Callum Park Equestrian

Callum Park Equestrian Callum Park in Wamboin offers the highest quality coaching and training but we pride ourselves on being friendly and accessible to all riders and levels.

It is home to Australian Grand Prix Champion rider and trainer, and coach to Australian Representative standard, Susan Elekessy, who has produced so many top Nationally competitive as well as amateur friendly, correctly trained horses. Susan combines a wealth of knowledge that covers young horses right through to Grand Prix level with a calm, positive and correct training style and has enormous experience in dealing with a range of horse types and training issues. All ages and stages of rider welcome, and Susan loves to work with any rider seeking to develop a better partnership with the horse. We strive to develop a positive and welcoming atmosphere conducive to learning and development, and believe that success is iincidental to sound and correct training where the horse comes first. Lessons available at Callum Park, Wamboin near Canberra, on our all weather Olympic size arena, $120 x 45 mins and overnight stabling available upon request. Tailored training packages available. Book through our online booking system off our website www.callumpark.com. Clinics are also offered and currently conducted in Yass, Wagga Wagga and Somersby on a monthly basis. Other clinics may be available upon request. Occasional training spaces and limited agistment sometimes available, contact us for more details. Top quality youngsters also for sale, and we can also assist you to find other horses of all levels through our trusted networks both here and overseas. Equine bodywork and sports massage for your horse is also available on and off site through our experienced and well respected therapist Marylouise Simpson

Please don’t hesitate to contact us, we’d love to help you achieve your goals with your horse. All the best from the team at Callum Park

06/11/2025
06/11/2025

🌿 Grazing Times for Laminitic Horses and Ponies 🌿

Many horse and pony owners battle for months to restore soundness and healthy hoof growth after a bout of laminitis. Careful dietary management — including when and how long a horse grazes — is essential to reduce the risk of further episodes.
Laminitis-prone horses and ponies are especially sensitive to high levels of soluble sugars and non-structural carbohydrates (NSCs) in pasture. These sugars are found in rapidly growing or stressed grasses, and even a short period of unrestricted grazing at the wrong time of day can trigger a painful flare-up in very sensitive horses and ponies.
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🌞 Understanding Sugar Levels in Grass
Grass naturally produces sugars through photosynthesis during the day when the sun is shining. These sugars are used overnight for growth, as long as the nights are mild. However, when nights are cool, frosty or dry, plants stop growing and instead store sugars in the leaves, stems and base to survive.
That means:
• Sugar levels are highest in the late afternoon and evening, when the sun has been shining all day.
• Sugar levels are lowest just before sunrise, if the night has been warm enough for the plant to use up stored sugars.
• On cool or frosty nights, sugar levels may stay high right through to the morning, making early turnout risky.
Many owners assume it’s safest to turn laminitic horses out overnight — but this can actually increase the risk of sugar overload and laminitis, particularly during cool weather or on stressed pastures.
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🐴 How Grazing Habits Affect Risk
Research shows that ponies, and even some horses, tend to ‘binge graze’ after sunset, when the pasture is sweetest. In fact, they can consume up to 40% of their total daily intake in the first few hours after dark!
This can lead to an overload of soluble sugars and fructans in the hindgut, resulting in hindgut acidosis, toxin absorption and impaired hoof blood flow — a dangerous combination for any laminitis-prone horse.
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🕒 Recommended Grazing Times
For horses and ponies with a history of laminitis, insulin resistance (IR) or Equine Metabolic Syndrome (EMS):
✅ Limit grazing to short sessions of 1–1½ hours in the late morning (before 10am) when sugar levels are moderate.
✅ Allow a second short grazing session in the mid to late afternoon if conditions are mild and pasture is not stressed.
🚫 Avoid grazing overnight or early morning after cool or frosty nights.
🚫 Restrict access to lush, fast-growing or drought-stressed grass, which can contain higher sugar levels even when it looks sparse or dry.
If full-time turnout is needed for mental wellbeing, consider using a grazing muzzle or confining to a dry lot or low-NSC grass area to control intake.
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💚 Supporting Recovery and Prevention
Once a horse has suffered laminitis, they remain at higher risk for future episodes due to compromised lamellae structure and circulation within the hoof. Careful management of both diet and grazing times plays a vital role in preventing relapse and supporting recovery.
Feeding a low-NSC diet, ensuring balanced minerals, and maintaining a healthy weight are all key components of laminitis prevention.
Kohnke’s Own TRIM can assist as part of a careful weight management plan for horses and ponies prone to laminitis, cresty necks or metabolic issues. It provides targeted nutrients to help support healthy metabolism and safe fat loss — without restricting essential vitamins and minerals needed for hoof and overall health.



📩 DM, email or call us today to book your free ration analysis! 📞 1800 112 227

05/11/2025
Totally agree
07/09/2025

Totally agree

Load Transfer: The Invisible System That Keeps Horses Sound (Until We Break It)

(This is probably the most significant blog I have written to date...and I am deadly serious.)

