ESP Canine and Equine Massage Therapy

ESP Canine and Equine Massage Therapy Clinical Canine Massage Therapy and Equine Massage Therapy located in South Wales.

24/06/2025
šŸ• Certified Canine Conditioning Coach šŸ•After studying for a year, I can now say I am a Certified Coach with the Canine C...
25/05/2025

šŸ• Certified Canine Conditioning Coach šŸ•

After studying for a year, I can now say I am a Certified Coach with the Canine Conditioning Academy. Meaning I can create tailored exercise plans to help your dog become as fit and strong as possible!

Big thank you to my case studies traceypriday and Helen O'Sullivan for working with me last year, amazing to see great results in Dobby, Murphy and Taco!

As you can see in the photos, in just 8 weeks, Taco has increased his muscle strength massively, improving his overall posture and becoming stronger in his core and hind. I can say this has also hugely improved his agility performance!

I will be looking to offer this service to my canine clients, keep an eye out for updates šŸ‘€ very exciting times! 🐶

Starting treatment early for canine osteoarthritis helps slow joint damage, reduce pain, and keeps your dog moving comfo...
09/05/2025

Starting treatment early for canine osteoarthritis helps slow joint damage, reduce pain, and keeps your dog moving comfortably for longer! Prevention is always better than cure 🫶

MYTH: "If my dog’s arthritis isn’t severe, they don’t need treatment."

FACT: Even mild arthritis can cause significant pain and discomfort for your dog 🐶 The effects of arthritis are often gradual, but left untreated, it can worsen over time, making it harder to manage.

✨ Why early treatment matters: Managing arthritis early can slow the progression of joint damage, helping to preserve your dog’s mobility and comfort. The goal is to minimise pain and improve their quality of life..

šŸ’” By addressing arthritis sooner rather than later, you can reduce the impact of long-term joint damage and keep your dog feeling their best for years to come.

If you notice any signs of stiffness, limping, or reluctance to move, it’s time to talk to your vet. Early intervention is key! šŸ’™

If you're interested in tailored advice for your dog, our Teleguidance service is for you!
https://caninearthritisteleguidance.co.uk

A few of my sponsored partnerships are off to represent Wales next week in Holland at the World Agility Open Championshi...
08/05/2025

A few of my sponsored partnerships are off to represent Wales next week in Holland at the World Agility Open Championships!

Best of luck to Aimee Kerton with Moose and Kefi, Chris Kerton with Duck and Cop, and Hannah Sansome with Chase 🄳 all the dogs have been treated this week in preparation and all feel amazing! So grateful to be part of your journeys here 🄰

Best of luck to all of my other clients and friends heading off next week, do us proud šŸ„³šŸ“ó §ó ¢ó ·ó ¬ó ³ó æ

It’s so important to know what to do if your dog suffers heatstroke!Pour on cold water or immerse in cold water to cool ...
30/04/2025

It’s so important to know what to do if your dog suffers heatstroke!

Pour on cold water or immerse in cold water to cool them down as fast as possible, then your dog should be taken to the vet to check if further treatment is necessary. This information could save your dogs life so please give it a read šŸ™

Just a reminder to my clients than in about a month or so I will be stopping work for a few months whilst on maternity l...
28/04/2025

Just a reminder to my clients than in about a month or so I will be stopping work for a few months whilst on maternity leave šŸ‘¶

To avoid disappointment please book in as May is looking very busy!

31/03/2025

There is a question I get asked constantly:

ā€œBart, should I play fetch with my dog every day? He LOVES it!ā€

And my answer is always the same:
No. Especially not with working breeds like the Malinois, German Shepherd, Dutch Shepherd, or any other high-prey-drive dog, like hunting dogs, Agility dogs, etc.

This answer is often met with surprise, sometimes with resistance. I get it—your dog brings you the ball, eyes bright, body full of energy, practically begging you to throw it. It feels like bonding. It feels like exercise. It feels like the right thing to do.

But from a scientific, behavioral, and neurobiological perspective—it’s not. In fact, it may be one of the most harmful daily habits for your dog’s mental health and nervous system regulation that no one is warning you about.

Let me break it down for you in detail. This will be long, but if you have a working dog, you need to understand this.

