Sarah Ridd Veterinary Therapist

Sarah Ridd Veterinary Therapist

Share

Nearby clinics

Susan Felton
Susan Felton

Sarah Ridd Veterinary Physiotherapist BSc (hons) provides comprehensive therapeutic massage and remedial prescription exercise.

Photos from Sarah Ridd Veterinary Therapist's post 07/04/2026

👇🏻Why I use raised pole work 🐎
More then you may think let me explain


🔶 Motor control

As the limb approaches and clears the pole:

– The horse cannot rely on its usual, often inefficient, movement pattern
– It has to reorganise the timing and sequencing of the stride
– There is increased demand on proprioceptive feedback and motor planning

This is why poles are so effective —
they don’t just strengthen, they retrain movement.



🔶 Thoracic sling

To lift and place the limb accurately:

– The thoracic sling (serratus ventralis, pectorals) must control the trunk between the forelimbs
– You’ll often see improved withers lift and reduced collapse through the shoulder
– The limb is no longer just pushing — it is supporting and stabilising



🔶 Pelvic sling & hindlimb contribution

Through the stride:

– The hindlimb has to flex more and step through more deliberately
– There is increased demand on gluteals, hamstrings and abdominal support
– The pelvis becomes more controlled rather than trailing

This is where you start to see improved engagement and step quality, not just activity.



🔶 Epaxial stability

With the increased limb flexion and altered timing:

– The epaxial muscles (longissimus, multifidus) must stabilise the spine
– Rather than bracing, they work to control movement between segments
– This supports a more functional thoracolumbar posture



🔶 Limb loading & joint mechanics

This is clearly visible in the photos:

– Increased joint flexion to clear the pole
– A more controlled flight arc
– More deliberate foot placement on landing

Which leads to:

– Smoother load acceptance
– Reduced abrupt loading
– More even distribution of forces through the limb



🔶 Why this matters

Without this type of stimulus, many horses will:

– Default to habitual, often compensatory, movement patterns
– Reduce joint articulation
– Load asymmetrically without it being obvious

Poles introduce just enough challenge to change the strategy of movement.



🔁 Progression

Once this is established, a belly thoraband can be added to:

– Increase abdominal activation
– Support thoracolumbar lift
– Reinforce postural stability



🔶 Take-home

This isn’t about getting a bigger step.

It’s about improving:

– Motor control
– Stability through the slings
– Quality of limb loading

That’s what underpins soundness and performance.



If you’re unsure what you should be seeing in your own horse, feel free to get in touch.

02/04/2026

Providing local Veterinary Physiotherapy - to your pets helping put that spring back into their step.

Photos from Sarah Ridd Veterinary Therapist's post 31/03/2026

Pole work… but not as you think 👇

This isn’t just about “lifting the legs”.

Even a simple static pole exercise like this is doing a huge amount for your horse’s neuromuscular system.

🧠 Proprioception (body awareness)
As the limb contacts and negotiates the pole, receptors in the hoof, joints and soft tissues are stimulated. This improves coordination, accuracy of limb placement and overall movement quality.

⚖️ Loading vs medial proprioception
The horse is constantly making small postural adjustments:
• Loading proprioception (green) → sensing and controlling weight through each limb
• Medial/lateral proprioception (purple) → awareness of limb position relative to the body

This is especially valuable in horses with asymmetry, weakness or post-injury compensation patterns.

💪 Muscle function – not just movement, but control
• Isometric stabilisation → maintaining posture over the pole
• Eccentric control → regulating load through tendons and joints (especially the fetlock and suspensory system)
• Concentric activation → subtle lifting and repositioning of the limbs

🔗 The big picture: the whole horse is involved
With the head and neck inline with the spine or lowered, the ventral muscle chain is engaged, encouraging:
• Activation of the abdominal system
• Reduced reliance on the thoracolumbar extensors
• Improved spinal stability

This creates a foundation for better movement, not just bigger movement.

✨ Why I use this in practice
• Early-stage rehab
• Improving coordination and balance
• Re-training movement patterns
• Building a stronger, more stable topline

It’s simple… but incredibly effective when used correctly.

Because good rehab isn’t about doing more — it’s about doing the right things well.

Want your practice to be the top-listed Clinic in Guildford?
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.

Telephone

Address


Trunley Heath Road
Guildford
GU5OBW

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 8am - 5pm
Saturday 8am - 11am