Poised Ponies

Poised Ponies EMMETT 4 HORSES Practitioner. Building a better world for your horse through balance.
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I offer "light touch neuromuscular release therapy" for your equine partner.

Look at this lovely old girl that I got to work on a few days back. 💙Age may add a few creaks and stiffness, but every h...
17/06/2026

Look at this lovely old girl that I got to work on a few days back. 💙

Age may add a few creaks and stiffness, but every horse deserves to move comfortably. It was wonderful spending some time helping this beautiful mare release tension and relax.

An interesting read.
07/06/2026

An interesting read.

The Great Saddle Slip Mystery🔍

Your saddle slips to the left.

So naturally, you buy a new girth.

It still slips.🤨

So you buy a fancy anatomical girth, a non-slip saddle pad, and perhaps a breastplate with enough straps to secure a small aircraft.

It still slips.😠

So you call a saddle fitter.

Then another saddle fitter.

Then one recommended by a friend who swears they transformed her horse's life.

It still slips.😖

At this point, many horse owners begin to suspect that they're somehow destined to spend the rest of their life searching for the mythical saddle setup that stays exactly where it should.

But before you spend another dollar on tack or lose respect for your latest saddle-fitter, let me tell you about some fascinating research by Line Greve and Sue Dyson.🤓

Because what they discovered put some very important information on the table to consider when you have a saddle slip issue.

The researchers investigated horses with persistent saddle slip and found that many of them had underlying hindlimb lameness.

Now, stay with me if you just rolled your eyes and think this isn't you case because your horse is clearly NOT lame....

The type of lameness identified was not the obvious kind where the horse is hopping around on three legs.

The subtle kind.🤔

The sort of issue that can quietly affect performance, behaviour, balance, and movement long before anyone recognises it as a soundness problem.

Why?

Because horses with discomfort or dysfunction or weakness in a hind leg often alter the way they move. They redistribute load, change how they push off the ground, and compensate through their body. Those altered forces travel through the horse's back and can gradually push the saddle off centre.

This doesn't just apply to horses with obvious injuries. It can occur in horses with mild lameness, asymmetries, weakness, developmental immaturity, or conditions affecting structures such as the stifle, sacroiliac region, suspensory apparatus, or other parts of the hind limb.

Now here's the part that many people find surprising.

The researchers found that saddle slip was actually associated with well-balanced saddles that had even contact and good flocking.😲

In other words, a saddle that slips isn't necessarily poorly fitted.

In fact, if you've had the saddle checked, adjusted, reflocked, replaced, and the problem keeps returning, there may be something else worth investigating.

The most compelling finding came when the researchers identified the source of the hindlimb pain and used diagnostic nerve blocks to remove the discomfort.

The saddle slip disappeared in 97% of cases.😱

Read that again.

Ninety-seven percent.😱

The saddle didn't change.

The girth didn't change.

The saddle pad didn't change.

The horse's movement changed.🤯

That's a pretty powerful clue.😎

One of the biggest challenges with horses is that we often focus on the symptom we can see rather than the cause we can't.

The slipping saddle becomes the problem.

The canter transition becomes the problem.

The spooky behaviour becomes the problem.

The horse drifting through the shoulder becomes the problem.

But sometimes these things are not separate problems at all.

Sometimes they are all clues pointing towards the same underlying issue.

So if your saddle consistently slips despite multiple fitting assessments and equipment changes, it may be worth considering whether your horse is trying to tell you something.

And if that saddle slip is accompanied by things like:
- Canter difficulties
- Resistance under saddle
- Reactive or spooky behaviour
- Struggles with engagement
then the possibility of an underlying soundness issue becomes even more important to investigate.⚠️

One of the most valuable lessons I've learned working with horses is that behaviour, performance, and movement are often connected in ways that aren't immediately obvious.

A slipping saddle may not always indicate a soundness issue...sometimes it can be a YOU issue, but that is for another article another day.

