Three Cross Equine Massage Therapy

Three Cross Equine Massage Therapy Prevention is the best medicine. Maintenance is the key!

06/04/2026

Westbound 70 at the Centerville exit go some other way. It is dead locked as far as you can see!

06/01/2026
July is my 10 year anniversary!  To kick off finishing a decade of caring for horses, I will be certified to use red lig...
05/31/2026

July is my 10 year anniversary! To kick off finishing a decade of caring for horses, I will be certified to use red light/heat massage tool. (Cannot use the typical name… will get fb banned)
I will be offering pick 2 services as well as single service items. Pm for a list of what will be offered.

For my 4h Horse and Pony members… here are some positive body language indicators your horse will do when they are relax...
05/31/2026

For my 4h Horse and Pony members… here are some positive body language indicators your horse will do when they are relaxed and in a good mind set.
Licking/chewing
Yawning
Soft eye
Closed eye or a sleepy look
Big exhales or sighs
Swaying/ stretching

When I come to see your horse I will ask if you have seen any of these things.
Start watching!

This is 💯!!!!!
05/30/2026

This is 💯!!!!!

The 7 best vets are:
(+ one bonus)

1. Turnout & Sunshine
2. Rest & Recovery
3. Movement & Exercise
4. Balanced Nutrition
5. Hydration
6. Peace & Safety
7. Connection & Companionship

Massage therapy does far more than simply help muscles relax.

Research continues to show that massage influences circulation, lymphatic movement, nervous system regulation, immune function, tissue healing, and cellular exchange throughout the body. By improving blood flow and supporting fluid movement through the tissues, massage may help deliver oxygen and nutrients more efficiently while also assisting with the removal of metabolic waste products.

Massage therapy may also help regulate excessive stress responses within the nervous system. Horses living in chronic tension or protective patterns often hold unnecessary muscular and fascial guarding that can affect comfort, posture, movement quality, and overall function. Encouraging parasympathetic (“rest and regulate”) activity may support recovery, relaxation, digestion, immune health, and tissue repair.

Benefits of massage therapy include:
• improved circulation and tissue perfusion
• support for lymphatic drainage and fluid movement
• improved mobility and movement quality
• reduced protective muscular tension
• support for recovery after work or injury
• improved comfort and body awareness
• support for nervous system regulation and relaxation

Horses are complex, interconnected systems. Movement, circulation, the nervous system, immune function, and tissue health constantly influence one another — and massage therapy may help support that balance.

https://koperequine.com/recognizing-the-importance-of-fascial-release/

BC Saddle Horse
05/30/2026

BC Saddle Horse

Please read this! This is more a personal reaction from experience with my own horse. This is a save to read again and a...
05/27/2026

Please read this! This is more a personal reaction from experience with my own horse. This is a save to read again and again!!!!
Way to go Koper Equine!

Are Retained Primitive Reflexes Relevant in Horses? A Closer Look

In human development, primitive reflexes are well described.

They are automatic, brainstem-driven movement patterns present at birth—designed to support early survival and provide a foundation for coordinated movement.

Over time, these patterns are not simply turned off.

They are shaped and refined through experience, as higher levels of the nervous system contribute to more organized, adaptable control.

When that process is limited or incomplete, the effects can be far-reaching—shaping posture, coordination, sensory processing, and behavior.

Which raises a natural question:

Do horses experience something similar?

The term doesn’t transfer cleanly—but the underlying idea is worth exploring.

What Horses Share—and What They Don’t

Horses, like all mammals, are born with early reflex-driven movement patterns.

But unlike humans, they are precocial—meaning they are neurologically and physically far more developed at birth.

They:

* Stand within hours
* Move almost immediately
* Begin organizing coordinated movement from the start

This means their early movement patterns are:

* Quickly incorporated into function
* Rapidly refined through use
* Less visible as isolated reflexes

Because of this, horses do not have a recognized model of “retained primitive reflexes” as described in human developmental frameworks.

There is no standardized diagnostic approach that applies that concept directly to horses.

The Idea Worth Exploring

Even though the terminology doesn’t carry over, the underlying principle still matters:

Movement is shaped through experience.

Sensory input, variability, and interaction with the environment all influence how the nervous system organizes control.

If that process is limited, inconsistent, or influenced by discomfort, the system may rely more heavily on protective or less adaptable movement strategies.

Not in a pathological sense—but in a functional one.

What This Can Look Like in Horses

In horses, you don’t see labeled “retained reflexes.”

But you do see patterns that suggest a system relying more on protection and predictability than adaptability.

