Ra Equine

Ra Equine Horses are athletes. Helping humans and horses one session at a time 🤠

🎉🐎🎉🐎🎉Finally someone wrote it better than i can explain it🤣
04/03/2026

🎉🐎🎉🐎🎉
Finally someone wrote it better than i can explain it🤣

01/06/2026

Why Walking Is One of the Most Powerful Nervous System and Fascial Regulators in the Horse

Walking is often underestimated. It is commonly treated as a warm-up, a cool-down, or something reserved for horses that are sore, aging, or “not working hard.” In reality, slow, rhythmic walking is one of the most effective ways to regulate the equine nervous system, normalize fascial tone, and restore coordinated postural support throughout the body.

This is not accidental. The walk provides a unique combination of neurological, vestibular, respiratory, and fascial input that no other gait delivers with the same safety, clarity, and precision.

This article is not about fitness or conditioning. It is about how the walk organizes the horse from the inside out — neurologically, fascially, and mechanically — and why it is often the most therapeutic gait when regulation, symmetry, and recovery matter.

Walking Organizes the Nervous System Through Rhythm

At the walk, the horse moves in a steady, symmetrical left–right sequence. This four-beat, bilateral gait provides continuous, predictable sensory input through the limbs, spine, and body wall, supporting proprioceptive feedback, postural regulation, and nervous system stability.

Each step:
• reinforces communication between the left and right sides of the body
• refines proprioceptive mapping
• supports spinal pattern generators responsible for rhythm and timing
• reduces threat perception through consistency

This is why walking is often the fastest way to reduce anxiety, bracing, or emotional reactivity — particularly after stress, travel, confinement, pain, or mental overload.

The nervous system does not need intensity to reorganize.
It needs rhythm.

Side-to-Side Spinal Motion: The Hidden Driver of Regulation at the Walk

This neurological rhythm does not occur only in the limbs. It is expressed through the spine.

Unlike faster gaits, the walk allows the horse’s spine to move in a gentle, alternating lateral pattern with each step. As the hind limb advances, the pelvis rotates and the trunk subtly bends toward the stance side, creating a continuous left–right wave through the spine, ribcage, and body wall.

This lateral motion is small, but neurologically rich.

Each step produces:
• controlled axial rotation through the thoracolumbar spine
• side-bending through the ribs and abdominal wall
• alternating lengthening and shortening of paraspinal and fascial tissues
• rhythmic input to spinal mechanoreceptors and intercostal nerves

Because this motion is slow, symmetrical, and uninterrupted, the nervous system has time to receive, integrate, and respond — rather than brace or override.

The walk is the only gait where the spine can fully express this side-to-side conversation without impact, suspension, or urgency. This is one reason spinal stiffness, asymmetry, and guarded movement often soften first at the walk.

The spine is not being forced to move.
It is being invited to oscillate.

Head and Neck Motion Regulate the Vestibular System

This spinal oscillation is inseparable from the movement of the head and neck.

In a relaxed walk, the horse’s head and neck move in a gentle pendulum pattern. This natural nodding motion stimulates the vestibular system, which plays a central role in balance, posture, muscle tone, and emotional regulation.

When the head and neck are free:
• muscle tone normalizes throughout the body
• postural reflexes settle
• the nervous system shifts toward a calmer, more organized state

When the head is restricted — by tension, equipment, or mental stress — this regulating vestibular input is reduced or lost. The body compensates by increasing holding patterns elsewhere.

A free walk is neurologically grounding.

Walking Normalizes Fascial Tone (Rather Than “Loosening” Tissue)

Fascia is not passive wrapping. It is a living, responsive tissue that continuously adjusts its resting tone based on movement, load, and nervous system input.

Slow, rhythmic walking provides the ideal stimulus for fascial regulation:
• low-load, cyclical stretch signals fascia to normalize stiffness
• alternating left–right strain balances tension across fascial continuities
• gentle compression and decompression improve hydration and glide
• consistent rhythm reduces protective guarding

This is why walking often produces visible softening and improved movement without direct tissue work. The fascia is not being forced to change — it is being given permission to stop bracing.

