Project Pegasus Equine Services LLC

Project Pegasus Equine Services LLC Optimizing your horses’ mental and physical wellbeing through bodywork and natural horsemanship

The success stories these ladies share gave me goosebumps! I am so thankful for having ProSix introduced to me when Otis...
04/17/2026

The success stories these ladies share gave me goosebumps!

I am so thankful for having ProSix introduced to me when Otis needed it most.

I will use one for so much more with my mare and gelding and will be recommending this product to all of my clients. Its uses are so versatile, every horse would benefit from its use.

🎙️‼️New Episode! ‼️🎙️

🌺Join your favorite red mares, Taylor and Kahlan, for another double feature episode! Today’s story isn’t just the story of one horse, but the many horses that are helped by ProSix. Founders, Jill McDermott and Lynda Reese walk us through their inspiration for this product and all its different uses.
☯️Prosix is a whole body proprioceptive tool that can help support horses struggling with ataxia due to disease, kissing spine, body lameness from compensation patterns and so much more. They even have dog sizes! This incredible tool helps creatures big and small from training time to rehab to hospice care.

🧡Thumbnail photo is of Kellie Courtwright Roach of Arete Hoof Care working on Brittany West's darling boy, Otis. Brittany and Otis were featured in our last episode (15) 🧡
Project Pegasus Equine Services LLC

🍿Grab some snacks and settle in to hear the inspiring stories Jill and Lynda have to share., as well as some solid science.

🎧Apple podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/e16-proprioception-with-the-pros-lynda-reese/id1817818294?i=1000761908054
🎧Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/66Gvfvy8EfoRBZsyXYkUri?si=a03d0d745a4c41e3

☯️To learn more about the Prosix and purchase one for your horse, visit their website at: https://www.eagleprosix.com/

🧑‍🔬Link for the research study discussed: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12892970/

🤎Learn more about our showcased foundation, Teddy’s Legacy at https://www.teddyslegacy.org/

📨Email us with your interesting stories.
Your horse may be able to help another.
redmareproject@gmail.com

Taylor CL Schouten, MS, APF-I
Hoofcare Practitioner
Wild Hoof Equine LLC
www.wildhoofequine.com

Kahlan Ettere
Equine management
Wise Choice Equine Wellness LLC

Check out our website:
www.theredmareproject.com
Follow along on Facebook: The Red Mare Project
Instagram: Wild_Hoof_Equine

04/14/2026

This testimonial is long overdue, but I have to express how absolutely incredible ProSix was for my Otie-Oats.

He had been struggling to make it through trims because of his chronic pain. My colleague, Molly Aggar, loaned me her ProSix to use while he had his feet done. Kellie Courtwright Roach and I gave it a shot!

We forgot it existed for the first composite to go on, and when we got around to the second one, he simply could not hold his leg up long enough for Kellie to accomplish anything.

ProSix went on, and Voila! He was able to hold his leg up for OVER A MINUTE. Something he hadn’t been able to do in months.

The last little bit of this appointment went so much more smoothly with the support of the wrap. You can see him lean into it and relax so much as soon as it went on, too.

Kellie is so incredibly patient and gentle with the horses she works with; something Otis desperately needed. She knew he was in pain and he tried so hard to be good and do what was asked.

ProSix made a major impact on helping him through necessary care. He practically lived in it for his last two months. I am grateful to have had the privilege of witnessing first hand the impact this system has on the horses.

I believe every horse can benefit from this. I will be utilizing the ProSix while reconditioning my other horses, strengthening them and building proprioceptive awareness during work.

The ladies at ProSix are so kind and helpful. Their invention is making an incredible impact on so many lives, I want to help get their name out there even more.


Arete Hoof Care LLC

04/04/2026
⚠️ Warning Graphic Photos ⚠️ **photos from an equine dissection that are not edited or blurred out are in this album. Pl...
04/03/2026

⚠️ Warning Graphic Photos ⚠️
**photos from an equine dissection that are not edited or blurred out are in this album. Please only look if you are comfortable seeing internal structures of anatomy**

✨the most difficult part of owning and loving horses letting them go. My sweet boy was showing me he was ready over the winter and we had the opportunity to make his passing meaningful and impactful for so many others.

