Holistic Horseworks Talks with April Love
Introducing the Holistic Horseworks Talks podcast! Hosted by April Love, the founder of Holistic Horseworks, this podcast offers valuable insight and solutions to those "little issues" that are often encountered with equine companions.
With her wealth of knowledge and decades of experience in working with them, April offers a unique perspective on horse health and well-being. Through this podcast, she answers listener questions and shares real-life stories that resonate with horse owners everywhere.
In a world where horses face so many challenges in their daily lives, and the "good ol' ways" just aren't cutting it anymore, this podcast brings fresh content to listeners, providing them with innovative approaches and techniques to address the challenges of today's modern horses.
This podcast explores a variety of topics, including horse bodywork, natural remedies, emotional wellness, and the importance of understanding the horse as a whole, sentient being. April Love's dedication to promoting not only horse health but also a harmonious bond between horse and rider shines through as she offers practical advice and insightful guidance. Her authentic and compassionate approach, combined with her expertise in holistic horse care, provides a platform for horse owners to explore new horizons and find effective solutions to enhance their horse's overall well-being.
Whether you're dealing with mysterious lameness, behavioral and training issues, issues, saddle fit, hoof balance, or high vet bills, the Holistic Horseworks Talks podcast is an invaluable resource for horse owners everywhere.
Tune in to embark on a journey of discovery, learning, and empowerment as you navigate the world of holistic horse care. Let April Love's wisdom and stories guide you toward a deeper understanding of your horse's unique health needs and a more fulfilling partnership with your equine companion.
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Holistic Horseworks Talks with April Love
Tips For Tuning Up Your Horse In Spring.
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Springtime is a good time to give your horse a nice tuneup.
Start by looking at the horse's mouth. Get an equine dentist to work on the teeth. When the teeth don't line up correctly, the bit is going to be very uncomfortable for the horse.
The next thing, is what to do about all that hair!
Then, take a look at the feet. They've been soaking in mud for a while. The horse has to run on these hooves.
Soaking the feet in my special solution will kill the fungus, and improve overall hoof health.
My yoga program will show you where the horse has glitches. Then follow my bodywork program to clear up those glitches.
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Hi, this is Lillian and I'm here with April Love of Holistic Horseworks
It’s springtime, what can horse owners do to give their horse a good spring tuneup?
April: So the first thing again, you're going to be having more exercise coming up and you want to make sure the horse is balanced. So, every spring is when you should be looking at not all the vaccinations, but a dental exam on your horse to make sure before you're putting a bit in, before they're needing to eat more and bring more calories that all the teeth are in balance, including the front.
I've seen some people use power tools in the back and not even touch the front teeth and then the horse can barely connect. And there's a lot of lameness issues that are actually related to individual teeth. So please make sure you find an equine dentist. This is not the normal veterinarian unless they took the $25,000 classes in equine dentistry, which is usually just hand tools.
So, we start with the teeth and being able to eat and you don't even want to go out there because you know when you're grooming your horse, you're going to be wearing all that hair back in the house, in the mudroom, tracking it everywhere. It's in your car. So, for people on a budget, what I had done is find a vacuum attachment.
At the time I was using Bissell. Bissell. It was a big dog grooming brush with a clear plastic dome and metal serrated teeth that were really short. And it went on the end of a shop vac. So, I just got a shop vac that my horse got used to the noise got a longer hose and used a $29 dog grooming tool, and just started vacuuming the horses.
And they love it. It pulls the oils up and their skin and it helps to get rid of dandruff. Their whole coat's healthier and you're not going to be wearing it like it does when currying and it's going off into the wind and everything. So, a lot of horses don’t like vacuum noise, but they really get used to it.
And when you just do long strokes and back in them, they really like it. The black Lab that I used to have, she would just wiggle and smile and grin and like vacuum me, vacuum me to show that was really nice in the house as well. If you vacuum the hair off the dog, you don't have to vacuum all the hair up off the floor.
So that's what I start with because the whole grooming process is like, Oh, my God, I got to groom my horse for an hour and it was going to be hair everywhere.
And then we want to look at their feet. What's the quality of their feet that have been in the mud? The horse has to run on these hooves.
So, I have an amazing hoof soak recipe. And the only boots that I like are the U.C. Davis Soaker boots. You can find them on Amazon pretty cheap. They're really sturdy and I do two or three hoof soaks to just pull out toxins, it's like an ionic foot bath for people. So I might only do one or two on the high end, which can be a little more challenging.
And if you have old IV bags from the vet, the big IV bags, you can put it on like a sock on the horse and just do a little bit of vet wrap to tighten it, especially on the hind feet so that you don't have these big boots sloshing and I'll use the UC Davis soaker boots on the front and I make sure I kind of walk the horse around a little bit so they're not afraid of the boots, before you add the soaking solution, which has a little bit of a tingle to it. So, if you have a lot of flies in your area, you want to make sure you fly, spray the legs or put something on them so they won't be picking up their legs to slam down. And you put this solution in for 45 minutes and it's just amazing.