1️⃣ Why We Miss the Point

Most riders and owners look at legs, joints, or hooves when a horse goes lame. We obsess over hock injections, tendon scans, or shoeing tweaks.

But here’s the blind spot: horses aren’t Lego sets where you can just swap out a dodgy block and keep stacking. They’re whole systems where forces - rider weight, ground impact, propulsion - have to be absorbed, stabilised, and passed on like the world’s most complicated game of pass-the-parcel. That process is called load transfer.

If load transfer works, the horse moves fluidly, distributes force safely, and stays sound. If it doesn’t, the wrong bit cops the pressure - joints, tendons, ligaments - until it breaks. Cue “mystery lameness” and your savings account crying into a feed bucket.

2️⃣ What Load Transfer Actually Is

Load transfer is the art of sharing forces across the horse’s whole body:
- Hooves = shock absorbers (your horse’s Nike Airs).
- Tendons and ligaments = springs (boing, boing).
- Core and spine = suspension bridge (though honestly, comparing a living, moving horse to a bridge bolted to the ground is a bit crap - sorry Tami, I’ll get to you in a second and anyone else having a fit over my analogies :P ).
- Hindquarters = the engine room.
- Trunk = the bridge deck, carrying weight forward.
- Nervous system = Wi-Fi (sometimes 5G, sometimes “buffering…”).

It’s not one joint or one leg doing the work - it’s a team effort. And when one player drops the ball, the others cover… until they tear something.

3️⃣ How It Gets Compromised in Domestication

Here’s the catch: our horses don’t live or move the way evolution intended. Instead, we’ve gifted them the equine version of late-stage capitalism:
- Sedentary living → Wild horses walk 20 km a day. Ours do laps of a 20 x 60 and then slouch around on the couch bingeing Netflix. Fascia weakens, cores collapse, proprioception clocks off.
- Gut health issues → Ulcers, acidosis, restricted forage. Imagine doing Pilates with chronic indigestion. Goodbye stabilisers, hello bracing.
- Rider influence → Saddles, weight, wobbly balance. A hollow back under a rider = hocks and forelimbs eating all the force. “Congratulations, you’re now a wheelbarrow.”

And then we act shocked when the “bridge” collapses and the legs file for workers’ comp.

4️⃣ Why This Explains Early Breakdowns

A horse with poor load transfer isn’t just inefficient - it’s a ticking time bomb.
- Hock arthritis by six.
- Suspensory tears that never heal.
- Kissing spine in a horse that never learned to lift.

This isn’t bad luck. It’s physics. And yes, physics is painful. But so is paying vet bills the size of your mortgage repayments.

Once you see it, the endless cycle of injections and rehab isn’t fate — it’s the logical result of pretending your horse is four pogo sticks with ears instead of a system that has to share the damn load.

5️⃣ Why Talking About This Will Probably Annoy You

Here’s the thing: people who really understand the sheer magnitude of load transfer will most likely confuse you… or offend you.

My good friend Tami Elkayam is the one responsible for hammering this into my thick skull. And I’ll be honest: it took four clinics and two years of friendship before the penny really dropped. She will read this and her hair will stand on end, because load transfer and how the body works is far more interconnected and complex than I’ve made it here.

Because here’s the reality: there is a reason your six-year-old has the joints of a 27-year-old, or why your horse developed kissing spine. And while I’m pretty good at spotting when dysfunctional load transfer has already chewed through a part of the horse… my bigger mission now is to spread the word before more horses — and bank accounts — get wrecked.😎

It may sound like physics, and physics isn’t sexy. But this is physics that explains your vet bills, your training plateaus, your horse’s “difficult” behaviour, and that nagging sense of “not quite right.”

6️⃣ What We Need to Do About It

Instead of obsessing over the parts, we need to step back and care for the system:
- Movement lifestyle → Turnout, hills, hacking, grazing posture. (Not “arena prison with cardio punishment.”)
- Gut health → Forage first, low starch, fewer ulcers. (Because no one engages their core mid-stomach cramp...and that's not even mentioning how digestion impacts the whole things - that blog is for another day)
- Training for posture → Lift the back, wake up the core, balance the bridge. (“More forward” and "rounder" isn’t a strategy, in fact saying those things can be part of the problem...)
Rider responsibility → Balanced seat, good saddle fit, some self-awareness. (Yes, because we have a massive impact on load transfer and how dysfunctional we make it...but let's get the idea in our heads before we beat ourselves up.)
Preventive care → Conditioning, fascia release, thoughtful management. (“Wait for it to break, then panic” is not a plan.)

7️⃣. Closing

Load transfer is the invisible system that keeps horses sound. When it fails, the legs, joints, and tendons take the hit - and horses “mysteriously” break down.

The tragedy isn’t that we can’t prevent it. It’s that we’re too busy staring at hooves or arguing on social media about everything from bits to barefoot to notice the actual system collapsing under our noses.

