Hills Equine

Hills Equine I have been a certified Equine Massage Therapist since 2010 One of the questions I'm frequently asked - How long does a session last?

CONTACT INFORMATION

Call Laurie @ 9209884156

Hills Equine

Hills Equine has changed the name from Hills Equine Integrative BodyWork Services

Laurie offers Sports Massage Therapy, Deep Tissue Massage, Full Body Light Massage, Myofascial Release, Trigger Point Release Therapy, PEMF -Magna Wave Therapy
Red Light Therapy is included in the bodywork sessions as needed! I have to say "As long

as the horse needs me" sometimes it's an hour - but more often it goes to 2 hours or more. If I'm there to heal your horse it will take a bit to release, especially if he's been compensating awhile. So please give us the time we need - I don't charge by the hour. MagnaWave is great for:
Equines
Humans
Pets

Certified Equine BodyWork Massage
Certified in Saddle Fitting
Certified in Thermography
Thermography Saddle Fit with Saddle Mapping

Red Light Therapy – Red Lights are used as Acupoint Therapy
Pads are used as muscle relief and Wound Healing. Kinesiology Taping available
Essential Oil Therapy used when needed

Package Prices-
All Inclusive Package
Assessment, Notes, Magna Wave Pemf, BodyWork Session, Thermography
________________________________________________

Call or text Laurie at 920-988-4156 today! If I don't answer please leave a detailed message! Laurie studied and received certifications through:
Therasage, EMC, in Wisconsin
NHA of Indiana (Midwest Healing for Animals)
Holistic Animals of Florida
and has certifications - Red Light Therapy, Kinesiology Taping,
and is a Certified Pain Point Practitioner. MagnaWave Certified for Humans, Horses, Pets, and Livestock!!! Call Laurie at 920-988-4156 or Facebook message
Hills Equine Integrative BodyWork Services, Hustisford, Wisconsin for more information and to book your appointment for evaluation and equine massage today! MagnaWave and Massage BodyWork Therapy is not a substitute for veterinary care. Call or text Laurie at 920-988-4156 today!

I was recently invited out to work on this pretty little mare. She has been having intermittent lameness, along with a p...
05/23/2026

I was recently invited out to work on this pretty little mare. She has been having intermittent lameness, along with a poor attitude in the pen towards her herd mates.

I was asked to do thermography and an All-inclusive Bodywork Session.

As I was doing my thing, the owner explained they had the vet out several times, to rule out a couple ideas of what may be going on, plus a chiropractor wasn’t getting lasting results, which made the owner feel pretty frustrated because they weren’t getting the results needed.
As my clients know – I can’t diagnose any conditions, as that’s for the vet to do. But I can identify areas that have unusual heat and changes.
I carry certifications in Thermography, and continue my training. I developed a protocol that gives me the best results and allows the owner to see what I see and feel.

In this mare’s case I was able to show several things going on with her. In her case it took her a long time to become this way, and with ongoing rehab, it will take her time to “peel” the layers away. The owner was given several new rehab ideas (HOMEWORK) to help this mare return to doing what she does so well.

The mare will also have a saddle fitting session done once her recovery is well underway and her topline has made the desired changes we’re looking for.

Laurie Leverich Hills

Hills Equine Saddle Mapping Tool





05/11/2026

The article down below was written by Tami Elkayam. I see a lot of value in what she says because I’ve seen quite a bit of it myself. I’m going to explain a bit about why I feel this hits close to home!

But first please stay with me while I do a little rambling….

ME - I was recently was called in because a horse had recent stifle injections and after two weeks was STILL not moving quite right. I did thermography and could see right away that maybe the diagnosis needed to go into another direction; which would be x-rays of the spine. Horse had several lameness tests that were followed by injections in the stifles. The xrays showed several areas in the spinous processes that had been touching, but with the rehab the mare was undergoing they decided not to pursue surgery at this point, but changed her course of intense rehab. That did not originate in her stifles.

