KAD Concept Bodywork

KAD Concept Bodywork Bodywork • Breeding • Rehabilitation • Training • Care Products

This man is my huge success story. He came to me few months ago with the long time injury. He never said no just his per...
10/05/2026

This man is my huge success story. He came to me few months ago with the long time injury. He never said no just his performance declined and it was how he ended up here. With amazing Med Vet we won the battle and he is now returning to full work. It will take time to build him back to full strength but he will be fully functional athlete again 💪🏼 Super feeling to ride him now and see unreal change in his attitude. From always wiggly man to the laid back smooch 😍

MICROCHIPPING 🥳Since I’m travelling back and forth South Island seeing my lovely clients. I thought I can also bring mic...
07/05/2026

MICROCHIPPING 🥳
Since I’m travelling back and forth South Island seeing my lovely clients. I thought I can also bring microchipping to you ☺️ soon also DNA testing hopefully.

Christchurch clients! I’m looking at visiting few clients around Christchurch and could add few more in different areas ...
08/03/2026

Christchurch clients! I’m looking at visiting few clients around Christchurch and could add few more in different areas to make few full days rather than long distance travels. Therefore atm books gets open for Christchurch 🥳

Please PM to book in.
Over an hour treatments with various techniques. $150 if I have to travel to less than 5 horses. $130 if I can gather 5+ horses in one area for a day.

Powerful PEMF treatment available too
Shockwave for specific cases in a very welcoming prices.

I’m practicing in NZ for over 6 years now and work with horses on World Cup levels, our Olympic rider and all sorts of amateur riders down to the pets. I do cooperate with few amazing vets and treat every client accordingly to their needs.
Session starts with a whole-horse assessment and conversation about concerns and goals for the treatment.

I deliberately avoid forceful chiropractic cracking. Instead, I use precise, soft, neurologically informed techniques that the horse can accept and integrate:

Soft joint mobilisations (within physiological range)

Muscle release work (including deep and superficial layers)

Fascial work and myofascial lines (addressing tension chains through the body)

Trigger point therapy

Cranio-sacral theraphy.

Acupressure and acupuncture points (to influence neuromuscular and autonomic responses)

Nervous-system down-regulation where needed (especially for tense, defensive, or chronic pain horses)

This allows the body to reset movement patterns, not just temporarily feel looser.

Regarding the courses done: I was taught lots by vet-chiro but I do very rarely use hard adjustments as there is more long term results with softer approach. Over years done many, many courses and never stop learning but probably most valuable are two levels of Equinology with way bigger tool kit I use as needed for example pictured cupping. I believe the fact that I have ridden horses competitively on quite high levels in Europe and to this day I breed and produce youngsters gives me a specific advantage along with the feeling I’m apparently born with 🤷🏻‍♀️

I also travel with very powerful PEMF machine which can access 18 cm depth and has programs for soft tissue and bones levels and can be combined with the laser treatment at the same time.

If the owner can’t make time I’m more than happy to treat on my own as long as the horse is manageable and not stressed by a new person type.

For more information please send PM

PEMF isn’t just tolerated by dogs — it’s genuinely enjoyed 🐶⚡This little guy relaxed into his session within minutes.No ...
28/01/2026

PEMF isn’t just tolerated by dogs — it’s genuinely enjoyed 🐶⚡

This little guy relaxed into his session within minutes.
No restraint. No stress. No force.

PEMF (Pulsed Electromagnetic Field therapy) works at a cellular level, supporting:
• pain and inflammation reduction
• improved circulation
• joint and tissue recovery
• nervous system regulation

That’s why so many dogs settle, soften, and switch off during treatment.

Ideal for:
✔️ aging dogs
✔️ post-injury or post-surgery recovery
✔️ active and sport dogs
✔️ dogs that can’t tolerate heavy manual work

Non-invasive. Drug-free. Individualised settings.

When dogs relax like this, it tells you their nervous system feels safe — and that’s where healing starts

📌 How I Work – Scope, Ethics, and Horse WelfareI want to be clear about how I operate so owners can make informed decisi...
22/01/2026

📌 How I Work – Scope, Ethics, and Horse Welfare

I want to be clear about how I operate so owners can make informed decisions.

Horse welfare is non-negotiable.
Every horse is treated as an individual, with respect for their physical limits, history, and current workload.

