horse showing  flexible and balance movement
flexibility and balance

How to not keep your horse flexible and balance ?

First, you can invest in expensive equipment, bites, spurs, or complicated gear "helping" your horse to stand better. Saying helping your horse is often understood by forcing your horse to hold it in a certain position for better performance.

The horse is a very sensitive animal which has a much more developed nervous system than ours. His skin will tremble to remove a fly from his body. We don't.

Arriving at 10 years of age, your horse starts to show signs of aging, even if you bombard it with minerals and vitamins or injection and hocks. Egg bar shoes to slow down navicular syndrome and so on. There is another the way to keep your horse flexible and balance (see horse balance)

Keep your horse performant

By placing the free horse in an inside arena. Joachim Creten, Cert. Adv. Rolfer (TM) observes his movements, rather what he does not want to do and why he avoids doing it. he shakes his head, bucks and gallops to release certain tensions of the body. Is the horse aggressive?. The rider complains that the horse presses very hard on the bite ... all these details will be collated to start his first rolfing session. Placing his hands on the horse's body with a light touch, Joachim observes the horse's reactions and begins to connect with the animal.The conversation begins, the horse reacts, he likes contact, he shows it. He does not like, he lets it be known by the ears lying down, or the horse avoids being touched. Joachim's magic touch helps the horse to relax and get rid of his muscular tension, he yawns, closes his eyes, his head is lowered and all this without constraint. The horse free to move during the whole session. Joachim can be reached to 805-680-5943 for all your horse request.

https://www.chronofhorse.com/forum/forum/discussion-forums/horse-care/129831-massage-vs-rolfing-is-there-much-difference

Improve your body posture

  • Better Body Posture
  • Better Flexibility
  • Better Balanced
  • Chronic Pain Free

Another way to keep your horse flexible and balance

September 10th, 2019 by Joachim Creten

horse showing  flexible and balance movement
flexibility and balance

How to not keep your horse flexible and balance ?

First, you can invest in expensive equipment, bites, spurs, or complicated gear “helping” your horse to stand better. Saying helping your horse is often understood by forcing your horse to hold it in a certain position for better performance.

The horse is a very sensitive animal which has a much more developed nervous system than ours. His skin will tremble to remove a fly from his body. We don’t.

Arriving at 10 years of age, your horse starts to show signs of aging, even if you bombard it with minerals and vitamins or injection and hocks. Egg bar shoes to slow down navicular syndrome and so on. There is another the way to keep your horse flexible and balance (see horse balance)

Keep your horse performant

By placing the free horse in an inside arena. Joachim Creten, Cert. Adv. Rolfer (TM) observes his movements, rather what he does not want to do and why he avoids doing it. he shakes his head, bucks and gallops to release certain tensions of the body. Is the horse aggressive?. The rider complains that the horse presses very hard on the bite … all these details will be collated to start his first rolfing session. Placing his hands on the horse’s body with a light touch, Joachim observes the horse’s reactions and begins to connect with the animal.The conversation begins, the horse reacts, he likes contact, he shows it. He does not like, he lets it be known by the ears lying down, or the horse avoids being touched. Joachim’s magic touch helps the horse to relax and get rid of his muscular tension, he yawns, closes his eyes, his head is lowered and all this without constraint. The horse free to move during the whole session. Joachim can be reached to 805-680-5943 for all your horse request.

https://www.chronofhorse.com/forum/forum/discussion-forums/horse-care/129831-massage-vs-rolfing-is-there-much-difference