Wharfedale Equine Therapy

Wharfedale Equine Therapy Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Wharfedale Equine Therapy, Massage Therapist, Chevin Side, Leeds.

Certified Masterson Method Practitioner (CMMP), Upledger Craniosacral Therapy Levels 1 & 2, Certified Equine Sports Massage Therapist (EMST), BHSAI, Graduate Diploma in Lymphoedema, Casley Smith MLD Practioner, Kinesio Taping 1,2&3 (human) Level 1 Equine

Every horse you work with teaches you something but there are some horses that literally teach you lessons so profound t...
04/05/2026

Every horse you work with teaches you something but there are some horses that literally teach you lessons so profound that you take them with you from that moment on to every horse you ever touch and change you as a person!

Holly was a horse that demanded that you listened to her, but if you did and you gave her the time she rewarded you with moments so tender that you were left wondering afterwards whether that really did happen!

What Holly and her owner showed me is that when a relationship between a horse and a human is based on love you end up with a connection that goes way beyond what anyone can see externally, and you can overcome so many obstacles together.

Thank you for everything Holly I can’t believe you are gone, I know just how much you will be missed, you were literally a one in a million horse ❤️

I started my filly last year and then gave her the winter off. I have very recently started bringing her back into ridde...
18/03/2026

I started my filly last year and then gave her the winter off. I have very recently started bringing her back into ridden work.

For me it’s very important to give her some choice right from the start, therefore rather than pushing her into walk I’ve been either waiting for her to make the decision to walk forward whilst allowing with my body, or asking her to step to the side slightly if she gets a little stuck and seeing if she can flow forward into the movement. If she walks forwards and then stops I am allowing her to stand for as long as she needs to (I think sometimes we don’t spend enough time at the beginning on standing still and then wonder why it’s difficult to stop later on).

I’ve been trying to keep the energy flowing back and forth between us so I just don’t make her do. This I think is very hard for us to do as humans as we often feel we should be doing something and perhaps here we can learn from the horses who if allowed spend an awful lot of their time doing nothing.

I’d let her stand for ages and then suddenly even though she looked really calm she yawned and yawned, a definite sign of release.

I’m very much trying to work with her both on the ground and ridden in the same way I would do in bodywork in that when you hit something you don’t push through it but soften to the brace instead. I was mentioning this to my friend and she reminded me of something I told her that Jim Masterson used to say when I was doing my training. He would always say to wait on a spot then when you think you’ve waited long enough wait another twenty seconds more. It’s always amazing how much more you would get in that extra twenty seconds! 😊

I’ve learnt so much about both feet and the connections to the horses body’s since trimming my own horses using David’s ...
10/03/2026

I’ve learnt so much about both feet and the connections to the horses body’s since trimming my own horses using David’s methods. I’m really looking forward to attending David’s clinic in the uk later this year.

I particularly love the way David teaches us to work with the horse and read there responses during trimming just as I would do whilst carrying out bodywork.

I think often we do not realise what a privileged it is that a horse allows us to have its leg and it’s something we should think about a little bit more rather than just expecting it to just be something that they do.

https://www.facebook.com/100063660723632/posts/1575757767889566/?mibextid=rS40aB7S9Ucbxw6v

Life with horses isn’t a race. We need to be happy with small steps as often time and patience are more important than a...
08/01/2026

Life with horses isn’t a race. We need to be happy with small steps as often time and patience are more important than any technique 🥰

Hello. Happy new year to you.

As many of you know I am a big fan of Nahshon Cook, and I absolutely loved this podcast. So much so that I have already ...
02/01/2026

As many of you know I am a big fan of Nahshon Cook, and I absolutely loved this podcast. So much so that I have already listened to it several times. There were things to learn in there but also many validating points for me.

I’ve felt recently that I perhaps needed to change the way I work a bit for many of the reasons mentioned in the podcast. Today something happened that really made me understand the way to go forward with this (more about that in my next post).

I love this podcast but I did wonder if it some people wouldn’t be ready for it, but today made me realise that it’s not for me to say who is ready or not and also if I hide from things that I truly believe then I am not being true to myself, and the thing horses (and people deep down I believe) hate is a lack of congruency..

Thank you Nahshon Cook for your honesty and wisdom, and thank you to the beautiful young lady who has no idea just how much she taught me about myself and how I can help people today ❤️

The Little Horse Big Conversation Podcast · Episode

Merry Christmas to you all! May you have a relaxing time with your family human and equine and look forward to seeing yo...
24/12/2025

Merry Christmas to you all! May you have a relaxing time with your family human and equine and look forward to seeing you in the New Year 🎉🎄🤶🥂###

21/12/2025

This 🥰

14/12/2025

Why I don’t do deep tissue work on horses.

I am extremely grateful for the quality of training I received as a body worker. Before I could qualify as an equine massage therapist I had to train in human massage. I had no desire to do this (I mean, human bodies……….) but there was an important reason why. We humans have a voice, and can and should use it when receiving therapy. It is easy to impose ourselves on the equine body in a way we imagine feels good, but does, in fact, not. Spending time on human bodies first provides the verbal feedback many of us need.

Several years ago I got ran over by a training horse. A good looking Arab who’d had it with people. Not his fault, but the end result was he ran over me - all four feet- up my side, over my neck and head. I learned a lot, about horse owners and horses. And of course, my own short comings.

I have been gently - and sometimes not so gently- suffering ever since. It caused a bone spur in my neck which produces residual pain in my shoulder and arm. Mostly it just grumbles, sometimes it spasms.

