase circulation and lymphatic flow

This is why even gentle, well-targeted work can create dramatic changes in comfort and movement:

You are restoring the body’s ability to let tissues move independently again — the foundation of pain-free motion.

https://koperequine.com/10-most-important-things-fascia-does-for-your-horse/

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