These may include:

Persistent startle or hypervigilance

* Strong reactions to minor stimuli
* Difficulty settling or habituating

Inconsistent proprioception

* Subtle stumbling or uneven limb placement
* Difficulty organizing coordinated movement

Bracing and co-contraction

* Opposing muscle groups firing together
* A body that feels “tight” but not truly stable

Head and neck fixation

* Limited ability to soften or move independently through the cervical spine

Sensory processing differences

* Overreaction to touch in some areas
* Reduced awareness in others

Difficulty with self-regulation

* Trouble returning to baseline after stimulation
* Patterns of “too much” or “not enough”

These are not isolated problems.

They are patterns of organization.

A More Useful Way to Frame It

Rather than asking:

“Is this a retained reflex?”

A more useful question is:

“How much of this horse’s movement is being driven by protective, reflex-mediated strategies rather than adaptable control?”

This keeps the focus where it belongs:

* On function
* On experience
* On what the system is working with

Why These Patterns Develop

This kind of organization rarely comes from a single cause.

More often, it reflects a combination of influences over time:

Limited movement variability

* Repetitive footing or environments
* Lack of terrain and movement diversity

Subtle, ongoing discomfort

* Hoof imbalance
* Mild asymmetries
* Low-grade physical strain

Nervous system sensitivity

* Some horses respond more strongly to input
* Protective responses become more dominant

Early handling and management

* Reduced opportunity for exploration
* Too much repetition, not enough variation

Growth without full recalibration

* Rapid physical change without corresponding coordination updates

These are not necessarily developmental failures.

They are adaptations.

Small influences, over time, shape how the system organizes.

Why It Often Looks Like “Just the Horse”

By the time these patterns are visible:

* They are consistent
* They are well-practiced
* The nervous system recognizes them as normal

So they are often labeled as:

* Personality
* Training issues
* Conformation
* Attitude

But from the inside, they reflect a system working within a narrower set of options.

Where Somatic Work Fits In

This is where approaches like massage, myofascial work, body wraps, kinesiology tape, and movement-based exercises become relevant.

These are forms of somatic work.

They don’t act by forcing the body into position.

They work by changing what the horse can feel.

Through touch, pressure, movement, and controlled variability, they:

* Improve sensory input
* Reduce protective tone
* Increase body awareness
* Expand available movement options

The nervous system uses this input to update its internal map.

And when that map becomes clearer, movement begins to reorganize.

Change Happens Through Experience

Change does not come from input alone.

It comes from pairing input with movement.

As the horse:

* Explores
* Adjusts
* Repeats with variation

The system begins to shift from:

* Protective, reflex-mediated strategies
to
* More adaptable, organized control

This is not about “fixing” a reflex.

It is about expanding what the system is able to do.

A Careful Conclusion

It is not accurate to say that horses have “retained primitive reflexes” in the way human developmental models describe.

But it is accurate to say this:

Some horses move and respond in ways that reflect a system that is more protective, less adaptable, and more reliant on reflex-mediated strategies.

Seen this way, the concept becomes useful—not as a diagnosis, but as a lens.

A way to understand:

* Why movement looks the way it does
* Why behavior and coordination are linked
* Why changing input can change output

Final Thought

When early movement patterns are shaped under limited or inconsistent conditions, the body may organize around protection instead of efficiency.

And when you change the input:

You’re not just changing movement.

You’re changing how the horse experiences its own body—and the world it moves through.

https://koperequine.com/stress-shielding-in-fascia-and-muscle/

I am excited to be at the Wayne County Horse and Pony show! A discount is offered when a 4-H member is present. I love e...
05/25/2026

I am excited to be at the Wayne County Horse and Pony show! A discount is offered when a 4-H member is present. I love engaging with young riders about their equine partners and the vital role they play in their performance and care. I do require someone to be available at the appointment.

Here at Preble County! Rain will end soon. Come on out! Appointments available by messaging or text! We are in Barn 7.
05/23/2026

Here at Preble County!
Rain will end soon. Come on out! Appointments available by messaging or text! We are in Barn 7.

05/21/2026

Services currently offered:
Therapeutic Massage and Thermal Imaging.

July will bring a 3rd service that I am sooooo excited about!!! 👏🏻🥳❤️

Address

Richmond, IN

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 8pm
Tuesday 9am - 8pm
Wednesday 9am - 8pm
Thursday 9am - 8pm
Friday 9am - 9pm
Saturday 9am - 8pm

Telephone

+17657602424

Website

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