BluWynd Equine - Rehabilitation & Maintenance

BluWynd Equine - Rehabilitation & Maintenance Equine rehabilitation & maintenance.

🚨🚨Cyber Monday Sale🚨🚨$50 off all regular priced packages4 Full body sessions $350 now $3006 full body sessions $500 now ...
11/28/2022

🚨🚨Cyber Monday Sale🚨🚨

$50 off all regular priced packages
4 Full body sessions $350 now $300
6 full body sessions $500 now $450
8 full body sessions $650 now $600

💥Must be purchased today 11/28/22
Package valid until 12/31/23
Travel fee not included if applicable💥

Venmo or PayPal accepted

Teen sat under the lights while he enjoyed his mash after our ride.💥I am currently scheduling 2-3 weeks out. If you have...
06/28/2022

Teen sat under the lights while he enjoyed his mash after our ride.

💥I am currently scheduling 2-3 weeks out. If you have not scheduled an appointment do not assume you have one. If you want your horses/stables on a set schedule then you need to get with me.💥

06/27/2022
06/26/2022

Why do ‘cresty’ necks suddenly go rock hard?

This information is relevant and useful to people who own horses with Equine Metabolic Syndrome and are in danger of laminitis or whose horses are intermittently ‘footy’. Understanding this has helped with rehabilitating, not only all the ponies at Jen Heperi’s Mini-HaHa Rescue Haven but many more horses and ponies all around the world.

We learned from Dr Deb Bennett PhD (who has conducted many dissections), that “the horse's "crest" is made of fibro-fatty sub-cutaneous (adipose) tissue similar in texture to high-density foam”.

Have you ever wondered how it is that the ‘crest’ of the neck can harden so rapidly? Sometimes overnight?

The actual reason is because it goes ‘turgid’ (it fills with fluid). Like foam, the crest tissue can take up water like a sponge; so it swells and hardens because fluid ‘leaks’ into it, filling the interstitial spaces until it is hard as a rock, and ‘softens’ when electrolyte balances are corrected thereby allowing fluid to be resorbed.

When the crest swells with edema, other parts of the horse's body like the abdomen and the hooves (significantly the digital cushion is made of similar material, it is a thick wedge of fibro-fatty subcutaneous tissue) -- are liable to be in trouble, too.

Hardening of the ‘crest’ coincides with not only spring and autumn growth spurts but also potassium and nitrogen spikes in autumn and winter grasses. It coincides with early signs of laminitis which are ‘stiffening’ of gait and being ‘footy’.

It is a sure indication that one cause of ‘pasture related laminitis’ is as much to do with mineral imbalances, (particularly potassium and nitrogen excesses concurrent with salt deficit) as sugars and starches. It explains why short Autumn grass can cause laminitis when analysis shows soluble sugars + starch content is only 7.5% while potassium is 3.4%, sodium only 0.154%, nitrogen 5.8%, nitrates 2290mgs/kg (far too high, in mature grass/hay they are undetectable).
It is one of the many reasons clover is such a ‘no-no’ for EMS/laminitis equines and a likely explanation why there are some insulin resistant/elevated insulin horses that can't tolerate Lucerne (alfalfa) and is why Lucerne can perpetuate laminitis when everything else is being done ‘right’.

People who own horses with EMS are aware they need to pay attention to this vital sign: that just before a horse has a bout of laminitis, the normally soft and spongy crest stands up firm and hard. Then they can immediately reduce potassium/nitrogen intake by eliminating short, green grass replacing it with soaked hay and make sure they add salt to feeds and not rely on a salt lick. If action is taken quickly enough in these early stages, laminitis can be averted, you can ‘dodge a bullet’.

Soaking hay for about an hour not only reduces sugars but also reduces potassium levels by 50%.

Therefore a very important aspect of EMS and laminitis is that identifying and addressing mineral imbalances (particularly high potassium/nitrogen & low salt) are equally as important as sugar and starch content when rehabilitating individuals and assessing suitability of forage for these compromised equines.

06/24/2022

Working on this weeks schedule.
Message me with number of horses & location and I’ll let you know when I’ll be where.

06/22/2022

Message me to get on the schedule

🐎Calling all horses owners, trainers, and facility owners!🐎Get your horses on the schedule today!📲🗓💥repair soft tissue d...
06/20/2022

🐎Calling all horses owners, trainers, and facility owners!🐎

Get your horses on the schedule today!📲🗓

💥repair soft tissue damage
💥 relieve pain, swelling, and inflammation
💥 increased oxygen levels and blood flow
💥 great for growing babies
💥rehab or maintenance
💥 help wounds heal faster

💚Message me to learn the difference between PEMF and infrared treatments so you can make the best decision for your horses needs! Not every type of treatment fixes every type of issue.

🌻 New Pricing🌻
Horses:
$100 full body Infrared
$140 full body Infrared with Massage
$55 Partials (1-2 areas. Michigan or Larger groups of horses required)
$75 Massage only
Dogs:
$40 full body Infrared
Humans:
$55 Infrared

06/20/2022

My page is back! In the process of updating everything so ignore all old pricing and trip dates.

02/17/2022

If you have not paid for your invoices or have not sent me your email to be able to send you an invoice, I don’t currently have you on the trip this weekend. I need to get the schedule done so I can send it out.

02/15/2022

Doing a trip this weekend. Need 4 more horses.

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Mount Morris, MI

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