Bowen for Every Body

Bowen for Every Body Treatment of painful conditions such as arthritis, migraines, sports injuries, back problems, sciatica. EMRT oftens resolves niggling undiagnosable lameness's .

Bowen Therapy is a whole body system of muscle and connective tissue therapy, that is suitable for all people and animals. Bowen/ EMRT/CCMRT are highly effective light touch therapies which harness the body's own healing ability and as such may help with almost any condition including musculoskeletal problems such as back pain, joint pain and restrictions, migraine and headaches, chronic fatigue,

irritable bowel syndrome, hormonal imbalance, bed wetting in children, breathing restrictions and general stress. I can work with you and your horse to improve performance and all round wellbeing. Useful for stiff, 'cold backed', or irritable horses as well as those with sport injuries. I also use photobiomodulation therapy which is proven to stimulate the healing ability of the body's cells and speed healing. Particularly useful for all kinds of injury including pulled ligaments and tendons and fractures. Also used for lymphangitis, muscle soreness, skin conditions, wound healing and general pain including arthritis and neuralgia. In horses it is useful for all of the above plus mud fever, thrush, bowed tendons, capped hocks, sarcoids,hoof abccess's and overeach wounds. I also use kinesiology taping where needed and offer advice on rehabilitation of horses. Also if you wish to help yourself and animals with pain or discomfort, why not ask about my Reiki workshops where you will learn to channel healing energy to help yourself and others?

21/11/2024

POV: You're 87 and ride as confidently as a 37 year old!

Linda Tellington-Jones is such an inspiration!

Last week she hopped on this lovely Dutch Warmblood mare, at her friends, Libby and Jules Anderson's, Teamwork Dressage facility near her home in Jupiter Farms, Florida.

Linda felt that it was a joy and privilege to ride this wonderful 17 year old mare named Lola, who was trained to the Intermediate Level. Riding more regularly has been something Linda has wanted to do since being back at home. Thanks to her friend, Laurietta Oakleaf, a para dressage rider, this has become a reality!

A common theme Linda noticed while working with sport horses in Europe this fall, was how many lacked the opportunity to really go forward without heavy contact. So she wanted to allow this mare to go up and open with forward flow, and feel the fun in the ride.

Here's aspiring for the rest of us to still be riding with this much joy just a few years shy of 90!

21/11/2024
19/11/2024

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19/11/2024

We've all seen the viral "funny" animal videos that, on closer inspection, reveal animals in varying degrees of distress. But it can sometimes be difficult for people to understand and/or recognise these expressions of distress. So we have put together a chart to help you identify when a video might be funny and when it is not. We have also included some links below that should help you learn some common signs of fear and stress in some key species. If you come across a video that leaves you still unsure then how about posting it below and we can offer some thoughts about the body language...."

Horse:
http://www.ebta.co.uk/lof.html

Dog:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=7&v=yaxCYgqh2ao
https://youtu.be/bstvG_SUzMo

Cat:
https://www.cats.org.uk/help-and-advice/cat-body-language

Rabbit:
https://rabbitwelfare.co.uk/rabbits-do-not-need-to-be-full…/

Exotic Animals (not so much body language as useful reminders)
http://www.onegreenplanet.org/animalsandnature/viral-videos-and-pictures-of-exotic-animals-harm/

If you have equivalent links for other species then please post below and we can add to the list.

01/10/2024
13/09/2024

The ā€œproblem horseā€ 🐓

There is such a recurring theme in the clients I’m seeing that I really feel the need to talk about this more. Time and time again I am seeing horses displaying significant signs of pain, who have been to the vet to have some diagnostics and been told there is nothing wrong, the horse definitely isn’t in pain and they need to send the horse to a trainer. It is incredibly frustrating and upsetting as an owner when you really feel something isn’t right but are being told by professionals that the issue is you and you’re overthinking it or being soft.

The idea that a problem is purely behavioural is a fallacy in and of itself. Behaviour is a manifestation of how the horse is experiencing life, whether that be pain/discomfort in the body, the environment, the people, the training, the diet, trauma, past experiences etc. It is unfortunately not packed into two neat little boxes of either pain or behaviour and, even if it was, the idea that we could easily rule out pain with the limited diagnostics available is unrealistic.

When we have a horse that is displaying concerning behaviour, beyond the usual joint, back x-rays and scoping for ulcers, we need to consider hind gut issues, liver issues, hormonal issues, muscle myopathies, congenital defects, old injuries, compensatory patterns, the list goes on. Often we do find pathology, medicate it and declare the horse pain-free and ready to crack on without considering the other factors at play.

I cannot emphasise enough the role of environmental factors. Sometimes we are chasing pathology, buying expensive supplements, paying every professional under the sun to fit our horse’s tack, train them, give them bodywork and hoof care while entirely missing the fact the horse’s basic needs are not being met. If your horse is stressed in his living environment you are setting yourselves up to fail. Horses that are living in a chronic state of stress and have very little ability to down-regulate their nervous system are unable to thrive and develop healthy bodies.

So many horses have poor posture which is causing tension and soreness in their bodies, it is so normalised that it seems to be rarely recognised as an issue as horses can still perform at high levels even when their bodies are compromised, we’re used to seeing horses with poor muscle development. Winning trophies does not necessarily mean the horse is comfortable, it means the horse is compliant. A lot of training views compliance as the main measure of success without really seeing how the horse is feeling both emotionally and physically, with the training itself often contributing to more tension, stress and strain on the body.

All of these things together create the ā€œproblem horseā€.

I feel really strongly that we need to start looking at things differently if we want to train ethically and also increase longevity for our horses. What if instead of just medicating the horse then sending the horse to the trainer to be ā€œfixedā€, we took a step back and really looked at the whole horse and maybe why this happened in the first place.

I genuinely think we’d have much more long term success if we took the pressure off, made sure their living environment was the best we could get it, learned to help our horses down-regulate their nervous system and train at the horse’s pace in an environment they’re comfortable in. In doing so we can really help their bodies and support them as best we can with their issues.

Watching horses find relaxation in their bodies, find peace around people and start to find joy in movement through slow, low-pressure training doesn’t make very exciting videos but it does transform horse’s (and people’s) lives.

If you take anything away from this just know that you absolutely CAN train pain, people are doing it every day and getting 100k views on their reels, so don’t disregard your horse’s voice just because he is somewhat compliant or someone told you to. Behaviour is communication, not something to be fixed. There are people out here who will help you and your horse and not dismiss your concerns. 🐓

www.lshorsemanship.co.uk

12/09/2024
Jack opened the gate and took himself off to see the neighbours this afternoon! He's getting too smart with gates!! Mayb...
31/08/2024

Jack opened the gate and took himself off to see the neighbours this afternoon! He's getting too smart with gates!! Maybe he's missing his new 'Mum' Joanna Whyte , as she's been on holiday. 🤣

I would add that there are no 'difficult' horses, only learning opportunities!
04/08/2024

I would add that there are no 'difficult' horses, only learning opportunities!

02/08/2024

Address

Sandiacre
Nottingham
NG105

Opening Hours

Monday 11am - 6pm
6pm - 7pm
Tuesday 11am - 6pm
6pm - 7pm
Wednesday 11am - 6pm
6pm - 7pm
Thursday 11am - 6pm
6pm - 7pm
Friday 11am - 6pm
6pm - 7pm
Saturday 11am - 6pm

Telephone

07866 967282

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