The Head–Neck Pendulum Loads the Fascial Front Line

At the walk, the head and neck act like a pendulum, gently tensioning and releasing the fascial structures connecting the poll, neck, sternum, ribcage, and abdominal wall.

This oscillation:
• supports elastic recoil
• improves postural tone
• provides timing information rather than force

When this motion is restricted, fascia shifts toward static holding instead of dynamic elasticity. Over time, this contributes to heaviness in the forehand, shortened stride, and loss of spring.

Walking is one of the few gaits that loads these tissues elastically without overload.

Ribcage Motion Is Essential for Sling Health

The thoracic sling does not suspend the limbs alone — it suspends the ribcage.

True thoracic sling function cannot occur without ribcage mobility. At the walk, the trunk experiences subtle but essential:
• rib elevation and depression
• lateral expansion
• axial rotation

These movements:
• hydrate deep thoracic fascia
• improve glide around the sternum and ribs
• reduce compressive holding patterns

A stiff trunk prevents true postural lift. Walking restores this relationship neurologically and mechanically.

How Massage and Myofascial Therapy Fit In

Massage and myofascial therapy do not replace walking — they restore the tissues’ ability to participate in it.

When fascia, muscle, or neural tissues are restricted, the lateral spinal motion of the walk becomes uneven, delayed, or reduced in amplitude. The horse may still walk, but the oscillation is distorted, limiting thoracic sling timing, ribcage mobility, and nervous system regulation.

Manual and myofascial therapies help by:
• reducing asymmetrical tone that blocks spinal oscillation
• restoring glide between fascial layers along the trunk and ribs
• improving sensory feedback from paraspinal and intercostal tissues
• decreasing protective guarding driven by pain or threat

After bodywork, the walk often looks different. Spinal motion becomes more fluid, ribcage movement improves, stride timing normalizes, and the horse settles more quickly. This is not coincidence — it is improved sensory input meeting a gait designed to integrate it.

Massage opens the door.
Walking teaches the body how to walk through it.

Breathing, Vagal Tone, and Fascial Tension

Walking naturally coordinates breath with movement, supporting parasympathetic (vagal) activity. Vagal tone directly influences muscle tone, fascial stiffness, pain sensitivity, and emotional regulation.

As vagal tone improves:
• baseline fascial tension decreases
• tissues regain elasticity
• movement feels lighter without effort
• recovery improves

This is why horses often look better after a calm walk than after stretching or strengthening exercises. The system has shifted out of protection.

Walking Over Terrain and Hills: When Rhythm Meets Real-World Input

When available, walking over varied terrain and gentle hills further enhances the regulating effects of the walk.

Uneven ground introduces subtle changes in limb loading, increasing proprioceptive feedback and encouraging the nervous system to refine coordination without triggering defensive tension. Fascia responds by adjusting tone dynamically rather than locking into static patterns.

Walking uphill gently increases thoracic sling engagement and trunk lift, while walking downhill improves controlled lengthening and eccentric control. In both cases, the ribcage must continuously adapt, improving mobility and suspension.

Terrain should add information — not intensity.
The walk should remain slow, rhythmic, and emotionally calm.

Walking Needs Variety

The nervous system adapts quickly. When movement is repeated in the same way, on the same surface, in the same environment, the body stops learning and begins automating.

At that point:
• sensory input diminishes
• fascial tone becomes uniform and less responsive
• postural strategies become fixed
• protective holding patterns can quietly re-emerge

Walking is regulating because it is rhythmic —
but it remains therapeutic because it is variable.

Variability Is How Fascia Stays Adaptive

Fascia thrives on changing vectors of load, not constant ones.