🔹 Scope of Practice
• I provide equine bodywork, rehabilitation support, and functional assessment
• I do not diagnose, replace veterinary care, or override veterinary instructions
• I work alongside veterinarians where required and regularly accept vet referrals
• All work is done with owner consent and transparency

🔹 Decision-Making
• Treatment plans are based on:
• Observation and functional assessment
• Known pathology or veterinary findings (when available)
• Training load, saddle/hoof balance, and management factors
• If something is outside my scope, I say so and refer on

🔹 Ethics & Integrity
• I will decline work if I believe it is unsafe, inappropriate, or not in the horse’s best interest
• I do not promise miracles, shortcuts, or instant fixes
• Rehabilitation is a process, not a single session

🔹 Communication
• Owners are encouraged to ask questions and be involved
• Concerns should always be raised directly, not anonymously or second-hand
• Constructive feedback is welcome; vague or anonymous accusations are not helpful to horses or professionals

🔹 Track Record
• I am grateful for the many owners, trainers, and veterinarians who trust me with their horses
• References and examples of my work are available on request

If you are unsure whether my approach is right for you or your horse, I’m happy to discuss that before any booking is made. The same refers to the payments.

Thank you to those who value professionalism, accountability, and evidence-based care.

— Karolina, KAD Concept

Most injuries don’t start  “out of nowhere.”They start with a stiff body, a dropped sternum, a fake frame, and a nervous...
19/11/2025

Most injuries don’t start “out of nowhere.”

They start with a stiff body, a dropped sternum, a fake frame, and a nervous system that’s been forced to cope with bad information stride after stride.



GRF: The Force Your Horse Can’t Opt Out Of

Every time a hoof hits the ground, the horse pushes down and back into the surface.
The ground pushes up and forward with equal force.

That push from the ground is GRF – Ground Reaction Force.
• Vertical GRF = impact and weight-bearing.
How hard the ground hits back up into the limb.
• Horizontal GRF = braking and propulsion.
How much the ground resists sliding and how much push the horse can generate.
• Side-to-side (mediolateral) GRF = the wobble.
What happens when the horse lands more on inside/outside of the hoof, or on a camber, rut, or slippery patch.

GRF is the signal the body uses to organise movement.
It travels from hoof → tendons and ligaments → fascia → thoracic sling → spine → whole body.

If the horse is aligned and allowed to move honestly, GRF is used like a spring:
absorbed, stored, and released.

If the horse is crooked, stiff, or shoved into a false frame, the same GRF becomes a weapon.



How a Fake Frame Starts the Injury Chain

Take a body that is already a bit tight and crooked. Then add:
• Head and neck pulled into “roundness.”
• Nose behind the vertical, over-flexion at C3–C5.
• Base of the neck dropped, withers not truly lifting.
• Rider chasing outline instead of balance.

Now look at what happens to GRF:
• More vertical force goes into the front end because the horse is tipped onto the shoulders.
• Hind limbs can’t step under properly, so hocks push behind the horse, not underneath.
• One diagonal (e.g. right fore–left hind) usually ends up doing more work.

Fascia reads this distorted force pattern and adapts:
• The forelimb fascial sleeve (hoof → tendons → suspensory → thoracic sling) densifies on the overloaded leg.
• The thoracic sling (serratus, pectorals, subclavius) starts to brace to stop the horse falling on its nose.
• The thoracolumbar fascia (back) stops gliding and starts acting like armour.

From the saddle, you feel:
• A back that gets harder and less swinging over time.
• One rein that is always heavier; one shoulder that always wants to fall in.
• A horse that “needs longer to warm up” and “works out of it” once you’ve forced it into shape.

That “works out of it” feeling is not improvement.
It’s the body hiding the problem by adding more compensation.

This is where injuries start.



Surfaces: How Bad Footing Twists GRF Even Further

Now add footing that makes GRF even more hostile.

Hard / Compacted Ground
• Very fast, high-impact vertical GRF.
• Shock travels straight up the limb with little help from the surface.
• Forelimb fascia, pastern joints, fetlocks, and carpi take the hit.

In a fake frame, where the horse is already downhill, that means:
• More concussion in the front end.
• More bracing in the thoracic sling and neck to stabilise the rider.
• A back that gives up on swinging and just holds.

