Equine Body Balance - Musculoskeletal Therapist & Saddle Fitting

Equine Body Balance - Musculoskeletal Therapist &  Saddle Fitting Equine Bodywork. SCENAR Therapy. Saddle Fitting. Equine massage therapy is a natural and long used approach to horse care & management.

Equine Body Balance is operated by bodyworker/musculoskeletal therapist Melissa Longhurst, offering a fully mobile service for equine athletes located in the Mackay & Whitsunday's, Queensland. Massage properly applied increase horses range of motion, increase their mobility and improve performance. I first studied Equine Massage in 1997, gaining a certificate with
Equine Massage International and currently completing a number of externship studies with Equinology Inc. Cert -Equine Anatomy
Cert - Independent Saddle Fitter
Equine Body Worker
Equine Exercise Physiology
Myofascial Release
Equine Biomechanics
Red Light Therapy
Independent Saddle Fitter/Assessor

From paddock companion to elite athlete, assisting recovery or enhancing
performance - I look forward to meeting you and your equine friend soon!

11/11/2024
01/05/2023
This coming weekend I am in Townsville to host a course in conjunction with  Jenna from APH Equine Services.If you are i...
01/05/2023

This coming weekend I am in Townsville to host a course in conjunction with Jenna from APH Equine Services.

If you are interested in
*improving your seat
*knowledge of horse and rider biomechanics
* how your tack influences your seat and riding
* plus loads more then this weekend course is for you.

One day - $140/PER RIDER
Both days $280/RIDER
6th and 7th MAY 2023

APH EQUINE SERVICES and DYNAMIC SADDLE FITTING are excited to present two days of tailored learning by enabling riders to understand how their seat, application of aids and equipment affects the horses movement, comfort and performance
'Biomechanics is the study of the structure, function and motion of the mechanical aspects of movement and posture'.

As a rider that has worked with a huge variety of disciplines on horses from all over the world, Jenna from APH EQUINE SERVICES brings coaching the importance of an independent seat, clarity of rider aids and exercises to achieve correct posture no matter what situation your in. Jenna is a qualified LVL1G Equestrian Australia Coach, PCAQ Qualified Instructor and spends her days starting horses under saddle, Ottb thoroughbred retraining and providing rehabilitation work for performance and pleasure horses.

Melissa from DYNAMIC SADDLE FITTING has represented Australia in Endurance races, is an qualified and Australian & I international trained saddle fitter, studied Equine Podiotherapy, and is an Equine Bodyworker. (+ Laser, kinesiotaping, MFR, SCENAR)

This is going to fun folks!

This clinic is located at APH Equine Services Bluewater Qld, cost is $280pp
Camping is available for both you and your horse and is fully catered.
Don't miss out on this exciting opportunity to learn!

Townsville, Ayr and Bowen looking forward to seeing you for saddle fitting in just 2 short weeks.  Please contact me asa...
21/08/2022

Townsville, Ayr and Bowen looking forward to seeing you for saddle fitting in just 2 short weeks. Please contact me asap if you would like to make a booking for a fitting from one of our new saddles, or to refit your current saddle.
Cheers Melissa

The Horse that died for meThey gave me a fiery horse to groom and I rode him on paradeWhile he plunged and swung for kic...
23/04/2022

The Horse that died for me

They gave me a fiery horse to groom and I rode him on parade
While he plunged and swung for kicking room, like a young and haughty jade.
I rode him hard till I curbed his will, hot-foot in the sham attack
Till he ceased to jib and took the drill like a first class trooper's hack.
He tasted hell on the Indian sea; pent up in the gloom below,
He dreamed of the days when he was free, and his weary heart beat slow.
But he lived to leave the reeking ship and raised his drooping head
With new-born zest when he felt the grip of earth beneath his tread
I left him and sailed away to fight in the trenches deep -
A stretch that passed like an awful hour of fearsome nightmare sleep
I lived to search for my mount once more on the crowded piquet line:
I rode him out as I did before, when I'd claimed the horse as mine.
I loved him as only one who knows the way of a horse may love;
Who rides athirst when the hell-wind blows and the sun stands still above.
Who ride for cover behind the rise that lifts like a wall of woe
And smites the vision of burning eyes when Moslem lead rips low.
Far out on the hock-deep sands that roll in waves to the flaming sky,
He carried me far on the night patrol where the Turkish outposts lie.
He took me back to the camp at noon when the skirmish died amain,
And under a white and spectral moon he bore me afield again.
Our squadron surged to the left and right when the fire of the day was dead;
The foemen crept in the sombre night with a wary noiseless tread.
We moved away on the flanking march, like a brown line rudely drawn.
That reached the foot of the grey skies arch in the waking light of dawn.
The line closed in when the red sun shot from the purple-tinted east
To glare with scorn on the wretched lot of man and his jaded beast.
I urged my horse with a purpose grim for a ridge where cover lay,
And my heart beat high for the heart of him when he saved my life that day.
His knees gave way and I slipped from him; he dropped in a sprawling heap
On the wind-gapped edge of the skyline's rim where the high-blown sand was deep.
And fear came down with a gusty rain of lead on his final bed . . .
Before I turned for cover again, I knew that his life had fled.
My heart is warm for a heart that died in the desert flank attack,
And the white sand surges down to the hide and bones of a faithful trooper's hack.
Edwin Gerard (Gerardy)

Rocky & Surrounds, I will be in your area performing saddle fits over the weekend of the 4/5th December. Please contact ...
26/11/2021

Rocky & Surrounds, I will be in your area performing saddle fits over the weekend of the 4/5th December.

Please contact me if you would like help with assessing or re-fitting your current saddle, or help with a new saddle.
I stock several brands of saddle that I will have with me along with suitable & compatible girths, pads, stirrups etc.