Another horse recently has thermography done – another follow-up vet visit with xrays showed very mild kissing spine. That horse had been starting to become stressed under saddle and was showing anxiety on the ground. Owner knew something was wrong but wanted a better direction to go with. That horse is undergoing intense rehab also.

There was a horse that I was asked to do thermography on and that horse had suspensory lameness, thermography actually showed uneven hoof walls, which with that strain will cause suspensory issues and lameness. Yup - horse had several xrays on the legs done - but the source was never found.

Another horse had ongoing behavioral issues – thermography showed several intense areas of compensation trauma. That horse had a number of followup xrays, which showed fusions in through the lumbar region, and possible C6-C7 malformation. That owner faced a huge decision and made the choice to put that horse out of its misery.

I do bodywork, and many times I can find issues with my hands. My training was originally with a local Wisconsin Massage School, and further advanced training with Beverly Brady of Midwest Natural Healing for Animals. Followed by many other courses, including a Tom Mayes Intense Craniosacral class this past spring.

And so this leads me into another growing concern I have; which is the number of “side hustlers” out there trying to make a quick buck using PEMF machines. I was called in to work on a horse that had some young gal with a machine come in and crank it and caused lasting spasms in the hamstrings. That horse suffered as a result of someone cranking the power just to watch the muscles fasciculate, because they watched videos of horses getting that kind of therapy.

If you choose to have someone come in and do MagnaWave, Pulse, or PEMF Complete please follow-up on their credentials and training. It truly is NOT very often your horse will be “CURED” or stay feeling good after a few days. It is NOT a stand-alone fix it for your horse! Do you go to the dentist and have the hygienist fix your teeth? Do you have just anyone come in and trim your horses feet?

Do your diligence and make sure your bodyworker knows what they’re doing. Many of these folks are buying machines to go out to make money; have not had training nor do they have the certifications proving their skills.

Now on to Tami's wise words:

TAMI ELKYAM - I saw the one lameness post that everyone was commenting on, which was interesting as an experiment. It was fascinating to see what people consider lameness and what they actually saw. It is eye opening to see how people respond both in assessment and in considerations of assessment.

For what it’s worth here is my two cents. There is no such thing as a "lame limb."

There is only a lame horse.

A horse moves as one integrated system.

Four limbs. One spine. One nervous system. One locomotory pattern.

So when one limb finally breaks down, that limb is often not the true problem. It is simply the part that has paid the highest price for compensation.

Unless there has been clear trauma or injury, most lameness is not isolated to a single leg. It is the result of altered load distribution, dysfunctional movement patterns, imbalance, and compensation spreading through the entire body.

The "diagnosed" limb is frequently the victim, not the cause.

Meanwhile the real issue, the struggling core, the opposite limb, the collapsing spinal mechanics, the dysfunctional motor pattern, the failed weight transfer, the restricted fascia, the struggling organ is often never addressed.

We treat the symptom. The horse improves temporarily. Then the cycle returns. That is why so many horses live on the cycle of intermittent lameness.

The lame limb is often just the warning light on the dashboard.
It is not the engine failure itself.

Until we stop viewing the body as disconnected pieces and start viewing the horse as an integrated mechanical and biological system, we will keep missing the bigger picture.

The lameness question is a trap, particularly in a ridden horse.

Hills Equine
Laurie Leverich Hills


I had a client reach out a couple years ago asking about the thermography.  They had a horse that had suspensory problem...
12/11/2025

I had a client reach out a couple years ago asking about the thermography. They had a horse that had suspensory problems. They said they had it set up at a vet’s to do ultrasound imaging to try and figure out what’s going on and would get back to me. I didn’t hear anything.

Then – fast forward to recently - I was asked in to do thermography because they just couldn’t get to the root of it. So I explained my protocol and how they can prepare the horse.

