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Stifle & Hindquarters Area for Horses – Improve Coordination, Balance and Clarity of Movement

A horse-friendly guide to targeted massage gun application in the stifle & hindquarters area — step by step and with clear orientation.

Massage gun applied to the horse’s stifle and hindquarters area

What you’ll learn inside the members area:

  • recognize and work with patterns you notice in the stifle & hindquarters area
  • understand how the stifle & hindquarters influence coordination and movement from behind
  • apply a massage gun in the stifle & hindquarters area with clear structure and orientation
  • see how fascia relates to movement patterns in the hindquarters area
Massage gun applied to the horse’s back in the saddle region

Does This Sound Familiar?

Does your horse stumble more often, hesitate when going downhill, or appear less confident on one side when jumping?

These observations are often related to how movement from behind is organized through the stifle & hindquarters area, especially in coordination with the surrounding joints and musculature.


This may show up as:

  • Weight shifting more toward the forehand
  • Transitions that feel inconsistent
  • Movement that appears uneven or hesitant
  • Changes in rhythm or push from behind


A noticeable difference between left and right sides

You may have already trained, tried different approaches, or added breaks — and still feel that something is missing.


This is where this course begins.


You’ll receive clear, practical, horse-friendly guidance on how to work with a massage gun in the stifle & hindquarters area, step by step and in a structured sequence.The focus is not on force or correction, but on precise application and clear orientation when working with this area.

The Solution: Clarity Through a Safe, Point-by-Point Guide

Anatomical illustration of the horse’s back muscles and fascia.

Who This Online Course Is For

This course is right for you if:

  • your horse appears unstable or inconsistent in the hindquarters, especially during transitions

  • your horse stumbles more often, hesitates downhill, or feels insecure on one side

  • push and impulsion from behind feel uneven or reduced

  • transitions feel delayed, irregular, or lack clear engagement from the hindquarters

  • movement from behind feels different left to right

  • training alone does not seem to create more clarity or coordination in this area

  • you are looking for a structured, horse-friendly routine that can be integrated into everyday work

  • you value clear, practical guidance and want to understand where and how to apply the massage gun meaningfully

Who This Online Course Is Not For

This course is not suitable if:

  • you are looking for veterinary diagnosis or therapeutic treatment
  • your horse is currently acutely lame, injured, or in significant pain
  • (in these cases, please consult a veterinarian)
  • you are searching for “quick fixes” or very intensive techniques
  • you currently have very limited time to engage with your horse on a regular basis


And This Is Me - Andrea Furlani-Krebel

Andrea Furlani-Krebel interacting calmly with a horse during a close, attentive moment.

 

Awareness and mindful contact are the foundation of my work.
The massage gun is a supportive tool — not the starting point.


My work – and why this online course was created

I have worked intensively with horses and their movement systems for many years. Over time, I’ve observed the same patterns again and again.


Some horses show reduced coordination in the hindquarters.
They stumble more often, hesitate in transitions, or struggle to organize movement from behind.


Not because they are unwilling — but because patterns of tension and restriction in the stifle, hip, and surrounding musculature affect how movement is expressed.


Hands-on work is my primary tool. However, especially in the stifle and hindquarters area — where large muscle groups, fascia, and force transmission come together — manual work alone is not always sufficient or well tolerated by the horse.


This is where I use the massage gun.


Not as a replacement for feel. But as a precise, supportive extension of what I perceive with my hands.


The focus is not intensity, but placement and application. Horses respond to subtle, well-directed impulses — particularly in the hindquarters, where coordination, stability, and push are organized.


When the right areas are addressed in the right sequence, the massage gun allows work with deeper tissue without force or pressure.


This practical experience is the foundation of this online course.


You’ll receive clear, horse-friendly, step-by-step guidance, based on real-world application.
Structured. Practical. Easy to follow.


Because coordination is not accidental.
It develops when understanding, perception, and the right tools come together.

 

This course does not replace veterinary diagnosis or treatment. It provides orientation and a practical framework for working with the back and hindquarters area in a structured, horse-friendly way.

 

Learn how to use a massage gun safely and in a targeted way for the stifle & hindquarters area — with clear, practical, point-by-point guidance.

 

✓ Practical video guidance
✓ Explained step by step
✓ Easy to apply right away

Application of a massage gun on the horse’s back

Online Course for Horse Owners – Stifle & Hindquarters area I

How to Use a Massage Gun Safely and Correctly

Special Price

$36 

✓ One-time payment – no subscription

✓ Instant access after purchase

✓ 60-day money-back guarantee via Digistore24

© 2026 Andrea Furlani-Krebel - All rights reserved.

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