To. a. T - Equine Massage

To. a. T - Equine Massage Massage therapy is a great way to keep your horse performing at it's best.

I work one on one with you and your team to provide the best quality care to your horse. Offering massage therapy, nutrition advising, educational clinics and basic first aid care.

Carrot stretches are my  #1 recommendation to owners🥕 They are a simple, uncomplicated exercise and will help to create ...
11/16/2025

Carrot stretches are my #1 recommendation to owners

🥕 They are a simple, uncomplicated exercise and will help to create a bond with the horse and owner

🥕 They can improve the horse's flexibility through the back and neck by stretching the muscle groups associated with their topline

So make sure to incorporate them into your daily routine and feel free to ask for help if you are unsure of how to do them!

The weather is changing and winter is approaching. Let's talk about how bodywork can help your horse adjust.By incorpora...
11/13/2025

The weather is changing and winter is approaching. Let's talk about how bodywork can help your horse adjust.

By incorporating massage and bodywork into your horse's schedule, you are helping them by:

🍁 Keeping their muscles loose and pliable. The colder temperatures or the extreme differences in temperatures from one day to the next can make them tense. Some may become more energetic outside, leading to injuries. Others may not move as much outside which leads to decline in performance or even injuries while riding.

🍁 Increasing the blood flow and movement of in the body. This keeps the tissues healthier, leading to a horse ready to continue training.

🍁 Increasing their GI movement and water intake. These systems tend to slow down with the drop in temperatures but by incorporating bodywork these systems can function around a more normal range. This helps to decrease the risk of colic, choke and issues caused by dehydration.

Let's get your horse booked to keep them performing at their best through the season changes!

Do you have a long weekend of showing ahead of you? Or are you making your way home from the AQHA Congress? How about ju...
10/17/2025

Do you have a long weekend of showing ahead of you? Or are you making your way home from the AQHA Congress? How about just finishing up a long trip of hauling with your horse?

These events will fatigue the horse's body, no matter how conditioned they are. Incorporating bodywork sessions after stressful events such as these will help the body bounce back quicker and healthier.

Massage is not just a luxury, it is a necessity for helping to keep your horse performing and feeling its best 👌 PM me!

Adding some finishing touches to a presentation I will be giving in the morning 🙌I have a couple presentations/clinics t...
10/15/2025

Adding some finishing touches to a presentation I will be giving in the morning 🙌

I have a couple presentations/clinics that I will be doing over the next months, but I still have a few openings! Reach out and let's chat about what I can offer your club or class 😊

Take a moment and give this article a read! With the amount of stress that the forehand of a horse endures, I make sure ...
10/11/2025

Take a moment and give this article a read! With the amount of stress that the forehand of a horse endures, I make sure to properly assess both of these areas and USUALLY these areas are more tender than the horse lets on.

The Interplay Between the Thoracic Sling and the Fascial Sleeve of the Forelimb

The horse’s forehand is a marvel of suspension and flow — a dynamic system that relies on the thoracic sling and the fascial sleeve of the forelimb working together as one continuous, responsive unit. The efficiency, elasticity, and comfort of the horse’s entire front end depend on how these two systems share load, tension, and sensory feedback.

🩻 The Thoracic Sling: The Horse’s “Living Suspension System”

Unlike humans, horses do not have a bony joint connecting their forelimbs to the trunk. Instead, the thoracic sling — a network of muscles and fascia — suspends the ribcage between the shoulder blades. Key players include:
• Serratus ventralis cervicis and thoracis
• Pectoralis profundus and subclavius
• Trapezius and rhomboideus
• Latissimus dorsi
• Related myofascia

These structures stabilize and lift the trunk during movement, absorb impact, and allow for fine adjustments in balance and posture. A supple, strong sling lets the horse “float” the ribcage between the shoulders rather than brace against the ground.

🩹 The Fascial Sleeve of the Forelimb: A Continuum of Force and Flow

Each forelimb is encased in a fascial sleeve — a continuous, multilayered sheath of connective tissue that envelops every muscle, tendon, ligament, and neurovascular pathway from the scapula to the hoof.

Rather than separating structures, fascia integrates them, distributing tension and transmitting force both vertically (hoof to trunk) and laterally (across the chest and back). The fascial sleeve is both a stabilizer and a sensory network, richly innervated with mechanoreceptors that inform the central nervous system about position, pressure, and movement.