February 13th, he was laid to rest and his body was donated for a three day dissection led by Lorre Mueller with Trinity Equine Services with the help of Gabby Hale with Victory Equine Services, hosted by Dr. Kaylin at the beautiful facility of Sun Coast Equine Veterinary Care in Odessa Florida.

In honoring him and the sacrifice he made, I participated in his dissection; it would have been a disservice to all my clients and myself for not gleaning what he had to teach. Learning from him expanded my understanding of anatomy and biomechanics, translating directly into my work. The collective knowledge and scope of practices in the attendees was incredible to be a part of; we all learned from eachother as well as from him. Though the anatomy was all covered, we all took away things unique and special for each of us to apply with our own horses and our client’s horses.

Coming from a bodyworker’s perspective, I went into this learning experience knowing almost everything about my boy’s life, having owned him since he was six months old. I knew his history, his diet, his training, his lifestyle, his maintenance, and what it took to keep him comfortable. I had been his caretaker for 5 years. I knew he was hurting. I didn’t know to what extent the damage had been done.

A fractured navicular as a yearling set him up for a lifetime of compensation. Once the soft tissue damage occurred and the bones in his feet surpassed any form of repairable treatment, the clock started ticking on how long he would remain comfortable just being a horse… we got 4 months from the MRI diagnostics to “it’s time.” The date was set with Trinity and we only had to get in through to February.

The purpose of the dissection was not a necropsy, but an overall study of the anatomy of the horse, however, every body tells a story. Knowing what’s normal helps identify what isn’t, and there was a whole lot that wasn’t normal. What was found within him reaffirmed my decision to let him go— from synovitis is almost every single joint of the limbs and cervical vertebrae, to kissing spine, to ulcers, he was living in a state of such chronic pain. The most humane thing I could have done was let him be free of his earthly body.

He was the horse that taught me when bodywork was not appropriate. Sessions would remove his compensation patterns and make him more lame.
One of the most difficult things for me was having people see him and say he looked fine. Unless you truly knew him, you would never have known what was going on beneath the surface. Heck, even I didn’t know what was going on completely. But I knew him. And I knew he was in pain. It wasn’t until he was nerve blocked that the level of pain was remotely comprehensible.

Above everything else, though, he taught me to listen to my gut. We as owners know our horses better than anyone. It is our responsibility to advocate for them and take care of them. My boy told me he was hurting and I listened to him as best as I could.

We didn’t get a lot of time together, and 99.8% of that time was spent on the ground, bonding, and enjoying each other’s company. He was never fully started, and that’s okay. He gave his whole heart in everything we did and in the end, he gave his body for the betterment of equine industry through teaching bodywork practitioners, saddle fitters, owners, and artists, too.

His purpose was fulfilled through his sacrifice.

🐴 🪽Run free, bug.
Stay Gold Pony Boy 💛

This is absolutely true. It’s why I researched my program thoroughly before deciding on it. I am so grateful for my educ...
03/19/2026

This is absolutely true. It’s why I researched my program thoroughly before deciding on it. I am so grateful for my education in equine science and my veterinary experience which provides the in depth understanding of anatomy, physiology, biomechanics, and pathologies, in addition to assessment skills.

Application of techniques requires understanding how the body responds and the skill to feel the tissues to perform the most effective treatment.

Education and competent application of techniques are vital to all forms of manual therapies.

01/30/2026
01/08/2026

Supporting Healthy Development in Young Horses

Before a horse enters regular training, early conditioning can offer long-term advantages. While it is true that young horses are still growing—and that joints, tendons, and bones remain sensitive during this time—experts agree that carefully controlled, low-intensity exercise does not harm development. On the contrary, appropriate movement during growth may improve a horse’s future resilience and performance.

Modern management practices such as full-time turnout and track systems naturally encourage this kind of healthy, self-regulated movement.