Ever since I have taken myself along to an incredible cranial sacral therapist who, by ostensibly ‘not doing very much at all’, is actually doing an awful lot. This keeps me out of serious pain and comfortable enough to function.

A few weeks ago this injury was aggravated. and as my cranial sacred goddess is away I looked for a massage therapist. She did what is often done, and dug away with her elbow on the sore bits and applied a lot of cross tissue pressure on the spasmy bits. I said ‘Oh that’s a bit sore’ in a small breathless voice a few times, and she said ‘I’m not really using that much pressure’. So I shut up and held my breath.

Now, following this treatment, I can’t move that arm or shoulder at all. I’m rattling with pain killers, strapped to a TENS machine and trying not to get too far away from a hot water bottle. Again, my fault. I should have got off that table and protected my body, rather than her feelings.

The more time I have spent with my hands on horse bodies, the less and less it seems necessary to do. I don’t impose stretches, I don’t use trigger point therapy, I don’t use knuckles, or elbows or digging about into sore points.

If a body is having to protect itself from a therapist, my experience is that not much good is being achieved. It might feel satisfying to knead away at tight muscles, but bruising should not be the outcome of a treatment. I no longer have my horses cracked, or ‘overly’ manipulated, or in any way manhandled in treatments. There are very, very few people I’ll let get their hands on my horses.

The body will do its own remarkable amount of healing in response to small suggestions and touch which feels safe, Very often ALL we need to do is provide a space for the body to feel safe in and it will begin to weave its own magic. It’s remarkable what we can offer our horses with the most minimal of touch (I don’t want to say ‘light’ touch as this often produces something from a human which horses also don’t appreciate).

While we may enjoy seeing a body worker ‘Get right in there’ with our horse; very often their body might have been better off with a lot, lot, less.

04/12/2025

The problem with change, is that we have to do it.

A couple of weeks ago I taught someone I have worked with for a long time. Even as she walked in, I could sense things were different in her. And her horse was more than able to tell the story of change - his expression was happy and interested; rather than frustrated and defensive.

As soon as she started doing some things with him, everything was different. It was probably one of the most exponential changes I have ever witnessed. I asked her what had happened and she said she just got tired of hearing the same things in lessons, over and over. From me, and from every other teacher she encountered. In her case the message was pretty simple. For the sake of every horse, get clearer. Be more effective.

She was a gold star student in being soft. Being quiet, being gentle. She is a sensitive human and a lovely rider. But these qualities can't exist in isolation, otherwise you are limiting the conversation to a very small range.

This - of course - does not mean you need to be aggressive or angry. But what could be seen is that horses were often left in a vacuum by her. Where ARE you? What do you MEAN?
With some horses this just resulted in things getting a bit woolly and their understanding diminished or didn't progress. In her own horses case, he got cross. He could not stick that feeling from her. I don't believe horses are sent to us for a reason (amazingly, we are not the center of the universe), but sometimes one comes along which is well timed. In this instance, he was the perfect teacher.

Therefore, in order to meet her horse where he was, she took a long hard look at the thing she found came least naturally to her and decided to address it. A way of being she found the hardest to be, and had the least desire to practice. And she practiced it. I take my hat off to her (and then put it back on because it's bloody freezing).

Because, what many of us do instead (myself included) is just keep practicing more of the same. Or gathering acres of information, going to clinic after clinic, having hundreds of lessons, and resolutely not addressing that elephant in the corner of the arena - the thing we need to actually change. It's why we plateau, despite the hours we put in. It's why we keep getting the same results even though we know we are 'trying really hard'.

And it's also why early next year we are going to be running an online coaching course for horse riders and owners, because seeing these kind of changes is what keeps me inspired as a teacher, I love it. Thanks for the inspiration young Jedi, your horse is also delighted.

I really enjoyed this podcast. I’m lucky enough to have been able to buy a few acres and we are trying to take a rewildi...
01/12/2025

I really enjoyed this podcast. I’m lucky enough to have been able to buy a few acres and we are trying to take a rewilding approach to our land. I know how challenging this can be for many horse owners situation but perhaps there are small changes ypu can make to benefit your horses and the land they live on.

The Brand New Episode

‘IN CONVERSATION WITH.. KATE LEMON & RINA QUINLAN: EQUINE CONSERVATION CONVERSATION'

Episode 15

'In this auroch-sized episode, Amy and Ross are joined by two special guests, Rewilding Delivery Manager, Kate Lemon of the Derbyshire Wildlife Trust and rewilding specialist, Rina Quinlan of Rina Quinlan Research & Rewilding Consultancy.

Together, we delve into public misconceptions that surround rewilding, benefits that rewilding can have on humans and our long-term management of equines, and of course, what equines can bring to conservation and rewilding projects across the world.'

Streaming now on all platforms; Amazon Music, Apple Podcasts, Podbean, Spotify & More!

Listen here:
https://littlehorsebigconversation.podbean.com

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Areion Academy
Rosca Horsemanship
Strong Foundations Hoof Care
Little Horse Big Conversation Podcast
The Wildlife Trusts

Address

Chevin Side
Leeds
LS213JJ

Opening Hours

Monday 7am - 5pm
Tuesday 7am - 5pm
Wednesday 7am - 5pm
Thursday 7am - 5pm
Friday 7am - 5pm
Saturday 8am - 4pm

Telephone

+447737952091

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