As I’m doing a full body scan of the horse; the hooves were showing a lot of heat so I asked them to pick up the horses feet so I could take pictures of the frog, ect. I did the left hoof first, then we got to the right front hoof and the owner announces – OH MY GOD. (Ooooops - something clicked)

***In the past I attended Ida Hammer's Class on “Exploring the Equine Hoof”
I’m thrilled that class began my awareness of high low syndrome and hoof wall evenness/unevenness and the causes and the RESULTS.***

This pretty little mare had feet with uneven hoof wall height – likely the result of someone being right hand dominant and filing the hoof uneven. The following pictures will show what happens when the hooves are uneven.

No – I didn’t identify the cause, but the owner finally noticed it; and I was able to capture what happens when hoof care needs to be improved upon, and how it actually affects the horse and the ongoing compensation and pain. The compensation starts to show in the suspensory ligaments, then reaches the withers, shoulders and through the back.

This post is to make folks aware of what happens when the body has to compensate, and certainly not to bash anyone! So please – no negative comments.
Laurie Leverich Hills

The owner of this horse used the Hills Saddle Mapping Tool to find her guy a well-fitting saddle.  She has asked for fol...
12/09/2025

The owner of this horse used the Hills Saddle Mapping Tool to find her guy a well-fitting saddle. She has asked for followup advice on “things just not quite right”

Last time I was at there for bodywork – we decided to use thermography to see if we could figure out what’s happening. We did pictures before he was ridden and pictures immediately afterwards. I have done this a number of times and have a pretty strict protocol in place to make sure we get the most accurate pictures possible. What can you see in the following pictures?

Pad and Saddle are placed horn down.

Laurie Leverich Hills


10/21/2025
So today I was invited in to work on this gorgeous little mare who has been having intermittent lameness; the head bobbi...
07/07/2025

So today I was invited in to work on this gorgeous little mare who has been having intermittent lameness; the head bobbing kind.

The kind that's so obvious that the old saying pops into my head – The head bobs up when the lame leg goes up and then the head goes down with the sound

They were telling me about how the previous farrier would shoe the horse with a wedge to help her to travel better. And the current one hasn’t heard of that reasoning before and shod her according to what he sees, now she has intermittent issues.

I started by explaining what some of the stuff I was seeing. And you know - there are just some days I have no problem showing some of my releases, and I guess today was one of them. The young lady who owns this mare was willing and seemed excited to learn so I guess I couldn’t help myself. The girl got lots of homework, plus got to feel a lot of the things I was feeling.

One of the things she learned is the value of taking pictures of before and after the bodywork session.

Did we make changes? You decide.

UPDATE FROM OWNER:

Hi! I just wanted to reach out and say that B**** just did all the stretches and releases you taught her with R**** tonight and then lunged her to check lameness. The lameness was significantly decreased, about 80 percent better. She was very happy to see that! We started the thrush treatment as well, so if the thrush is hurting her it may be contributing still, but definitely improved a lot. Thank you!

Laurie Leverich Hills

Give me a shout for your bodywork needs!

920-988-4156





The past two weeks were brutally busy for me – with having way more horses that needed bodywork than I normally take on....
06/14/2025

The past two weeks were brutally busy for me – with having way more horses that needed bodywork than I normally take on. After having taken a couple continuing education classes over winter; I was personally amazed at the results I’ve been getting. I find that this tied in very well with my saddle fitting work as so many issues are created due to the withers and shoulders having high- low syndrome. With this new added therapy I’m able to start relieving the pain and unevenness caused by high – low.

I had a few saddle fitting sessions too. One wonderful gal had about 10 saddles to try for her big guy, with only one that fit him. That sounds frustrating, but I would rather folks keep searching and know what will fit their horses and not cause injuries along with increasing bad behavior.

Plus I reconnected with old friends of mine; who I met when my mare was hit by a car back in 2000. They heard about the accident and asked if they could come and red light her. I was totally in the dark with red light therapy and was amazed with how much easier she was moving when they finished up with her. She did have broken bones, she had fractured ribs and her tuber coxae was sheared off. We did bring her back with red light therapy and veterinary chiropractic care. That began my journey into healing therapy for horses.