It's one cup of Epsom salt and two full droppers full. So, I have the Dynamite liquid trace minerals. So when you open the bottle and you squeeze up a dropper full, it'll only be half. So, if, if it's doing that in your bottle you have to do six half-droppers full and that's in a 32-ounce shaker bottle, like our smoothie shaker bottles. That's 32 ounces. You can shake it up in there and then pour it in the boots. Stay there with them. Give them a hay bag. So, they're not sloshing around in the water.
And normally when you pull those boots off, it just smells like dead, rotting animal. It's just pulling everything out of the frog and a white line fungus that has separation on your hoof while you're looking at it barefoot.
If you see a separation in the hoof wall. That's the white line fungus. So, it kills and tightens the hoof wall. If you have a horse that has shoes on and you want to go barefoot. I recommend doing three of these soaks three days in a row before taking off the shoes and then the horse saying, “Oh, my God, my feet hurt so much, I'm not going to move anywhere.”
So, we want to balance the teeth. You want to balance the feet and vacuum the horse and then start into my yoga program to make sure everything can move correctly. So, my yoga program has five moves. And if they can't do any part of that easily, you have a glitch there. The carrots stretch, the nose should go all the way back to the stifle on both sides.
If it only goes on one side long and one side short, you have a glitch in that area. The leg circles up and over down to drunken horse pose. Should be easy. If it's easy with the right shoulder and not easy with the left shoulder and you tack it up and right it left front shoulder tightness is going to throw back to mysterious right hind issues.
It's going to throw stress to the diagonal so there are no mysterious lameness and by the time that you see a horse bob its head, it's already, to me, three-legged lame. And there's other compensation we need to look for. And I always start with how happy are the hooves, tendons, and suspensories. I have a video that you can look at on how to check your horses, suspensories, and tendons by palpating, especially if you're a jumper, barrel racer, or endurance rider... need to make sure those legs are ready to go.
So that starting with the whole horse's teeth and the hooves.
And then we get into the body issues, you know, the tail pull and the butt tucks. They can't do it if the pelvis is not in alignment. And if your pelvis isn't in alignment, you're going to start to get the roach back and the hunter's bump, but also the hocks that come too close together because your psoas in spasm.
So, then you have a horse that's going to pull the hills at the front end and not be able to push off the hind or engage the hind well. And then again you're going to have mysterious lameness. The belly lifts is all about, are all the ribs free and is the back free.
The belly lift scratch in the girth area should not be done with a hoof pick, you should just scratch and the whole back should pop up and you want to hold it there. So, it's like an isometric tone and stretch. And if your horse can't do the yoga well, you shouldn't be tacking it up and riding it until you do my bodywork program. The yoga is a great diagnostic tool.
If you're doing competitive endurance or barrel racing, like my clients, as soon as they're done with the event, they loosen the girth, they lift the back of the saddle. unless it's ice-cold air to take the pressure off and get some air underneath. You can leave the saddle on, and you can do my whole yoga program in between each event. And they found that by doing that and not sitting on the horse, you know, in the shade for the horse show, which just locks their whole back and just keeping them in movement, that their horses are doing the same speed events and performing as well at the end of the day, when everyone else's horses are starting to fade. And we'll also teach to work the K-27s, which is a nice little energy boost at the end of the day for one more event.
So, one of the things you should do before you ride is stand behind your horse about 10 feet. And if they're tall, get on a bucket and look at the top.
The back of their butt and their back from the rear is one hip higher is one side of the back, lower is the withers crooked? And that's on 95% of all the horses out there, which is why you need to learn my program. So, you can tune up your horse yourself. So, if you have a horse that's not looking symmetrical and you're putting on a straight treed saddle and girthing, it uptight, that's when they get girthy.
And the horses, if you're putting that saddle pad on and they're already pinning theirs and swishing their tail, your horse has pain. This is not an attitude of, “Oh, I just don't want to be ridden today.” It has to do with the horse’s body's crooked, you're tightening up the girth into a straight saddle with wood and leather that doesn't allow the horse to bend and breathe.
So, it's not just lunge the buck out of them, or, you know, tighten the girth slowly. You need to find out what the issue is. The horses that just hate to be girth, it's usually some kind of impact or trauma in the past from a horse kicking him or running into a fence that affected their whole sternum and the chiropractic and bodyworkers that are only working on the withers and the ribs on top and not looking to the intercostal is in the whole sternum tightness underneath is missing like half the issue.
So, email me if you have one of those horses that absolutely hates to be girthed up and I'll teach you about what we can do about all that. So please enjoy my free e-book. It's www.Horse Academy101.com. It goes into how all the issues start slipping and falling in the pasture, going down and trailer the foal taking a tumble in the field.
What happens to a horse when they pull back and they're tied to something and all the cranial nerve damage that's done? Our horses did not wake up and say, “Oh, I just really want to piss off my owner today and not do everything they asked me to do.” They don't work that way. They're loving, they're willing, they're kind, sentient beings.
So, if your horse is talking to saying, I'm not comfortable, I can't pick up the right canter. You know, it's not let's just keep lunging them until they can do it, because then you're going to end up with a really sore stifle or string hall or shivers in the hind leg. So, please contact me through my website, Holistihorseworks.com.
You can find over 190 helpful videos on my YouTube channel, Holistic Horse Works and Facebook page Holistic Horseworks. Hope to see you there.