Developing Muscles, Tendons, and Bones

The most significant changes in a horse’s locomotor system occur during the first few years of life. Muscles, connective tissues, and bones are particularly responsive during this period and adapt to the physical demands placed upon them.

Muscle tissue, in particular, responds well to gradual conditioning and adjusts according to the type of activity the horse is expected to perform later in life. For young sport horses, this early muscle development lays an important foundation.

At the same time, care must be taken to avoid excessive strain. During growth, connective tissues undergo continuous remodeling, and too much repetitive stress can overwhelm their ability to adapt.

Bone development is also influenced by movement. As a young horse matures, bones increase not only in size but also in density and structural strength. Mechanical loading helps guide this process, much like balanced nutrition supports healthy growth.

Building a Strong Foundation for the Future

Multiple long-term studies examining early exercise in young horses have reached similar conclusions: moderate conditioning does not damage the developing musculoskeletal system. In fact, it may help improve bone quality and enhance the durability of tendon tissue later in life.

This understanding challenges the long-held belief that young horses should be kept largely inactive until formal training begins.

Researchers now recognize that growth includes specific periods when different tissues respond most effectively to stimulation. Muscles tend to adapt earlier, while bones and joints continue responding as the horse matures.

Equine biomechanics expert Dr. Hilary Clayton has emphasized that early physical activity helps not only the musculoskeletal system but also the cardiovascular and respiratory systems adapt for athletic demands later in life.

Movement From the Very Beginning

Early conditioning does not require structured training. Natural movement—such as free exercise on pasture—can begin from birth. Research into developmental orthopedic conditions, including osteochondrosis, shows that young horses with regular access to appropriately sized pastures demonstrate fewer skeletal abnormalities than those kept primarily in stalls with limited turnout.

These findings highlight the importance of allowing young horses to move freely and consistently during growth.

Physical and Mental Readiness

As horses approach the age for initial under-saddle work, training should remain slow and progressive. Gentle exercises help the horse adapt to carrying weight while learning to use the body correctly, including developing postural strength through the back and chest muscles.

Equally important is mental well-being. Studies examining stress responses in young horses suggest that individualized, low-pressure training approaches result in lower physiological stress levels compared to more repetitive or restrictive methods. Young horses are particularly sensitive to their environment, social grouping, and handling style.

Finding the Balance

When conditioning becomes too intense, the risk of injury increases. Unfortunately, science cannot yet define exact limits for safe workload in growing horses. What is clear, however, is that excessive, repetitive training poses greater risks than benefits.

For this reason, many experts agree that pasture-based movement remains one of the most effective and safest forms of conditioning for foals and adolescent horses. Horses with ample daily turnout tend to show better overall fitness and fewer musculoskeletal issues than those kept in more restrictive systems with limited natural movement.

In Summary

Thoughtful, age-appropriate movement during early life helps prepare a horse’s body—both physically and mentally—for future training. The goal is not intensity, but consistency, variety, and balance.

Otis modeling the amazing ProSix (on loan to us from Molly Aggar) as we wait for Kellie to prepare his new composites. I...
01/07/2026

Otis modeling the amazing ProSix (on loan to us from Molly Aggar) as we wait for Kellie to prepare his new composites.

I am a full proponent of using appropriate tools for appropriate situations and let me tell you, the difference the ProSix band system has made in Otis’ comfort level is incredible.

He went from full body shaking and falling back unable to stand on 3 legs to have his feet cared for - to standing square, holding up a limb more comfortably for longer than 10 seconds.

That may not seem like a lot for a healthy/painfree horse, but for my boy who struggles with chronic pain it is MAJOR. He is able to make it through necessary care with lessened discomfort.

This system is also a wonderful rehab tool. It essentially “hugs” the horse, giving gentle pressure along major points in the body to improve posture and encourage correct biomechanical movement. The compression also helps reduce stress and anxiety and the slight resistance works to train isometric and concentric movements to strengthen the body.

Otis will be getting accustomed to wearing it for longer periods of time over the next few weeks so his body is ready to have it on for a long trailer ride.