Subtle variation at the walk may include:
• straight lines, curves, and gentle figures
• changes in direction
• transitions between environments or footing
• brief pauses and restarts
• shifts in visual and vestibular input
• circles, turns, and lateral steps when appropriate

These small changes prevent repetitive strain, maintain elastic responsiveness, and distribute load across multiple fascial pathways.

Thoracic Sling Function Improves With Change, Not Repetition

The thoracic sling is a timing system.

If input is always the same:
• the sling engages in the same pattern
• certain fibers and fascial planes dominate
• others under-contribute
• asymmetry may be reinforced rather than resolved

Adding variation forces the sling to adapt continuously, redistribute tone, and refine coordination instead of bracing.

This is skill development — not strength work.

Variety Supports Mental and Emotional Regulation

Horses are highly sensitive to their environment. Changes in scenery, footing, visual horizon, and spatial orientation keep the nervous system engaged without threat — curious rather than defensive.

This is especially important for anxious horses, shutdown horses, rehabilitation cases, and seniors who do not tolerate intensity.

Boredom and over-repetition can increase tension just as much as over-work.

The Takeaway

Walking is not passive.
It is neurological organization, fascial regulation, and postural re-education in motion.

It does not force posture.
It restores the body’s ability to hold itself.

Walking is where the nervous system calms,
the fascia remembers elasticity,
and the body relearns how to carry the horse —
instead of the horse carrying itself with tension.

Walk Work Tip

Count the rhythm of your horse’s footsteps as you walk. Matching your attention to their step pattern helps you tune into consistency, symmetry, and relaxation — keeping the focus on rhythm rather than speed.

https://koperequine.com/the-power-of-slow-why-slow-work-is-beneficial-for-horses/

Sometimes it’s really nice to slow it down and enjoy just being with horses💜🐎💜
01/03/2026

Sometimes it’s really nice to slow it down and enjoy just being with horses💜🐎💜

SOOOO COOOL!!
12/08/2025

SOOOO COOOL!!

11/14/2025

Why so much walk?

…says another insecure voice in my head second guessing what others are thinking of my horse training 🤪.

But seriously, why are you still in walk 20 minutes after getting on?

Because in French classical training, the walk isn’t the warm-up before the real work; the walk often is the real work.

One of the biggest mindset shifts for me was realising that rushing into trot and canter was often my way of skipping over the boring but essential stuff: balance, looseness, straightness, genuine connection… all the things I later complained about not having.

The walk is where we develop those ingredients without the added chaos of speed or suspension. I’m not saying you should stay in walk; it’s vital to keep a horse eager to move forward, and some horses absolutely need to go before they can think. But once the desire to go is there, walk is where we can install the alphabet of aids and build balance before expecting the same clarity in trot and canter.

So we spend time in walk because:

✅ It gives you and your horse thinking time.

More time to think means more precision, and more precision means faster learning for both of you.

✅ You can fix crookedness before it becomes a habit.

If the shoulders are falling left at walk, they will launch left in trot.

✅ Walk is the only gait where each limb steps independently.

Because walk is a clear four beat rhythm with each leg landing separately, it is the easiest pace to isolate a single limb, influence it, and coordinate it with the rest of the body.

✅ Relaxation and balance come first.

A horse who isn’t mentally or physically balanced at walk won’t magically be balanced in canter. (Ask me how I know.)

And guess what: when you finally ask for trot or canter after all that patient, technical walk work, the trot and canter are magically improved. That is why we do it.

So if your friend peers over the arena fence wondering why you’re still walking in circles, smile politely. You’re not wasting time; you’re building foundations that will make your tower of training so much stronger.

