Fusion Equine

Fusion Equine Fusion Equine Bodywork can help keep your horse at peak performance. Ask me how... I am an Equine Bodyworker based in the Upper Hunter Valley, NSW.

I specialise in treating thoroughbreds as well as performance horses. I also travel to several other areas to do treatment days so please contact me to see if I service your area, or if you are interested in having me come to your area. I am fully qualified and insured and have over 10 years experience with bodywork and a lifetime of experience with horses. I have the advantage of working with many horses of different breeds and disciplines as well as working in conjunction with vets and rehabilitation specialists so I have a lot of experience to call on when assessing your horse. I work with many studs (mainly thoroughbred and QH) and work with foals through to yearlings prepping for sales, to horses in full work/futurity prospects, broodmares and serving stallions. I also have many years experience with high level performance horses (of all breeds), polo ponies, racehorses, pleasure horses and rehabilitation cases. My passion is helping people to understand how and why their horse is moving and behaving the way it does and how this relates to what is happening in the body. I want to help you understand why your horse might be struggling in certain areas and how you can use that information to better help the horse become functional in its movement and perform at its best. The idea of bodywork is not that I should just come back every week but that over time we can use bodywork plus possible changes in training, gear and your own body to make a lasting impact on your horses performance. I use several types of bodywork such as EMRT (Equine Muscle Release Therapy), TBT (Tucker Biokinetic Therapy) and I am also currently studying Equine Tensegrity Balancing Therapy (Tami Elkayam). All these modalities are very gentle and non invasive and focus on the holistic view that the horse's body is a whole, cohesive structure and the importance is on maintaining structural integrity and functional movement. Fascial remodelling helps the body come back in to balance and allows the horse to heal itself, creating longer lasting improvement.

It’s baby season!Mona is the very proud mum of a perfect little palamino c**t- and I finally have my coloured baby. She ...
27/09/2025

It’s baby season!
Mona is the very proud mum of a perfect little palamino c**t- and I finally have my coloured baby. She has (very surprisingly) taken to parenthood like a natural.
Watch out for all the foal spam to follow..

I am so excited to be part of this weekend at Blue Metal Equestrian. Who doesn’t love a weekend centred around you and y...
18/09/2025

I am so excited to be part of this weekend at Blue Metal Equestrian. Who doesn’t love a weekend centred around you and your horse that involves learning, relaxing, good food and fireside drinks!
Book early so you don’t miss out.

Nothing like a dorsal strip to highlight alignment for you!
04/09/2025

Nothing like a dorsal strip to highlight alignment for you!

It’s Live!!And just in time to gift it to your horse for their birthday..The course Shelley and I have been working on f...
31/07/2025

It’s Live!!
And just in time to gift it to your horse for their birthday..

The course Shelley and I have been working on for the last year is finally up on the new website and is available to purchase.
If you have ever considered taking on an Off The Tracker or you already have one but haven’t spent any time in the industry then this is the course for you.

This has been a labour of love we have spent the last year working on. We just wanted to get a resource out there to help people make the most of these fantastic animals and eliminate the confusion and heartbreak that happens when misunderstanding lead to problems that mean the horse needs to be rehomed again or retired.

Please check the link below or send it to someone you might think is interested.

https://www.racehorsetoridinghorse.com.au/events?fbclid=PAQ0xDSwL4sY9leHRuA2FlbQIxMQABp1hQ9rOki1lUZptljZbjr26TLlMCqaWI-3auz0n8V_4wHdUKAnNFXZWHTO68_aem_cvE8MKKGHcxpzBbdx4zsZA

It’s Live!! 🎉🥳🎊🍾Happy Horses Birthday and Happy Launch Day.!!You can check out the links in Shelley’s post below if you ...
31/07/2025

It’s Live!! 🎉🥳🎊🍾

Happy Horses Birthday and Happy Launch Day.!!You can check out the links in Shelley’s post below if you would like to see what the course offers or if you would like to buy it and get started straight away.

I don’t think I have ever been so proud of something I have produced. I really think this is an essential resource for people considering an off the tracker, or for people who have already got one but haven’t spent time in the industry.

It’s not only a step by step process for re training but it has a huge amount of resources for understanding their life before racing and how that shapes their thoughts and habits and how to transition that to life after racing.

Please go and have a look or share this with your friends that might be interested. We did this purely to help OTT’s have a better life after racing so the more people that see it the more horses we can help.

There is still time to join the free webinar tomorrow night. Details are in the comments on this fantastic post from She...
30/07/2025

There is still time to join the free webinar tomorrow night. Details are in the comments on this fantastic post from Shelley about new home syndrome in racehorses and how that can translate to confusion and stress for both the horse and their new owner.

Off the Track and Into the Deep End: Why "New Home Syndrome” Runs Deeper for Racehorses 🐎💥🏠

What is “New Home Syndrome” — and Why I Named It

I coined the term New Home Syndrome to describe the often-overlooked psychological and physiological stress response and its impact horses experience when they move to a new home.

It’s not just general stress or “settling in.” It’s a full-body, full-mind disruption — one that affects a horse’s behaviour, health, sleep, wellbeing, and ability to learn. It’s a syndrome in the truest sense: a cluster of symptoms that consistently occur together in response to a sudden and overwhelming change in environment.
All horses are impacted when they move homes. But for off-the-track Thoroughbreds and Standardbreds, the effects can be magnified tenfold.

Why? Because they come from a world of order and routine. Their lives have been shaped by structure — same people, same schedule, same job. They’ve been conditioned to perform a specific task, and their environment is designed to support that task with military-level predictability.