We will be using this band to help keep him comfortable on the haul to Florida in February where he will be the subject of a fully comprehensive educational experience for so many people.

This boy has taught me so much, and he has so much more to teach 💛💛💛

❤️
01/07/2026

❤️

Why Walking Is One of the Most Powerful Nervous System and Fascial Regulators in the Horse

Walking is often underestimated. It is commonly treated as a warm-up, a cool-down, or something reserved for horses that are sore, aging, or “not working hard.” In reality, slow, rhythmic walking is one of the most effective ways to regulate the equine nervous system, normalize fascial tone, and restore coordinated postural support throughout the body.

This is not accidental. The walk provides a unique combination of neurological, vestibular, respiratory, and fascial input that no other gait delivers with the same safety, clarity, and precision.

This article is not about fitness or conditioning. It is about how the walk organizes the horse from the inside out — neurologically, fascially, and mechanically — and why it is often the most therapeutic gait when regulation, symmetry, and recovery matter.

Walking Organizes the Nervous System Through Rhythm

At the walk, the horse moves in a steady, symmetrical left–right sequence. This four-beat, bilateral gait provides continuous, predictable sensory input through the limbs, spine, and body wall, supporting proprioceptive feedback, postural regulation, and nervous system stability.

Each step:
• reinforces communication between the left and right sides of the body
• refines proprioceptive mapping
• supports spinal pattern generators responsible for rhythm and timing
• reduces threat perception through consistency

This is why walking is often the fastest way to reduce anxiety, bracing, or emotional reactivity — particularly after stress, travel, confinement, pain, or mental overload.

The nervous system does not need intensity to reorganize.
It needs rhythm.

Side-to-Side Spinal Motion: The Hidden Driver of Regulation at the Walk

This neurological rhythm does not occur only in the limbs. It is expressed through the spine.

Unlike faster gaits, the walk allows the horse’s spine to move in a gentle, alternating lateral pattern with each step. As the hind limb advances, the pelvis rotates and the trunk subtly bends toward the stance side, creating a continuous left–right wave through the spine, ribcage, and body wall.

This lateral motion is small, but neurologically rich.

Each step produces:
• controlled axial rotation through the thoracolumbar spine
• side-bending through the ribs and abdominal wall
• alternating lengthening and shortening of paraspinal and fascial tissues
• rhythmic input to spinal mechanoreceptors and intercostal nerves

Because this motion is slow, symmetrical, and uninterrupted, the nervous system has time to receive, integrate, and respond — rather than brace or override.

The walk is the only gait where the spine can fully express this side-to-side conversation without impact, suspension, or urgency. This is one reason spinal stiffness, asymmetry, and guarded movement often soften first at the walk.

The spine is not being forced to move.
It is being invited to oscillate.

Head and Neck Motion Regulate the Vestibular System

This spinal oscillation is inseparable from the movement of the head and neck.

In a relaxed walk, the horse’s head and neck move in a gentle pendulum pattern. This natural nodding motion stimulates the vestibular system, which plays a central role in balance, posture, muscle tone, and emotional regulation.

When the head and neck are free:
• muscle tone normalizes throughout the body
• postural reflexes settle
• the nervous system shifts toward a calmer, more organized state

When the head is restricted — by tension, equipment, or mental stress — this regulating vestibular input is reduced or lost. The body compensates by increasing holding patterns elsewhere.

A free walk is neurologically grounding.

Walking Normalizes Fascial Tone (Rather Than “Loosening” Tissue)

Fascia is not passive wrapping. It is a living, responsive tissue that continuously adjusts its resting tone based on movement, load, and nervous system input.

Slow, rhythmic walking provides the ideal stimulus for fascial regulation:
• low-load, cyclical stretch signals fascia to normalize stiffness
• alternating left–right strain balances tension across fascial continuities
• gentle compression and decompression improve hydration and glide
• consistent rhythm reduces protective guarding

This is why walking often produces visible softening and improved movement without direct tissue work. The fascia is not being forced to change — it is being given permission to stop bracing.