09/22/2025

Definitely makes my day when the clients are this cute🥰

08/29/2025

PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUCEMENT:
I've been very busy the last few days with trying to save a horse that got bit in the nose by a RATTLESNAKE. (I've not been trying to ignore anyone.)
For those of you that live in an area where there are venomous snakes.... Listen up......
If a horse gets bit in the leg.... it's Bad... but, if they get bit in the face, especially the nose... it's Life Threatening, and can be Deadly... FAST!
The nose swells up, the nostrils close up, and the horse will SUFFOCATE! A horse must breathe through his nostrils. They Can't breathe through their mouth.
I didn't see this horse get bit by the rattlesnake... but, when I found the horse, he was suffocating! I knew what must have happened.... and I knew what I had to do, and do it FAST! I had to get Air to my horse!
The nostrils were so tightly closed... the only tubes I could fit up his nostrils were the size of a pencil, which sure didn't give him much Air..... but, it was enough to keep him from dying. After he could get a Little Air.... he quit thrashing around so bad, and he was not in as much of a Panic. Then, I prepared some lengths of garden hose to put in his nostrils. I tried to trim the edges so they wouldn't be as rough... because I knew is was going to be tough to get them in place. A frightened horse in a lot of pain doesn't want anyone to touch him, much less push a lubricated garden hose up his nose, when there is barely enough room for a pencil.
By this time, I had him in the stocks to minimize his movement so I could try to get him more air.
I slid the water hose along side the tiny hose, and although I made him bleed... I knew I had to get him more air. After both bigger hoses were in place... he was frantically trying to breathe deeper, and the pain from putting the tubes in made him breathe heavier and it was still hard to breathe through the larger hoses..... but, at least he could breathe. The hoses are held in place with tape, but putting tape on a painfully swollen face has it's own set of challenges.
Once I knew he was getting air... the next step was getting veterinary help.

Well, this happened Saturday, and around here... the vet was closed.
A visitor to the ranch that drove up for her appointment ... arrived as the tubes were put in the nose. She called her friend in Texas, who was a Vet, and after the vet confirmed we already had tubes in his nose.... she told me the horse needed Dex, Banamine, and Pen G. I had several things on hand, so I did what I could do for him with what I had.... but, still needed to get my local vet here...

Many phone calls later, and leaving messages, and eventually reaching the Mother of one of the vets... I found out that everyone was out of town, but should be back later that night.

My horse's face was swelling even more, and he was becoming unrecognizable. (Photo from when tubes were put in) He swelled to twice that size at his worst.
When a horse has been bit by a venomous snake, it is critical to keep the horse calm and as quiet possible. I kept him in the stocks with a fan on him.
Note- A horse bitten by a venomous snake, should NEVER be sedated.
His lips, mouth, and tongue swelled so much that swallowing was impossible. I let him try to lick water from a hose, but he couldn't swallow it. He so wanted to eat and drink, but this was impossible.

Later- the local vet arrived.... and after taking one look at the garden hoses sticking out of the grotesquely deformed face.... he looked at me and said I saved his life by getting the tubes in his nose when I did....
Meds, I.V. Anti-Venom, I.V. fluids, and Antibiotics were given. The road to recovery had begun.
I stayed with my horse most of the night, keeping him calm, and quiet.
The licking of water seemed to keep him happy, and was a distraction from being hungry.
Day two- The vets came back for more Anti-Venom, Meds, and I.V. Fluids. The swelling was now improving some...
Now on our 3rd day.... the swelling has improved enough that the nasal tubes have been removed, and although breathing is still far from normal... he can breathe without the tubes.
His upper lip and muzzle are still extremely swollen, but he can drink from a tub now, and I.V. fluids are no longer needed.

Eating is difficult, and water soaked alfalfa pellets (Mush) can be licked up. Eating will take a back seat to fluids for now.

He will have to be on Antibiotics for an extended time, because Snakes carry large amounts of bacteria in their mouth/fangs and this can be fatal.

I hope none of you reading this post ever have to experience what I've been through the last few days. But, I hope this information was helpful, and that if you or someone you know has a horse bitten by a venomous snake in the face.... you will know what to do until the vet can help.
Please Share to reach others that may benefit from this information. If one horse is saved.... it is worth it.

07/24/2025

Love this silly goober🐎😂

Address

Del Mar, CA

Telephone

+17604194925

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Ra Equine posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Ra Equine:

Share