Townsville - I will be available this coming weekend to help you with your saddle fitting.Contact me to arrange an apt n...
21/11/2021

Townsville - I will be available this coming weekend to help you with your saddle fitting.
Contact me to arrange an apt now for -
* refit of your current saddle
* fitting & test ride of a new saddle
* minor repairs and adjustments on site

The whole.horse needs to be treated, not just the obvious.
19/11/2021

The whole.horse needs to be treated, not just the obvious.

It's never just “tight hamstrings”

Often when we think of a muscle, we imagine a specifically shaped part of the body, in a certain anatomical location, which functions to contribute towards the movement of the organism as a whole.

In the anatomy books, muscles are classified with relation to the relationship between their attachments to the body; their origin and insertion. For example, the hamstrings are classified as a retractor of the hindlimb; contraction pulls the insertion of the hamstrings on the distal femur and tibia, towards the origin in the pelvis, which in turn draws the limb backwards in the retraction phase of the stride.

However, the hamstrings are not the only muscle which act to retract the hindlimb; the middle gluteal also plays an integral role. When we consider the biomechanics of the body as a whole, we see that muscles often act as part of groups.

Moreover, muscles can belong to more than one group. The semitendinosus, which is part of the hamstring group (along with the semimembranosus and biceps femoris) and the hindlimb retractor muscle group, also acts as part of the hindlimb adductor group which functions to bring the leg towards the midline (inwards).

To further complicate things, the middle gluteal muscle, which is also part of the hindlimb retractor group, acts as a hindlimb abductor which brings the leg away from the midline (outwards). Both the semitendinosus and middle gluteal muscles are hindlimb retractors, yet when we consider their actions within the sagittal plane of the body they perform opposing actions.

Each action has a consequence, and as such each muscle group has an opposing muscle group, whose role is to perform the exact opposite action to balance the forces within the body and control movement. In the same way that we have agonist and antagonist pairs of muscles (ie the biceps brachii and triceps brachii muscles which act to bring your arm up and down), muscle groups have agonistic and antagonistic functions. The antagonists of the hindlimb retractors are the hindlimb protractors, which advance the hindlimb forwards in the swing phase of the stride.

So why is this important for us to know?

Because tension in a muscle will never only influence that muscle individually.

Tightness, spasm or atrophy (dysfunction) of an individual muscle will mean that its role within the muscle group as a whole will be impaired. As such, the other muscles within the group will have to take up a greater role in performing the function of the group, ie retracting the hindleg. This will increase their risk of fatigue.

Consequently, as the agonistic group begins to weaken, the synergy between the agonistic (hindlimb retractors) and antagonistic groups (hindlimb protractors) will become unbalanced. This will result in uneven forces being exerted on other anatomical structures of the body; the tendons, ligaments and joints. Furthermore, in the case of the hamstrings not only will protraction/retraction be affected, but also abduction/adduction.

These effects will not just be isolated locally to the hindlimb...

Each muscle is encased by the fascial network which expands across the entire body, connecting each muscle to their neighbours and globally linking each and every part of the body together into one unit. Often muscle origins and insertions are not as discrete as they are depicted in the anatomy books, thus the principle that muscles act alone within the body to perform a singular role has been challenged.

Through the work of both human and equine anatomists, it has been identified that muscles act within chains, known as myofascial chains/meridians/pathways, which span across the body linking certain muscles together within a pathway. Meaning that dysfunction within one muscle will not only have local effects to that region of the body, but will have further reaching global impacts across the body as a whole.

The hamstrings are part of the Superficial Back Line myofascial chain, which starts at the back of each hind hoof, then extends through the caudal muscles of the hindlimb, over the muscles of the croup, and through long back muscles, before each side then passes under the shoulder blade through the neck and over the poll to through the face to the muscles of the jaw (see the blue line).

Through this chain, we can see how dysfunction in the hindlimb can travel through the body to have a significant influence to the horse's back, neck, across the poll, and also extending to influencing the acceptance of the bit.

Conversely, myofascial chains work in both directions; tension in the hamstring group may not be due to dysfunction of the muscle itself, but may be as a result of issues elsewhere in the dorsal chain. For example, this may stem from hypertonicity and spasm through the epaxial muscle group (back) or of the dorsal cervical region (neck), which in turn may relate to a poorly fitting bridle or saddle.

And so we see that it is never just “tight hamstrings”. It is important to consider the posture of the horse as a whole, and not just fixate on tension in one muscle and how to fix it. Often by addressing the whole posture and mechanics of the horse, we will see the resolution of dysfunction in particular muscles as the body functions in improved balance.

Or...it might just be that your horse has been larking around in a wet slippery field the day before and has strained his hamstrings. It is always about how the horse presents on the day, and addressing these issues early on can intercept the cycle of compensation before it becomes a whole body issue. Listen to your horse and trust your therapist’s palpation and clinical reasoning to best address your horse 🐎

Someone is really clever with their graphic work.  Also good advice.
17/11/2021

Someone is really clever with their graphic work. Also good advice.

09/11/2021

I have one apt available for tomorrow - Wednesday 10th November for either Bodywork or Saddle Fitting session in Sarina or Mackay. Please PM me to secure.

20/10/2021

💡 Absolute best way to store your saddle investment is simply on a bar that runs through the gullet channel. This prevents any potential damage to the panels that will then sit on your horses back.

This one is home made (x super amazing hubby) and has a pool noodle over for softness and protection. ✔️Easy.
✔️Cheap.
✔️Works well.





Address

Mackay, QLD
4750

Opening Hours

Monday 7am - 4:30pm
Tuesday 7am - 4:30pm
Wednesday 7am - 4:30pm
Thursday 7am - 3pm
Friday 7am - 12pm

Telephone

+61447583096

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