Working dogs like the Malinois and German Shepherd were selected over generations for their intensity, persistence, and drive to engage in behaviors tied to the prey sequence: orient, stalk, chase, grab, bite, kill. In their role as police, protection, herding, or military dogs, these genetically encoded motor patterns are partially utilized—but directed toward human-defined tasks.

Fetch is an artificial mimicry of this prey sequence.
• Ball = prey
• Throwing = movement stimulus
• Chase = reinforcement
• Grab and return = closure and Reward - Reinforecment again.

Every time you throw that ball, you’re not just giving your dog ā€œexercise.ā€ You are triggering an evolutionary motor pattern that was designed to result in the death of prey. But here’s the twist:

The "kill bite" never comes.
There’s no closure. No end. No satisfaction, Except when he start chewing on the ball by himself, which lead to even more problems. So the dog is neurologically left in a state of arousal.

When your dog sees that ball, his brain lights up with dopamine. Anticipation, motivation, drive. When you throw it, adrenaline kicks in. It becomes a cocktail of high arousal and primal intensity.

Dopamine is not the reward chemical—it’s the pursuit chemical. It creates the urge to chase, to repeat the behavior. Adrenaline and cortisol, stress hormones, spike during the chase. Even though the dog ā€œgets the ball,ā€ the biological closure never really happens—because the pattern is reset, again and again, with each throw.

Now imagine doing this every single day.
The dog’s brain begins to wire itself for a constant state of high alert, constantly expecting arousal, movement, and stimulation. This is how we create chronic stress.

The autonomic nervous system has two main branches:

• Sympathetic Nervous System – ā€œFight, flight, chaseā€

• Parasympathetic Nervous System – ā€œRest, digest, recoverā€

Fetch, as a prey-driven game, stimulates the sympathetic system. The problem? Most owners never help the dog come down from that state.
There’s no decompression, no parasympathetic activation, no transition into rest.

Chronic sympathetic dominance leads to:
• Panting, pacing, inability to settle
• Destructive behaviors
• Hypervigilance
• Reactivity to movement
• Obsession with balls, toys, other dogs
• Poor sleep cycles
• Digestive issues
• A weakened immune system over time
• Behavioral burnout

In essence, we’re creating a dog who is neurologically trapped in the primal mind—always hunting, never resting.

Expectation Is a Form of Pressure!!!!!!

When fetch becomes a daily ritual, your dog begins to expect it.This is no longer ā€œfun.ā€ It’s a conditioned need. And when that need is not met?

Stress. Frustration. Obsession.

A dog who expects to chase every day but doesn’t get it may begin redirecting that drive elsewhere—chasing shadows, lights, children, other dogs, cars.
This is how pathological behavior patterns form.

Many people use fetch as a shortcut for physical exercise.

But movement is not the same as regulation.
Throwing a ball 100 times does not tire out a working dog—it wires him tighter.

What these dogs need is:
• Cognitive engagement
• Problem solving
• Relationship-based training
• Impulse control and on/off switches
• Scentwork or tracking to satisfy the nose-brain connection
• Regulated physical outlets like structured walks, swimming, tug with rules, or balanced sport work
• Recovery time in a calm environment

But What About Drive Fulfillment? Don’t They Need an Outlet?

Yes, and here’s the nuance:

Drive should be fulfilled strategically, not passively or impulsively. This is where real training philosophy comes in.

Instead of free-for-all ball throwing, I recommend:
• Tug with rules of out, impulse control, and handler engagement

• Controlled prey play with a flirt pole, used sparingly

• Engagement-based drive work with clear start and stop signals

• Training sessions that integrate drive, control, and reward

• Activities like search games, mantrailing, or protection sport with balance

• Working on ā€œdown in driveā€ — the ability to switch from arousal to rest

This builds a thinking dog, not a reactive one. The Bottom Line: Just Because He Loves It Doesn’t Mean It’s Good for Him

Your Malinois, German Shepherd, Dutchie, or other working dog may love the ball. He may bring it to you with joy. But the question is not what he likes—it’s what he needs.

A child may love candy every day, but a good parent knows better. As a trainer, handler, and caretaker, it’s your responsibility to think long term.
You’re not raising a dog for this moment. You’re developing a life companion, a regulated athlete, a resilient thinker.

So no—I don’t recommend playing ball every day.
Because every throw is a reinforcement of the primal mind.

