Life and Liberty Equestrian Center

Life and Liberty Equestrian Center Beautiful horse boarding facility located in the rolling hills of West Liberty , West Virginia.

Offering full service boarding, lessons, pony rides and lease horses. Indoor and outdoor arena, prioritized turnout, customized feeding program, and more.

I am a horse. I have two jobs. To calm my humans when they are stressed and to stress them out when they are calm.During...
05/20/2026

I am a horse. I have two jobs. To calm my humans when they are stressed and to stress them out when they are calm.
During Mental Health Awareness Month, hug a horse

Happy graduation day Zoe!
05/09/2026

Happy graduation day Zoe!

So glad to know that we are providing good care to our horses so that they are happy, healthy, and don't need vices to c...
05/06/2026

So glad to know that we are providing good care to our horses so that they are happy, healthy, and don't need vices to cope with unnecessary stressors ❤️💙🐎

Wind sucking.

One of the most misunderstood behaviours in the horse world, and one that is still too often managed by restriction instead of understanding.

Let’s be clear: wind sucking is not a “naughty habit.”
It is a coping strategy.

When a horse windsucks, they are actively seeking relief, neurologically, physically, and emotionally.

What’s actually happening?

Wind sucking stimulates the release of endorphins. These are the horse’s natural “feel good” chemicals, helping to regulate stress and discomfort. Over time, this becomes a deeply ingrained self-soothing mechanism.

Remove the behaviour without addressing the cause… and you don’t fix the problem, you remove the horse’s ability to cope.

The emotional picture

Most wind suckers share a common thread:
chronic stress, frustration, or a lack of agency.

This might come from:

* Restricted turnout or movement
* High-concentrate, low-forage diets
* Social isolation
* Training pressure or confusion
* Physical discomfort or pain

But here’s the important part…
Even when you “fix” management, the behaviour often remains.

Why?

Because the nervous system has learned that this behaviour is safe. It’s predictable. It works.

These horses are often:

* Highly sensitive
* Internally busy
* Struggling to down-regulate

Wind sucking becomes their way of finding balance in a world that doesn’t always feel safe or understandable.

The physical impact on the body

This is where it gets really interesting, and often overlooked.

Wind sucking is not just a mouth behaviour. It’s a whole-body pattern.

Repeated engagement creates consistent muscular recruitment, particularly in:

* The underside of the neck (sternocephalicus, brachiocephalicus)
* The throatlatch and hyoid apparatus
* The diaphragm and ribcage
* The deep ventral neck stabilisers

Over time, this can lead to:

* Hypertrophy (overdevelopment) of the ventral neck muscles
* A fixed, braced underline
* Reduced lift through the thoracic sling
* Limited ribcage expansion and breath capacity
* Increased tension through the poll and TMJ

Posturally, many wind suckers present with:

* A lowered base of neck
* Hollowing through the thoracic region
* Reduced ability to lift through the wither
* Compensatory tension patterns through the back and abdomen

This is not because wind sucking is “damaging” in isolation, but because repetition builds a default neuromuscular pattern.

Why stopping it can do more harm than good

Collars, straps, crib boxes…

They suppress the behaviour, but they do nothing for:

* The underlying stress
* The neurological need
* The physical tension patterns

In many cases, removing the coping mechanism can actually:

* Increase stress hormones
* Create alternative stereotypies
* Heighten reactivity or shutdown
* Exacerbate internal tension

You’re not solving the issue, you’re silencing the symptom.

So what should we be doing instead?

We need to zoom out.

Look at the whole horse:

* Management
* Diet
* Movement
* Emotional state
* Physical comfort

And then go deeper:

* Where is the horse holding tension?
* What patterns has the body adopted?
* Can the nervous system actually down-regulate without the behaviour?

This is where therapy, correct training, and thoughtful management come in.

Not to “stop” the wind sucking, but to reduce the need for it.

Because at the heart of it…

Wind sucking isn’t the problem.
It’s the horse’s solution.

And if we’re serious about welfare, performance, and longevity, we need to start listening to what that solution is trying to tell us!!

Rainy morning helpers
05/06/2026

Rainy morning helpers

Monday morning nappies 😴🐎❤️💙 Baby Bubbles video in comments 🍼 💭
04/27/2026

Monday morning nappies 😴🐎❤️💙 Baby Bubbles video in comments 🍼 💭

Happy Birthday Star! Star is our OG boarder and today he is 28 years young!
04/15/2026

Happy Birthday Star! Star is our OG boarder and today he is 28 years young!

Blessed are You, Lord our G‑d, King of the universe, who remembers the covenant, and is faithful to His covenant, and ke...
04/15/2026

Blessed are You, Lord our G‑d, King of the universe, who remembers the covenant, and is faithful to His covenant, and keeps His promise.

Blessing on seeing a rainbow

When you have the heart of a runner, but the legs, not so much.
03/29/2026

When you have the heart of a runner, but the legs, not so much.

Sunday evening visitors ♥️💙🐄
03/23/2026

Sunday evening visitors ♥️💙🐄

What says, " we survived winter" better than a fresh jump course and pastures turning green
03/09/2026

What says, " we survived winter" better than a fresh jump course and pastures turning green

Address

383 Private Main Lane
Wheeling, WV
26003

Telephone

+14104286807

Website

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