Dirt To Diamonds, LLC

Dirt To Diamonds, LLC Equine Massage, Structural Integration, Training and Rehabilitation for horses. Pulsed Electro-Magnetic Field (PEMF) for people and animals. Hello!

Consulting and Education services. I'm training to become an equine practitioner. We are learning Equine Structural Integration (a therapy derived from what most people know as Rolfing on humans). Rolfing was created by a woman named Dr. Ida P. Rolf who had a compassion for helping humans. Dr. Rolf wanted to treat humans with structural issues with alternative medicine. A Little info on Dr. Ida Rolf:
“Dr. Rolf applied her knowledge of science and wellness to seek answers to the health concerns of her loved ones. Unwilling to accept the limitations of medicine at the time, Dr. Rolf embraced a wide range of approaches including osteopathy, chiropractic medicine, and mind-body disciplines such as yoga, the Alexander Technique, and Alfred H.S. Korzybski’s study of consciousness. Bringing together such a rich variety of perspectives, Dr. Rolf discovered that she could achieve remarkable changes in posture and structure by manipulating the body's myofascial system. Dr. Rolf eventually named her body of work "Structural Integration" – a holistic system of soft tissue manipulation and movement education that organizes the whole body in gravity. Recipients found the work dramatically altered posture and structure. Increasingly, people sought out Dr. Rolf to receive Structural Integration as a way to ease pain, address chronic stress, and improve performance in their daily activities.”

A Little more info on Rolfing:
“Rolfing® is a system of soft tissue manipulation and movement education that organizes the whole body in gravity. Rolfing bodywork affects the body’s posture and structure by manipulating the myofascial system (connective tissue). Often considered a deep-tissue approach, Rolfing bodywork actually works with all the layers of the body to ease strain patterns in the entire system. Research has demonstrated that Rolfing creates more efficient muscle use, allows the body to conserve energy, and creates more economical and refined patterns of movement. Rolfing has also been shown to significantly reduce chronic stress, reduce spinal curvature in subjects with lordosis (sway back), and enhance neurological functioning.”

A little info on the School I’m attending and the therapy I’m learning about: With Equine Natural Movement, we work to find what’s right, what’s good and correct about the horse’s body and heart. We they work with great compassion, kindness and skill to strengthen the horse’s structural integrity and develop the horse’s promise. We’ve created a way of working with these magnificent animals that truly changes how they feel and move. We’ve continually tested our methods since 1995 and keep seeing positive — often permanent — changes that owners and trainers notice. Our students tell us our professional equine training delivers the expertise they need to be knowledgeable, competent and reliable experts in the horse community. Our equine bodywork training is different from every other school. Not only do our students learn how to improve a horse’s structure and movement, we also do it in a heart-centered and caring way. We teach an innovative method of equine bodywork that differs from equine massage, equine chiropractic, physical therapy and other equine bodywork methods. Rather than trying to fix problems as most modalities do, we bring out the inherent natural balance and adaptability of a truly vital, life-filled horse. We do this by addressing the underlying structural system of the horse’s body, making changes that develop smoother strides, better balance, increased flexibility and evenness. This helps horses feel more calm, collected and be more pleasant to ride. A little info on me: I practiced human massage therapy and myofascial release for 6 years, and decided to make a career change. I have always loved horses. I have been riding and training for over ten years, and I believe I have found my true calling. I am applying my love of healing on the animals I am so passionate about. Along with helping horses, I will get to educate owners on how to help build a lifelong relationship with their horse filled with love, trust and respect. I hope to complete my education and open my business in the summer or fall of 2017. I am planning to offer structural integration on horses, horse training and horse/owner education.

The power of PEMF never ceases to surprise me. Benefits for any animal, any size. Tigers, lions, and bears are all on th...
11/08/2025

The power of PEMF never ceases to surprise me. Benefits for any animal, any size. Tigers, lions, and bears are all on the list for some PEMF practitioners throughout the United States. Give me a shout to add yourself or your animal to the list of beneficiaries of this amazing 100% natural wellness service!

08/21/2025

This girl is about to finish her 90 days. She is for sale by owner. PM me for contact information!.

Spice is a AQHA 2yr old and been exposed to traffic, trails, kids and 4 wheeler chaos, arena work, throw a rope & drag stuff, ride ba****ck or saddle, bit or halter, overall very calm and does not spook and is very mellow for a 2yr old, rides alone or in a group, easy to catch, in your pocket and loves attention and just wants to be with you, more whoa then go in the arena but canters out in the open just fine. Nice smooth WTL, Stop and Back. No buck bite bolt or rear with this girl at all. Whomever takes her home will have a great partner!

Call now to connect with business.

Beautiful view of a beautiful friend and her barbie "Hunny" horse. It isnt that often that I get the opportunity to ride...
08/19/2025

Beautiful view of a beautiful friend and her barbie "Hunny" horse.

It isnt that often that I get the opportunity to ride with friends. This riding weekend was a great time for me to rest, feel like my old teenage self and feel like I can leave the stress of being a mom, wife, chef, maid, taxi, buisness woman and entrepreneur, and volunteer extraordinaire behind for 48 hours.

Thanks for the ride Chantel Williams!