But if it keeps happening despite your best efforts to fix it, it might be worth looking beyond the saddle.💡

Sometimes the saddle is not the problem.

It's the clue.

References
Greve, L., & Dyson, S. J. (2013). An Investigation of the Relationship Between Hindlimb Lameness and Saddle Slip. Equine Veterinary Journal, 45(5), 570-577.
Greve, L., & Dyson, S. J. (2014). The Interrelationship of Lameness, Saddle Slip and Back Shape in the General Sports Horse Population. Equine Veterinary Journal, 46(6), 687-694.

Collectable Advice 226/365. Please SHARE or hit SAVE. Please no copy and pasting.

I attended a 1-day clinic yesterday at Moonstone Stables , where we explored different aspects of equine care and how th...
07/06/2026

I attended a 1-day clinic yesterday at Moonstone Stables , where we explored different aspects of equine care and how they all connect to support a happy, healthy horse.

The day covered:

☆ Equine bodywork
☆ Farriery
☆ Saddle fitting
☆ Equine & rider biomechanics

It was a real “pieces of the puzzle” experience—each topic adding more in-depth understanding, and naturally raising new questions along the way.

Very informative overall, and I left with a much broader perspective on how everything fits together.

- we had an equine visitor who also found it extremely interesting and was dropping in constantly...

The reality of working with horses, even when they aren't yours -  is that you fall in love with nearly all of them...
31/05/2026

The reality of working with horses, even when they aren't yours - is that you fall in love with nearly all of them...

Sometimes you just need to rest & take it all in after an EMMETT session. I must say,  I get to work on some pretty cute...
25/05/2026

Sometimes you just need to rest & take it all in after an EMMETT session. I must say, I get to work on some pretty cute individuals 🐎

Doing a session over the weekend and the horses in the neighboring paddock kept coming over to share in the calm... real...
11/05/2026

Doing a session over the weekend and the horses in the neighboring paddock kept coming over to share in the calm... really love this technique & how attuned to it the horses are - even from afar.

✨ Why Muscle Release Therapy Matters for Both Horse & Rider ✨Tension, stiffness, and compensation patterns don’t only af...
11/05/2026

✨ Why Muscle Release Therapy Matters for Both Horse & Rider ✨

Tension, stiffness, and compensation patterns don’t only affect performance — they affect comfort, communication, and confidence too.

Muscle release therapy helps horses move more freely, improve flexibility, release tight or overworked muscles, and support better balance through the body. Riders benefit too by reducing tension, improving posture, mobility, and body awareness in the saddle.

When both horse *and* rider move comfortably, everything feels softer, more connected, and more harmonious. 🐴🤍

A relaxed body creates a happier partnership.
Photos in this post are of me working on my horse, not only does he benefit significantly from these sessions, but I can feel the changes in the saddle.

https://www.facebook.com/share/1FkSR7N915/
07/04/2026

https://www.facebook.com/share/1FkSR7N915/

The EMMETT Technique is a unique form of body relaxation therapy for both people and animals, where light finger pressure is applied at specific points with the intention to trigger a relaxation response in the soft tissues of the body. The response and the feeling of ease in the area is often immediate. Animals can be treated wherever they are comfortable and a typical session will last from 10 – 30 minutes.

Another happy customer 💛
01/03/2026

Another happy customer 💛

01/03/2026

Sound on 🔊

Every horse responds differently to work being done, and that is one of the reasons it is so important to be able to adapt your session to the horse, and situation at hand. This lovely boy is usually quite nervous according to his owner and can find new experiences overwhelming.

In the first few moments he was alert and unsure - but within minutes of starting our session his head lowered, his eyes softened, and his whole body began to relax. That shift happened slowly, and organically. By the end of his very first session, he had completely settled into it.

EMMETT is gentle, subtle and always done at the horses' pace - which is why even sensitive or anxious horses often respond so beautifully to it.

I've shared 2 videos so you can see his reaction during the session. Can you spot the moment he let's go?

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