Deep / Holding Ground
• Slower vertical load, but massive braking and drag.
• Every stride, the hoof sinks; the limb must climb out of a hole.
• Flexor tendons, suspensories, and hocks do enormous eccentric work.

On a horse in a false outline:
• The front legs dig and drag because the body is already on the forehand.
• Hind limbs trail out behind instead of stepping under, overloading the plantar fascia, hocks, and proximal suspensories.
• Fascia along the flexor and gluteal lines becomes tight cables instead of elastic springs.

Slippery / Uneven Ground
• GRF direction changes stride to stride.
• Feet slide, twist, or land unevenly inside vs outside wall.
• The nervous system can’t predict load, so it chooses survival mode: global stiffness.

On a horse already stiff and forced into a frame:
• Proprioception (body awareness) crashes.
• The horse shortens stride, braces the back, and moves like it’s on eggshells.
• One side of the body turns into a permanent stabiliser; the other side turns into a permanent pusher.

Again: this is where injuries start.

Not on the one “bad” day, but on thousands of compromised strides where GRF is being pushed through a body that can no longer handle it correctly.



What You See Before the “Sudden” Injury

Before the suspensory tear, the “mystery” lameness, the SI issue, or the blown tendon, you nearly always had:
• A horse that needed “more leg” to go forward.
• A neck that was round to the eye but dead in your hand.
• A back that got flatter, not more lifted, the more “on the bit” you tried to ride.
• Stiffness that was dismissed as “just how he goes” or “he’s a bit cold-backed.”

Underneath that:
• GRF was loading the front end more than it should.
• One diagonal pair was taking more than its fair share every single stride.
• Fascia had been armouring for months to stabilise joints and keep the horse upright under a rider in a frame it could not support.

The eventual “sudden” failure is usually the weakest link finally saying, “enough.”



Where Bodywork Fits – Honestly

Bodywork absolutely helps in this picture.

Done properly, it can:
• Restore fascial glide so GRF can travel through the body instead of smashing into blockages.
• Decompress overloaded lines – suspensory/flexor chains, thoracic sling, thoracolumbar fascia.
• Improve proprioception so the horse can rediscover how to use all four limbs more evenly.
• Give the nervous system a chance to choose elasticity again instead of permanent bracing.

But:
Bodywork cannot override years of:
• Fake frame riding,
• Chronic stiffness,
• Poor surfaces,
• And unbalanced training patterns

if those same patterns continue unchanged.

Think of it like this:
• Bodywork hits the reset button on the tissues and fascia.
• Training, footing, saddle fit, and rider choices decide what gets written back into the system afterwards.

Use bodywork alone, and the body will slide back towards the same protective patterns.
Use bodywork plus better surfaces, more honest frames, and smarter schooling, and now you’re genuinely changing the horse’s injury risk.



The Point

Injuries start long before you see a limp.

They start when:
• GRF is pushed through a crooked, stiff, falsely framed body.
• Fascia quietly armours up to survive bad surfaces and bad patterns.
• Early warning signs are ignored because the horse can still “do the job.”

If you want fewer “mystery” breakdowns:
• Stop chasing outline over balance.
• Stop schooling serious work on deep, hard, or inconsistent ground.
• Start paying attention when stiffness appears and keeps repeating.
• Bring in bodywork to restore glide and give the horse’s system the chance to reorganise – then protect that change with better riding and management.

GRF is non-negotiable. The ground always pushes back.
Your choice is whether that force feeds an elastic, well-carried body – or slowly builds the next injury.

🤗 Local treatments welcome 🤗 I’m allowed to start treating small numbers and build back from there so bookings starts to...
31/10/2025

🤗 Local treatments welcome 🤗
I’m allowed to start treating small numbers and build back from there so bookings starts to open
next week 💪🏼🥰

06/10/2025

Video shows my two homebred 5yo’s having a day of active stretch 🧘‍♀️ At the level 2 Equinology course in Australia (wile ago now) we had been presented lots of research and discussed the use of those bands and other tools in depth. They do a great job if we know how to use them but may also be harmful (as everything) when used incorrectly.

💪 Why We Use the Equiband® System in Training & Rehab at KAD Concept:

Strong movement starts with a strong core. The Equiband® system helps horses activate and strengthen the deep muscles that stabilize the spine — improving balance, posture, and overall performance.

