Aberdeen Park Dressage Coaching

Aberdeen Park Dressage Coaching Dressage Lessons with a qualified NCAS EA Coach.

Bookings  for dressage over poles this coming Saturday 20/6.  Please pm to book! 🐴🐴🐴🐴🐴
16/06/2026

Bookings for dressage over poles this coming Saturday 20/6. Please pm to book!
🐴🐴🐴🐴🐴

09/06/2026

Sometimes I think we've forgotten what a normal horse looks like.

Not a perfect horse.

A normal horse.

Because a horse can't (and shouldn't have to be!) be perfectly calm every day.

Sometimes they're fresh.

Sometimes they're spooky.

Sometimes they're grumpy.

Sometimes they're lazy.

Sometimes they're carrying a little more condition than we'd like at the end of spring.

Sometimes they're looking a little rough at the end of winter.

Sometimes they get a mud fever scab.

Sometimes they lose a bit of topline.

Sometimes they have a few bumps, scratches and imperfections.

Because they're horses. They're not robots or motorbikes, but living, breathing, thinking, feeling, sentient beings.

And yet increasingly, every little imperfection seems to need a diagnosis, a supplement, a treatment, a therapy, a protocol or a product.

A horse that's fresh needs a calming supplement.

A horse that's overweight needs a metabolic product.

A horse that's underworked but full of energy becomes a horse with a behavioural problem.

A horse that's shedding oddly needs a new supplement to help with coat health.

Now before anyone gets upset, I'm not saying genuine health issues don't exist.

Of course they do. Lots of them. Because horses.

Good horse ownership absolutely does mean paying attention. We should notice when things change. We should investigate things that don't seem right.

But we shouldn't constantly be searching for problems that may not actually exist.

Somewhere along the way, I think we've started losing sight of what normal actually looks like.

We've become so accustomed to advertisements, before-and-after photos, miracle transformations and perfect looking horses, behaving perfectly on social media that we've started treating normal horse behaviours and normal horse fluctuations as though they're defects.

Horses just cannot exist in a perfectly managed, perfectly balanced, perfectly predictable state every day of the year.

Horses are alive and breathing, just like us.

Some days we wake up feeling fantastic.

Some days we're tired because we slept badly.

Some days we're stressed.

Some days we're hormonal.

Some days we eat too much.

Some days we eat too little.

Some days we're full of beans.

Some days we'd happily spend the entire day on the couch.

None of us look, feel or perform exactly the same every day of the year.

Why would we expect our horses to?

They're living creatures that respond to seasons, weather, workload, age, hormones, pasture conditions, social dynamics and a thousand other variables.

That's life.

The irony is that in our quest to optimise every little thing, we create stress where none previously existed.

We start chasing tiny imperfections that aren't actually problems. We spend money solving things that never needed solving.

We've become convinced that every quirk has a cause and every cause needs a solution.

Sometimes there is an issue. But sometimes the horse is simply being a horse.

And sometimes the thing that needs adjusting isn't the horse. It's our expectations.

02/06/2026

Anyone interested in Dressage with poles on Monday 8/6 (Kings Birthday)? Drop me a message and I’ll make it happen.
πŸ€—πŸ΄πŸ€—πŸ΄

DRESSAGE TEST PROTOCOL sessions this coming Saturday 6/6. Work through elements of your preferred test, gain tips on imp...
01/06/2026

DRESSAGE TEST PROTOCOL sessions this coming Saturday 6/6. Work through elements of your preferred test, gain tips on improving accuracy, ride the test without pressure in a relaxed atmosphere. Location Wandin North. Please Pm to book. 🐴🐴🐴

Dressage with poles this coming Saturday 30/5. Two riders per session.  Spots fill fast, please pm to book. Located in W...
26/05/2026

Dressage with poles this coming Saturday 30/5. Two riders per session. Spots fill fast, please pm to book. Located in Wandin North. 🐴🐴🐴

The Colors! πŸ€©β˜€οΈπŸ
19/05/2026

The Colors! πŸ€©β˜€οΈπŸ

All spots filled this coming Saturday. Please PM if you are interested in booking  Saturday 23/5🐴🐴🐴🐴🐴🐴DRESSAGE WITH POLE...
11/05/2026

All spots filled this coming Saturday. Please PM if you are interested in booking Saturday 23/5
🐴🐴🐴🐴🐴🐴
DRESSAGE WITH POLES

A couple of spots available this Saturday morning 16/5, shared (2 riders per session), located in Wandin North. Fun, relaxed atmosphere. Please PM to book.

10/05/2026

A recent study from the University of Tennessee provided strong support for something trainers, movement specialists, and bodyworkers have observed for years:

Ground poles significantly increase activation of important postural and core muscles in horses.

What the Study Found

Walking over ground poles increased activity in:

β€’ Longissimus dorsi β€” a major topline and spinal support muscle
β€’ Abdominal muscles β€” critical for core stability and support of the spine

Even at the walk, poles require the horse to:

β€’ Lift the limbs higher
β€’ Stabilize the trunk more actively
β€’ Organize posture and balance with greater precision
β€’ Continuously adjust limb placement and timing

At the trot, researchers also found increased activation of the abdominal muscles.

Trotting over poles requires greater dynamic stabilization, and the increased limb elevation demands more coordinated control of the trunk, pelvis, and spine.

What This Means

These findings support the long-standing use of cavaletti and ground poles as a low-impact way to:

β€’ Strengthen the topline
β€’ Improve abdominal engagement
β€’ Support spinal stability
β€’ Enhance proprioception and coordination
β€’ Encourage improved posture and self-carriage
β€’ Develop better movement organization through the whole body

One of the most important aspects of pole work is that it influences both sides of the postural system:

β€’ The dorsal chain β€” including the longissimus muscles along the back
β€’ The ventral chain β€” including the abdominal support system

This balance is essential for efficient movement, force transfer, and development of a healthy, functional topline.

But pole work is not only muscular.

It is neurological.

Each pole creates a movement problem the horse must solve in real time.

The horse has to:

β€’ Judge distance
β€’ Adjust stride length
β€’ Control timing
β€’ Stabilize the trunk
β€’ Organize the limbs in space
β€’ Adapt moment-to-moment to changing demands

That process requires attention, coordination, body awareness, and ongoing nervous system regulation.

In many horses, poles appear to improve focus not simply because the horse is β€œbehaving,” but because the nervous system is becoming more engaged and organized around the task.

Pole work may also influence neurological tone β€” the background level of muscular and nervous system readiness that affects posture, movement quality, stiffness, and coordination.

For some horses, this can help reduce excessive bracing and improve adaptability through the body.
For others, it can help improve postural engagement and overall organization.

Why It Matters

Regular pole work can benefit many types of horses:

β€’ Young horses developing coordination and posture
β€’ Performance horses improving strength, agility, movement quality, and limb awareness
β€’ Horses rebuilding core control and stability after periods of weakness or reduced work
β€’ Older horses maintaining mobility, coordination, and movement confidence

Importantly, many of these benefits occur even at the walk, making poles accessible to horses across a wide range of ages, disciplines, and fitness levels.

Rather than simply β€œmaking horses pick up their feet,” poles appear to challenge the nervous system, postural system, sensory system, and muscular system together β€” encouraging the horse to organize movement with greater control, awareness, and adaptability.

https://koperequine.com/step-by-step-the-benefits-of-walk-poles-for-horses/

29/04/2026

One dressage with poles spot available at 1.30pm this Saturday. Pm to book. 😊🐴

Address

Boundary Road
Lilydale, VIC
3140

Telephone

+61413154346

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