And the primal mind, unchecked, cannot be reasoned with. It cannot self-regulate. It becomes a slave to its own instincts.

Train your dog to engage with you, not just the object. Teach arousal with control, play with purpose, and rest with confidence.

Your dog deserves better than obsession.He deserves balance. He deserves you—not just the ball.


Bart De Gols

As many of you know (I’ve tried my best to tell everyone!) I am expecting a baby girl on the 13th of June šŸ’•šŸ„°We’re super ...
22/03/2025

As many of you know (I’ve tried my best to tell everyone!) I am expecting a baby girl on the 13th of June šŸ’•šŸ„°

We’re super excited, but obviously this will mean I’ll be having some time off work to recover.

I’m hoping to work up until my due date, assuming everything goes to plan! However, I will need to limit the amount of miles I drive close to the due date, meaning clients will have to drive to my treatment room rather than me working mobile.

Please, if you’d like your dog treated before I go on ā€˜maternity leave’ let me know so I can book your appointment in advance. It’s likely I’ll be pretty busy in the run up to the competition season so get your appointments booked asap to avoid disappointment šŸ¤ž

Thank you all for the support and understanding, I truly have the best job in the world 🫶

Massive good luck to my sponsored partnerships this week in crufts!Chris Kerton with Funky Duck and Copernicus Aimee Ker...
05/03/2025

Massive good luck to my sponsored partnerships this week in crufts!
Chris Kerton with Funky Duck and Copernicus
Aimee Kerton with Maroochy

The dogs look amazing and it’s been a pleasure helping them feel their best in preparation for Crufts 🐾

Big good luck to Hannah Sansome with Ember too 🄳

Go and smash it šŸ’Ŗ

How could canine massage make your working dog faster? Clinical canine massage has 2 main goals: 1) Decrease risk of inj...
02/03/2025

How could canine massage make your working dog faster?

Clinical canine massage has 2 main goals:
1) Decrease risk of injury
2) Improve performance

How can it improve performance?

Regular clinical canine massage treatments will:

- Treat trigger points (knots), Grade 1 strains and tightness in your dogs muscles, which could be causing discomfort or limiting their movement

- Improve joint range of motion, leading to greater flexibility and larger stride length, allowing your dog to cover the ground faster

- Reduce stiffness and delayed onset muscle soreness, allowing your dog to recover quicker and more efficiently between classes

- Improve their overall wellbeing. A happier, healthier dog is more likely to run faster and do its job better šŸ™‚

Studies have proven that clinical canine massage can benefit your dog within 1-3 treatments. Contact me to see how I can help your dog!

šŸ“§ esp.animalmassage@gmail.com
šŸ“ž 07935853507
🌐 https://www.esp-animal-massage.co.uk

24/02/2025
ā„ļø How to keep our dogs injury free in these cold months ā„ļøIf your dog is not warmed up properly, and subjected to inten...
06/02/2025

ā„ļø How to keep our dogs injury free in these cold months ā„ļø

If your dog is not warmed up properly, and subjected to intense exercise (or even what you’d call normal exercise for your dog), your dog is more at risk of sustaining an injury! Especially when cold temperatures, ice and wet ground comes into play.

Here a few easy changes you can make this winter to help prevent injuries:

- Warming up your dog! So easy yet not many think to do it.
- For the first 5-10 minutes of your walk, keep the dogs on a lead. Especially if they bolt as soon as you let them off.
- Take an extra few minutes to warm your dog up for intense exercise- agility, cani X etc. (see previous posts for easy warm up routine)

- Opt to walk on grass or sand if pavements are icy. Ice is just as dangerous for dogs as it is for humans!

- Trim the hair between your dogs pads, allowing for traction and grip.

- Consider using dog coats or fleeces when necessary.

- Brain games can be just as tiring/mentally stimulating as a long walk, so don’t feel bad if you can’t get them out!

- Keep an eye on your dogs for any unusual stiffness or lameness after training or walks.

- Maintain your dogs massage, hydro, physio etc routine, keeping them strong and healthy all year round!

For more information or to book your dog in for a clinical canine massage, please contact me 🐾

šŸ“§ esp.animalmassage@gmail.com
šŸ“ž 07935853507
🌐 https://www.esp-animal-massage.co.uk

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