When all of that vanishes overnight, their nervous system doesn’t just wobble — it spirals. And sadly, this is often misinterpreted as “bad behaviour,” “danger,” or “problem horse” status.

🖼️ This is Dash — imaged attached.

Dash is a 10-year-old off-the-track Thoroughbred and a powerful example of what happens when New Home Syndrome goes unrecognised.

He was returned to his rehoming program three times, labelled as “dangerous.” But the truth is likely something else entirely.
What happened to Dash was a full physical, mental, and emotional unraveling — a textbook case of New Home Syndrome.

His world kept collapsing and no one saw it for what it was. His confusion, anxiety, and distress were interpreted as reactive and unpredictable.

But he isn’t dangerous, he was just being dangerous because he was drowning.

And Dash’s story helped shape this blog — and the resource we created to help horses like him make a successful transition into a second life.

Thrown Into the Deep End

When a racehorse leaves the track, they don’t just change jobs — they enter a world they don’t recognise. 🌏
They’re used to:
- Routine and repetition
- Clear, singular expectations
- Practical, task-focused handling
- A training system designed to produce fast, forward responses

Suddenly, they’re in a paddock. Being hugged. Offered carrots. Asked to stand still in wide open spaces. Handled by unfamiliar people using unfamiliar language.

They don’t understand what’s happening — and they don’t know how to navigate it and that is acutely stressful. That’s New Home Syndrome.

And without support, even the kindest horse can spiral into confusion or panic.

Not a Behaviour Problem — A Learning History

Working with Isabelle Chandler — a racing industry insider, brilliant bodyworker, rehoming advocate, and former track rider and jockey — I’ve come to appreciate how subtle things we are completely ignorant of can trigger huge reactions in OTTBs.

Take Dash again in the early stages of his re-training. 🐎
Isabelle showed me how simply putting feet in the stirrups triggered him. He braced, tensed, and got agitated. Why? Because on the track, riders only put their feet in the stirrups when they’re ready to work. 🏇

The moment she removed her feet? He softened and instantly relaxed.

It only took a few quiet repetitions to reframe the association. Soon, Dash could stand at the mounting block without tension. No drama. No confusion. Just a horse learning something new — the right way.

These horses aren’t being difficult. They’re just doing their old job in a new world.

When Affection Feels Like Pressure

Many OTTBs haven’t experienced affection as comfort. Touch often meant tacking up, grooming, or veterinary care — not bonding.

So when you reach out with affection, they may brace, flinch or become unsettled— not because they don’t like you, but because they don’t know what that touch means. 💔

They’re not used to your way of loving them yet. That will come — with consistency, safety, and time.

Connection doesn’t start with cuddles. It starts with understanding.

Retraining Isn’t Enough — You Must Rebuild

Helping a racehorse transition isn’t just about teaching new skills. It’s about:
- Unlearning old patterns
- Establishing safe routines
- Reframing ingrained associations
- Supporting body, mind, gut and nervous system

These horses aren’t blank slates. But they are brilliant learners — and with calm, skilled guidance, they transform.

Because deep down, just like every horse they just seek three things - peace, predictability and safety. They just need someone to help them find it. 💛

New Home Syndrome Isn’t a Setback — It’s the Starting Point

Off-the-track horses don’t need fixing. They need time, empathy, and someone who understands the path they’re on.
When we offer that:
- They settle
- They soften
- They connect
- They begin to shine ✨

And we see the truth: they were never crazy. They were just misunderstood.

And Because Dash Deserved Better…

Horses like Dash — and so many others we’ve met — made it clear that something was missing.

There wasn’t a clear roadmap. There are gaps in understanding between the inside of the racing industry and the broader equestrian world — and it’s in these gaps that many horses get lost. Dash nearly did. 😔

Without that shared roadmap, you have well-meaning, brilliant people — rehomers, trainers, owners, coaches, equine professionals — all trying their best, sometimes in the dark.

Rehomers and trainers hand horses to owners who may not have the same skillset or insights. Owners turn to instructors on the outside of the industry who may not recognise what the horse is truly going through. And no one is at fault — we just haven’t all been working from the same page. I am an experienced trainer but I have learned so much from Isabelle that I was unaware of!

So Isabelle and I started putting our heads together — combining her experience in the racing industry, rehoming and rehabilitation with my expertise in retraining and teaching people how to work well with horses — to piece together a better way forward.

What emerged is a resource built from everything we wish more people knew — something to develop people’s knowledge, skills, and awareness for the task of rehoming racehorses:
- How to recognise and support horses going through New Home Syndrome
- How to retrain patterns shaped by life on the track
- How to identify, manage post-racing health, pain, and stress
- How to create stability, safety, and real communication

It’s not a quick fix. But it is incredibly effective.
We also got expert help from veterinarian Dr Jodie Gossage, Standardbred breeder, re-trainer who is involved in harness racing to add an entire section on these horses who have their own unique misconceptions!

It’s the kind of thing we believe can change lives — horse and human. 🧠❤️🐎

And if you’re someone who wants to help these horses thrive, this might be exactly what you’ve been looking for. In the comments will tell you more.

Please share — the respectful way.
💬 Hit the share button — don’t copy and paste. This piece is the result of lived experience, collaboration, and deep care.
Sharing it might help a horse like Dash land softly — and maybe help someone like you give them the second chance they deserve. 🙏🐴

IMAGE📸: Dash with Isabelle and me — we’re on a mission to raise awareness of the gap in understanding and skill that nearly cost this lovely, sweet, and clever horse his future.

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Scone, NSW
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