The Head–Neck Pendulum Loads the Fascial Front Line

At the walk, the head and neck act like a pendulum, gently tensioning and releasing the fascial structures connecting the poll, neck, sternum, ribcage, and abdominal wall.

This oscillation:
• supports elastic recoil
• improves postural tone
• provides timing information rather than force

When this motion is restricted, fascia shifts toward static holding instead of dynamic elasticity. Over time, this contributes to heaviness in the forehand, shortened stride, and loss of spring.

Walking is one of the few gaits that loads these tissues elastically without overload.

Ribcage Motion Is Essential for Sling Health

The thoracic sling does not suspend the limbs alone — it suspends the ribcage.

True thoracic sling function cannot occur without ribcage mobility. At the walk, the trunk experiences subtle but essential:
• rib elevation and depression
• lateral expansion
• axial rotation

These movements:
• hydrate deep thoracic fascia
• improve glide around the sternum and ribs
• reduce compressive holding patterns

A stiff trunk prevents true postural lift. Walking restores this relationship neurologically and mechanically.

How Massage and Myofascial Therapy Fit In

Massage and myofascial therapy do not replace walking — they restore the tissues’ ability to participate in it.

When fascia, muscle, or neural tissues are restricted, the lateral spinal motion of the walk becomes uneven, delayed, or reduced in amplitude. The horse may still walk, but the oscillation is distorted, limiting thoracic sling timing, ribcage mobility, and nervous system regulation.

Manual and myofascial therapies help by:
• reducing asymmetrical tone that blocks spinal oscillation
• restoring glide between fascial layers along the trunk and ribs
• improving sensory feedback from paraspinal and intercostal tissues
• decreasing protective guarding driven by pain or threat

After bodywork, the walk often looks different. Spinal motion becomes more fluid, ribcage movement improves, stride timing normalizes, and the horse settles more quickly. This is not coincidence — it is improved sensory input meeting a gait designed to integrate it.

Massage opens the door.
Walking teaches the body how to walk through it.

Breathing, Vagal Tone, and Fascial Tension

Walking naturally coordinates breath with movement, supporting parasympathetic (vagal) activity. Vagal tone directly influences muscle tone, fascial stiffness, pain sensitivity, and emotional regulation.

As vagal tone improves:
• baseline fascial tension decreases
• tissues regain elasticity
• movement feels lighter without effort
• recovery improves

This is why horses often look better after a calm walk than after stretching or strengthening exercises. The system has shifted out of protection.

Walking Over Terrain and Hills: When Rhythm Meets Real-World Input

When available, walking over varied terrain and gentle hills further enhances the regulating effects of the walk.

Uneven ground introduces subtle changes in limb loading, increasing proprioceptive feedback and encouraging the nervous system to refine coordination without triggering defensive tension. Fascia responds by adjusting tone dynamically rather than locking into static patterns.

Walking uphill gently increases thoracic sling engagement and trunk lift, while walking downhill improves controlled lengthening and eccentric control. In both cases, the ribcage must continuously adapt, improving mobility and suspension.

Terrain should add information — not intensity.
The walk should remain slow, rhythmic, and emotionally calm.

Walking Needs Variety

The nervous system adapts quickly. When movement is repeated in the same way, on the same surface, in the same environment, the body stops learning and begins automating.

At that point:
• sensory input diminishes
• fascial tone becomes uniform and less responsive
• postural strategies become fixed
• protective holding patterns can quietly re-emerge

Walking is regulating because it is rhythmic —
but it remains therapeutic because it is variable.

Variability Is How Fascia Stays Adaptive

Fascia thrives on changing vectors of load, not constant ones.

Subtle variation at the walk may include:
• straight lines, curves, and gentle figures
• changes in direction
• transitions between environments or footing
• brief pauses and restarts
• shifts in visual and vestibular input
• circles, turns, and lateral steps when appropriate

These small changes prevent repetitive strain, maintain elastic responsiveness, and distribute load across multiple fascial pathways.

Thoracic Sling Function Improves With Change, Not Repetition

The thoracic sling is a timing system.