Fast forward to this summer – I sent out a message to Donna Woods because someone was looking for a new source for red light therapy equipment. Donna and her husband, Bryan, started their own red light therapy business about 15 years ago, relocated to Florida, and have made a huge success with their product line. It has become quite popular and well-loved due to dependable equipment and the guarantee they have behind all their products. I decided it was time to try a new pad that they call the Magic Pad. It has a number of colors in the pad incorporating Nogier frequencies. I have been utilizing this into my bodywork and therapy sessions and I’m thrilled with what I’m seeing. I used it on a repeat client’s mare with known Kissing Spine; who doesn’t lift her back (during belly lifts) and will kick up when you try. She was anxious when we started out so I put the Magic Pad on her withers and did about half an hour with ALL the lights going. (Unfortunately I forgot to get pictures!!!) I kept an eye on her while I worked on a second mare while the 1st was using the pad. She settled in and when I got back to work with her she was so agreeable. After her session I was able to lift her withers, but she also lifted her spine when I did a belly lift! And she didn’t offer to bring her hind foot forward! What a WIN!
The Magic Pad can be found at https://photonichealth.com/
I will be adding another Magic Pad by fall!

Give me a shout for your bodywork needs! Serving Wisconsin and Northern Illinois.

920-988-4156

Laurie Leverich Hills






05/11/2025

There have been times I’ve been called out to do a saddle fitting and have informed the owner the horse needs rehab first before a saddle purchase, and we talk about the why’s. I think most times the owner takes that to heart and we go through the rehab process with many questions asked and many questions answered. And there have been a couple times the client goes silent. No followup text messages - no followup visits. No belief that something is not right with their horse. Those are the ones that will break me, if I don’t advocate for that horse - who will?

***Wise words by Kim Gates- Saddle Fitter***
It’s the morning after whats likely the biggest post to hit this page. If you follow the sport of eventing this isnt a new subject but it’s obviously a controversial one.

If we don’t educate and address these issues openly then we will loose our horse sports. The cats already out of the bag…..we can’t just try and stuff it back in.
This horses and others horses body condition on parade is the problem. Not those pointing it out. Eventing is an extreme sport and it involves an animal. If we don’t put horse welfare first and instead choose to bury our heads in the sand we will loose our horse sports.
Let’s review the hurdles the horse industry has recently had to make. The Walking Horse Industry. Reining and the FEI. Requiring helmets. Removal of roads and tracks. Safe Sport. Vests. Race horses breaking legs. Abuse at the hands of more than one upper level trainer. Electric spurs?
Everyone of these issues got two responses and we have all seen both of them on this post. If you did not read the post I encourage you to do so.
In my opinion the base of the problem is a lack of education. If a rider was educated they would not accept the sponsorship that gives them free saddles that don’t fit. They would not give the paid for praises on social media while their horses back is horrible.
Right now the problem is lack of education on the subject. But if we continue down the road of trying to silence those who are speaking up, then it’s willful negligence.
The first step is to learn what a healthy back looks like and what an unhealthy back looks like. As someone once told me on this page years ago, “ once you see it you can’t unsee it!” So true.

☘️🐎SF

Here we have classic symptoms of Thoracic Sling Disorder.  Client presents this lovely POA 4 year old mare.  This mare h...
04/23/2025

Here we have classic symptoms of Thoracic Sling Disorder.

Client presents this lovely POA 4 year old mare. This mare has a history of being shown all over the country, prior to this lady purchasing her about 2 years ago.

Barn owner sees the knees are showing synovial fluid bulges at the knees and strongly recommended resting the little gal so the knees hopefully heal. With rest and ongoing care the knees are much better, but the mare presents with severe pigeon toe stance, along with a twisted barrel.

I’m extremely pleased that my ongoing education has given me the skills to help this pretty lady on her path to recovery, plus give the owner homework to keep this going.
This will be an ongoing rehab for this little gal - to keep her on the path to healing and feeling better.

Dd we make a change? You decide.

Laurie Leverich Hills




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Hustisford
Hustisford, WI

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