🔄 A Two-Way Relationship

The thoracic sling and the fascial sleeve of the forelimb form a mutually dependent system.

When one is tight, weak, or imbalanced, the other compensates — often at a cost.

1. Force Transmission

Each stride begins with ground contact. The impact and rebound forces from the limb travel up through the fascial sleeve, into the shoulder girdle, and directly into the thoracic sling.
If the fascial sleeve is supple and well-hydrated, the sling can absorb and redistribute force smoothly.
If restricted — for instance, by myofascial adhesions or muscular guarding — the load transmits as sharp, jarring impact into the sling, leading to fatigue and microstrain.

2. Postural Support

The sling lifts and stabilizes the thorax between the shoulders. But that lift depends on the integrity of the fascial tension in the forelimb.
If the limb fascia loses tone or the deep pectorals shorten, the ribcage can “drop” between the shoulders, leading to a downhill posture, shortened stride, and overload of the forehand.

3. Neuromuscular Coordination

Fascia houses thousands of sensory receptors that communicate constantly with the nervous system.
The thoracic sling relies on this feedback to coordinate timing and symmetry of movement.
When fascial tension becomes uneven — say, due to unilateral limb restriction — proprioceptive input becomes distorted, and the horse may appear crooked, heavy on one rein, or unable to maintain even rhythm.

4. Reciprocal Influence
• A tight thoracic sling can compress the fascial pathways through the shoulder and upper limb, restricting glide and muscle contraction below.
• Conversely, a restricted fascial sleeve can inhibit normal scapular rotation and ribcage lift, forcing the sling muscles to overwork.

💆‍♀️ Myofascial Release and Massage: Restoring the Dialogue

Manual therapies that target both regions — not just the limb or the trunk in isolation — are key to restoring the horse’s natural balance.

Effective bodywork can:
• Release adhesions within the fascial sleeve to restore elastic recoil.
• Improve scapular glide and thoracic lift.
• Normalize sensory input through mechanoreceptors, refining coordination.
• Encourage symmetrical movement and postural awareness through gentle, integrated mobilization.

When the thoracic sling and limb fascia move as one continuous system, the horse’s stride lengthens, the topline softens, and forehand heaviness diminishes.

🧘‍♀️ Training and Conditioning Support

Beyond manual therapy, proper conditioning maintains this balance:
• Hill work and gentle pole exercises enhance thoracic sling engagement.
• Lateral work improves scapular mobility and fascial elasticity.
• Regular checks of saddle fit and rider symmetry prevent recurring restriction.

🐎 The Takeaway

The thoracic sling doesn’t work in isolation — it’s an extension of the fascial sleeve of the forelimb, and together they form the foundation of forehand function.
Healthy fascia enables the sling to lift, absorb, and respond.
A supple, responsive sling protects the fascia from overload.

When they operate in harmony, the horse moves with effortless balance — powerful yet soft, grounded yet elevated — the way nature intended.

09/21/2025
Large or small, more animals are in pain than we are aware of. Whether it be acute or chronic, learning the warning sign...
09/13/2025

Large or small, more animals are in pain than we are aware of. Whether it be acute or chronic, learning the warning signs can help to manage and heal their discomfort. I am always here to chat if you have an animal in question!

I love my job. Part of that job is working with horses and the other part is educating the horse community as much as I ...
09/07/2025

I love my job. Part of that job is working with horses and the other part is educating the horse community as much as I can.

Over the years I have spoken to many groups of people about basic horse care and knowledge, anatomy, nutrition, rehab and massage. This is something I enjoy and would like to continue to do!

With that said, I want to start promoting these educational clinics. I have spoken in front of college classes, 4H groups, and veteran based therapy programs to name a few. This can be done as a zoom presentation or an in person demonstration.

I have limited spots so pm me to set up a day for your group/barn/class!

This pilot study is a good read! While we think about the stressors of trailering and competition, we sometimes miss the...
08/22/2025

This pilot study is a good read! While we think about the stressors of trailering and competition, we sometimes miss the subtle signs of our horses being stressed at home too. Massage has been proven time and time again to help relax the horse's physical and mental state. A calm horse is a happy horse

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