✅ Better core strength & posture
The bands activate the abdominal and back muscles so the horse can carry itself correctly, reducing strain and preventing back pain.

✅ Improved hind-end engagement & coordination
The hindquarter band increases body awareness and encourages even movement — ideal for horses recovering from injury or building symmetry.

✅ Evidence-based results
Studies at the Royal Veterinary College and Colorado State University found Equiband® training improves spinal stability and strengthens postural muscles — key for long-term soundness and performance.

✅ Gentle but powerful rehab tool
Used correctly, it helps horses rebuild strength after conditions like kissing spines, weakness, or time off, while keeping the body aligned and supple.

How to use them?
Usage Progression is a key
• Begin with in-hand work 5–10 min per day, 4–5 days per week. Especially if the horse doesn’t have a correct posture or is post injury.
• Gradually increase to ridden or lunging work for 20–30 min. Observe the horse. If they will start bracing with hollow back or tension it means the correct muscles got too tired and you building a compensation.
• Always use at the start of the session (warm-up phase).
• Provide walk/rest breaks to prevent fatigue.
• After 4–6 weeks, the horse adapts neuromuscularly; full strength develops within 3 months.
• Then reduce to 1–2 sessions per week for maintenance.

📈 Strong core = sound horse.


*side note - we praise every stretch down, initially we offer transition to the lower pace as a reward, immediately when we see the horse starts stretching. Most of them find comfort in that posture and start offering it themselves. Like the two clowns 🤡 from the video showing off they know it all 😍
We do use bands in more collected work too. It becomes a bit different tool then but I just wanted to show you we don’t need to restrict the front to lower the head. It comes from the engaged hind. Sitting on horses who seek that stretch you can close the leg and they will gently come up to find soft contact on a bit 😊

Sadly due to the injury (broken ribs) I’m out of action for a while. Really sorry but won’t be able to visit anyone for ...
14/09/2025

Sadly due to the injury (broken ribs) I’m out of action for a while. Really sorry but won’t be able to visit anyone for few weeks.

🐴 Comparing Pain & Mobility Support for HorsesBute vs. Devil’s Claw vs. White Willow vs. ButelessWhen our horses are sti...
28/08/2025

🐴 Comparing Pain & Mobility Support for Horses

Bute vs. Devil’s Claw vs. White Willow vs. Buteless

When our horses are stiff, sore, or arthritic, there are both veterinary and natural options for support. Sometimes to find answers if mystery unsoundness or unwanted behavior are pain related those can be very helpful too.
Here’s how they stack up:



💊 Bute (Phenylbutazone)
• A powerful NSAID prescribed by vets.
• Provides fast, strong relief from pain and inflammation.
• ⚠️ Risks: long-term use can irritate the stomach, kidneys, and liver.
• ❌ Banned in all competitions (and prescription only).
• Best for: short-term relief, injury management, or acute flare-ups under veterinary guidance. Bute trials often used for diagnostics.
Always good to use gut protection with it.


🌿 Devil’s Claw
• Herbal anti-inflammatory & pain reliever.
• Useful for chronic joint pain, arthritis, or laminitis.
• ⚠️ Can upset the stomach (avoid in ulcer-prone horses). May be best to combine with natural gut support
• ❌ Not competition-legal.



🌿 White Willow
• Natural source of salicin (like aspirin).
• Offers gentle pain and fever relief.
• Easier on the stomach than Devil’s Claw, but still not for ulcer cases if used on its own.
• ❌ Also banned in competition (converts to salicylic acid).



🌟 Buteless (Equine America)
• A supplement blend for daily mobility and comfort, including:
👉 Boswellia, Turmeric, Yucca, MSM, Omega-3s, Vitamins C & E.
• Focuses on long-term joint health and muscle recovery.
• ✅ Safer for daily use, low sugar (laminitis-friendly).
• ⚠️ MSM can be a threshold substance in some sports like racing —always check rules.



🐎 Takeaway
• Bute = strongest pain relief, but with side effects and vet control.
• Devil’s Claw / White Willow = natural NSAID-like herbs, helpful but not competition-safe.
• Buteless = broader, supportive formula for daily mobility and joint comfort.

✨ Always talk with your vet before starting supplements or medications 😉

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