If input is always the same:
• the sling engages in the same pattern
• certain fibers and fascial planes dominate
• others under-contribute
• asymmetry may be reinforced rather than resolved

Adding variation forces the sling to adapt continuously, redistribute tone, and refine coordination instead of bracing.

This is skill development — not strength work.

Variety Supports Mental and Emotional Regulation

Horses are highly sensitive to their environment. Changes in scenery, footing, visual horizon, and spatial orientation keep the nervous system engaged without threat — curious rather than defensive.

This is especially important for anxious horses, shutdown horses, rehabilitation cases, and seniors who do not tolerate intensity.

Boredom and over-repetition can increase tension just as much as over-work.

The Takeaway

Walking is not passive.
It is neurological organization, fascial regulation, and postural re-education in motion.

It does not force posture.
It restores the body’s ability to hold itself.

Walking is where the nervous system calms,
the fascia remembers elasticity,
and the body relearns how to carry the horse —
instead of the horse carrying itself with tension.

Walk Work Tip

Count the rhythm of your horse’s footsteps as you walk. Matching your attention to their step pattern helps you tune into consistency, symmetry, and relaxation — keeping the focus on rhythm rather than speed.

https://koperequine.com/the-power-of-slow-why-slow-work-is-beneficial-for-horses/

12/27/2025
12/16/2025

Massage Therapy can down- regulate and up regulate muscle and fascial tone

The Nervous System Controls Muscle Tone — Not the Muscle Itself

Muscles don’t decide how tight or loose they are.
The brain and spinal cord constantly adjust tension based on incoming sensory information from:
• skin
• fascia
• muscle spindles
• Golgi tendon organs
• joint receptors

Massage and myofascial work change the information coming INTO the nervous system, so the brain changes the commands it sends OUT.

This is how you alter muscle tone.

HOW MASSAGE DOWN-REGULATES (RELAXES) MUSCLES

1. Activating slow, sustained mechanoreceptors

Slow compression, melting pressure, and long fascial holds activate:
• Ruffini endings (respond to stretch + sustained pressure)
• Golgi tendon organs (sense load and reduce contraction)

These receptors inhibit the sympathetic system and drop muscle tone.

2. Reducing protective guarding

When an area feels unsafe or unstable, the nervous system tightens muscles to protect it.
When you use slow, predictable touch, the body interprets this as safety → guarding drops.

3. Improving proprioceptive clarity

If the body has a “blurred map” of an area, it tightens muscles to stabilize it.
Touch improves sensory clarity → unnecessary tension melts.

4. Regulating breathing and vagal tone

Slow, rhythmic touch naturally shifts the horse (or human) into parasympathetic dominance, softening global tone.

HOW MASSAGE UP-REGULATES (ACTIVATES) MUSCLES

1. Using quicker, lighter, stimulating input

Techniques like:
• brisk strokes
• tapotement
• skin drag
• light vibration
• rapid fascial stretch

activate Pacinian corpuscles and muscle spindles, increasing tone and readiness.

2. Increasing proprioceptive awareness

If a muscle isn’t “online,” it often has poor sensory input.
Stimulation wakes up the neuromuscular connection, so the brain recruits it better.

3. Restoring reciprocal inhibition

Tight agonists shut down their antagonists.
If you release an overactive muscle, the underactive muscle naturally activates more easily.

Example:
Release the overworking brachiocephalicus → the thoracic sling activates more efficiently.

4. Improving movement organization

When fascial layers glide better, the nervous system allows more range and activation.

The Key Takeaway

Massage does not strengthen or weaken muscle fibers directly.

Massage changes what the nervous system allows the muscle to do.

You’re not altering the tissue —
✨ you are altering the sensory input so the brain changes motor output.

This is why massage therapists, bodyworkers, and skilled handlers can:
• switch off global tension
• “wake up” weak chains
• balance diagonal patterns
• restore proper neuromuscular sequencing

…and why the effects can be immediate and profound.

https://koperequine.com/25-of-the-most-important-and-interesting-properties-of-equine-muscle/

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