08/17/2025

Best horse trainer assistant award goes to my sweet Penelope.

Handsome fella Outlaw headed home today after 60 days. Came in with zero riding/saddling and leaving as a great riding p...
08/03/2025

Handsome fella Outlaw headed home today after 60 days. Came in with zero riding/saddling and leaving as a great riding partner for the trails, training cows and being ready for life with chaos and kids. Such a fancy mover and is obviously mixed with a gaited horse, my guess is a Tennessee walker, so much fun to ride and hang out with this guy. He will be missed around here. Penelope is sad " her favorite one" is heading home.

07/24/2025

Client story - Inappropriate Training 🐴

These stories are shared with permission but names have been changed to protect their privacy.

I was called out to see a horse, lets call him Harry, as they were having issues with him rearing in hand and under saddle. His owner had purchased him 6 months earlier from a home where he had hunted and competed heavily for several years and she just wanted to enjoy some hacking and low level dressage. As he had settled in his behaviour had become more unmanageable, he would seemingly randomly become extremely stressed in his paddock and gallop around until he was dripping with sweat, he was rearing and napping under saddle and had now started to rear on the short walk in from his paddock to the stable.

This horse had very recently been seen by a bodyworker who found “no issues” and cleared him to be ridden, and a saddle fitter who happily fitted a saddle to him. The owner was having fortnightly flatwork lessons with a local dressage rider and had also had a horsemanship trainer out to do some groundwork with him.

She showed me a video of her dressage lesson where she was being made to ride him on a 15m circle around the instructor in trot while he constantly tried to yank the reins out of her hands and his tail didn’t stop swishing, he was struggling so much that he looked extremely lame and was on three tracks. The instructor told her she just needed to work through it and he was trying to get out of it because she was too soft with him.

She then described the horsemanship lesson she’d had which involved chasing him around with a flag, making him back up, disengaging his quarters etc until he stopped protesting. She said he initially reared a lot and was very explosive but after about 20 minutes he seemed to settle and comply. She then tried to emulate this every day for 2 weeks afterwards like she’d been told, but every day he would come out really explosive before eventually settling. His owner just didn’t know what to do.

Upon seeing Harry, it was immediately apparent that he had a very weak, compromised body. Despite being a healthy weight, he had an extremely sunken appearance all through his neck, spine and back-end. There is no way it was appropriate for this horse to be ridden in this condition and I expressed my disappointment and concern than not one of the professionals involved with this horse had flagged this at all. These conversations are difficult, but I have to advocate for the horse.

We had a long conversation about healthy posture and musculature, the potential pain and discomfort issues and how this would affect his behaviour and how we can start to move forward.

We discussed his management first and foremost, if it was possible for him to stay with his pony companion in turnout and add enrichment to his stable. As with most behavioural issues this horse was extremely chronically stressed and our first port of call to help with this is to get our management the best we can.

We then took him into the arena and turned him loose with some empty buckets, we encouraged him to move from bucket to bucket by throwing low value food into each one, he was initially quite tense but started to relax into it. All of his associations with people and training had been so stressful that he naturally felt unsafe with people so it was going to take a while for his nervous system to calm down. We did maybe 10 minutes of this then took him back next to his friend to eat some hay. We then repeated it and took him back again.

We also taught him some basic nose targeting and did some treat scatters, just lots of low pressure, fun things to engage his brain and build positive associations with people again. At one point he spooked at something behind the hedge and froze, after about 5 seconds he touched the target with his nose and was back to being engaged with us. His owner couldn’t believe he hadn’t exploded.

Given how he presented and what had been going on I obviously referred the owner on to the vet for some investigations. Harry was diagnosed with stomach ulcers and arthritis in his neck, spine and hocks and his lovely owner immediately decided to not try to bring him back into ridden work. She medicated as appropriate and we worked with a physio on developing his body to help keep him comfortable. This looked like shaping movement and postures with positive reinforcement and enrichment games, not drilling over poles or up hills while he braced against us.

Harry now enjoys turnout with his pony friend, lots of hand walks with his owner and some quiet liberty work in the arena. His lovely owner has found a new joy in enjoying his company without riding him and would never have continued to do so if she knew he was in pain, but she just kept being told to push on.

Harry is a very sweet, gentle horse. At no time when I was there did he rear or explode, not because I am some magical horse whisperer, but because I didn’t put him in situations he couldn’t cope with. I can only imagine how painful being ridden or being chased and pulled around might have been for him. He was shouting out but nobody was translating this to his owner. This is such a huge issue within the industry, we have highly qualified and recommended people who do not understand behaviour and we are constantly pushing horses through pain.

I’ll leave you with this thought, if the training is causing your horse to be explosive, rear, pull back, try to get away from you or it just generally feels like a fight, it is not good for your horse regardless of what the end results looks like. I see so many compromised horses who are trying to communicate that they are struggling, and maybe that comes out as “bolshy” behaviour. We are then taking these compromised horses, hassling them into submission and calling it good horsemanship.

If training feels like a battle we are doing something wrong. 🐴

07/23/2025
07/17/2025

Address

2001 345th Avenue Se
Max, ND
58759

Telephone

+17014260174

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