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If you haven't tried the natural approach to healing, you might be missing out on some amazing benefits. These timeless, natural techniques come from all over the world and have been used for centuries for easing trauma, pain, and stress. Natural therapy may involve a combination of treatments and can offer solutions to many problems: * acute and chronic pain relief * restores natural suppleness to tissues * releases muscle tension * eases nervous anxiety and stress * improves attitude * promotes faster recovery time * optimizes performance For a more relaxed, flexible mount that is resistant to over-exertion or injury, stress or accident, or for a quicker recovery, natural therapies are of great benefit.
Therapeutic Massage is beneficial in relieving muscle soreness, spasms, and tightness. It promotes healing of soft tissue trauma by bringing fresh oxygen to the tissue and expelling toxins.
Raindrop Therapy is the application of "therapeutic" grade (not perfume or food grade) essential oils on ting and meridian points as well as along the spinous processes of the animal to open neural pathways, to act as a catalyst to healing, and to offer a pleasant, bonding experience and well-being to the animal, all of which aid the animal in healing at a cellular level.
Aromatherapy (essential oils from plants) may be absorbed through the skin or inhaled. When inhaled, molecules enter the limbic system of the brain and can influence memory, emotions, and behavior. The limbic system works directly with the circulatory, nervous, and immune systems.
Herbal Supplements (that are certified organic and free of pesticides & vehicle fumes) are truly loved by horses, an herbivore. But because of our living styles and the world we live in today, our horses can not benefit from roaming hundreds and hundreds of acres of lush pastureland full of beneficial herbs and grasses. Horses can no longer pick and choose tasty plants at their leisure. By feeding your horse herbs, we may hopefully be replacing a little of what he is NOT getting in his diet. Horses do love their herbal blends, and they seem to know what they need and will let us know when they feel they no longer need a certain herb.
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