Once you understand load transfer, you can’t unsee it. And once you can’t unsee it, you’ll never settle for patching symptoms again. You’ll start caring for the whole horse - because that’s the only way to keep the bridge standing, the system working, and your horse sound.

This is Collectable Advice 17/365 of my notebook challenge.

❤Please share this if it made you think. But don’t copy-paste it and slap your name on it - that’s the intellectual equivalent of turning up to an office party with a packet of Tim Tams and calling it “homemade.” This is my work, my study, my sweat, and my own years of training horses (and myself) before figuring this out (well with Tami Elkayam's patience too). Share it, spread it, argue with it - but don’t steal it.

23/08/2025

Clinic time & what a day for it

🥕🥕 Klep/ Elekessy Clinic this Saturday 🥕🥕                   23/8/25  Equestrian Park   Afternoon lessons now available w...
21/08/2025

🥕🥕 Klep/ Elekessy Clinic this Saturday 🥕🥕
23/8/25 Equestrian Park
Afternoon lessons now available with Susan

Join us for another fantastic combined clinic at Equestrian Park this Saturday with eventer and NSW High Performance Member Hannah Klep Eventing and Susan Julia Elekessy from Callum Park Equestrian member of the NSW Dressage High Performance team for a great day of fun and learning. Have a lesson with both coaches or just an individual lesson- your choice!
New riders always welcome and all levels accepted.
Or if you are competing at the NCEC Dressage comp and could do with some with your test riding here is a great opportunity 😉

Easy online booking system https://callumparkequestrian.schedulista.com/
or for more information
Ph: 0427669258

🥕🥕RARE  AGISTMENT OPPORTUNITY 🥕🥕                 EXPRESSION OF INTEREST                         Wamboin NSWA rare and va...
10/08/2025

🥕🥕RARE AGISTMENT OPPORTUNITY 🥕🥕
EXPRESSION OF INTEREST
Wamboin NSW

A rare and valuable opportunity at Callum Park Performance horses for two premium full board Agistment places in a safe, supportive horse and rider friendly environment. Options for training and coaching from one of Australia’s leading Grand Prix dressage trainers and coaches available with a focus on producing happy horses.

This includes a combined stable and private paddock with full board. Included are 2 feeds daily and hay inline with the best scientifically balanced equine nutrition, appropriate rug changes, and owner supplied supplements as required. As we produce top level performance horses from foals to National level Grand Prix horses the level of care and attention to detail is of the highest level. We have access to the best vets, farriers and equine professionals that can help you and can help facilitate the best care for your horse.

In addition to a rubber lined safe 4m x 4m stable with walk out access to private large yard/small paddock, with turnout to larger paddock options, recently renovated and well lit separate stable block, private tackroom space, separate wash bay with hot water, and room for float parking. Includes access to all riding facilities including the use of our all weather Olympic size synthetic fibre and sand arena with floodlights and a full short side of arena mirrors, big safe roundyard and access to trail riding on our property and easy access to local trails.

There is also access to Grand Prix trainer and coach, as well as onsite equine body worker. Potential options for tailored training and coaching packages also available.

Or just do your own thing in a private, quiet and tranquil environment that makes for happy horses and riders.

This is a very unique opportunity as Callum Park is a private property and not an agistment centre we are seeking the right candidates to ensure the right fit for all. Agistment and full board is $300 per week, lesson and training packages also available by negotiation.

Please direct your enquiries to Marylouise Simpson in the first instance, 0427 669 258,
Email callumparkequestrian@outlook.co

04/08/2025

Athlete: Coach… I think I want to quit.

Coach: Okay. Then let’s talk about why.

Athlete: I’m tired. All the early mornings, the pain, the pressure. Sometimes I wake up and wonder what I’m even doing this for.

Coach: That’s not quitting. That’s being human. Doubt shows up when you’re close to something that matters.

Athlete: But I’m not even sure I’m good enough. I look around and see people stronger, faster… happier.

Coach: Comparison is a liar. It shows you everyone’s surface but hides their struggle. You don’t need to be better than them. You need to be better than yesterday.

Athlete: What if I never win? What if I give everything and still fall short?

Coach: Then you’ll walk away with something most never touch—truth. The kind you only find when you’ve emptied yourself for something bigger than comfort.

Athlete: So… you think I should keep going?

Coach: I think you already know the answer. You wouldn’t be having this conversation if you truly wanted to stop. You just want someone to remind you that it’s worth it.

Athlete: It hurts, Coach. Some days, it really hurts.

Coach: Good. That means you care. And nothing worth having comes without pain. Now breathe. You’ve made it through every hard day so far. Don’t quit before the breakthrough.

Address

88 Merino Vale Drive
Wamboin, NSW
2620

Opening Hours

Tuesday 7:30am - 6pm
Wednesday 7:30am - 6pm
Thursday 7:30am - 6pm
Friday 7:30am - 6pm
Saturday 7:30am - 6pm
Sunday 7:30am - 6pm

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