Elliemare said:
Which do you think is more important in being a good equine massage therapist - A strong background and education in massage (being a human massage therapist before persuing animal massage) OR Having a lot of experience in the horse world, showing, competing, riding at an advanced level, owning and managing barns etc.
Oh I love this question!
I personally feel that it's in the best interest of the profession and animal for the practitioner to have a background in human massage or other bodywork prior to embarking on equine bodywork professionally. Mainly because the human massage programs are longer, you get more practice giving and receiving, as well as feedback from another human regarding pressure and touch. Receiving (during school) allows us to be in touch first hand with how massage and other bodywork effects the mind and body and its movement.
Knowledge of: horse anatomy & physiology, horse behavior & body language (individually between horses & humans and other horses/animals, group dynamics), horse care, health issues of the horse in general and specific to individual horse, best living environment of the horse so it can thrive, horse movement/biomechanics, safety around the horse, and the purpose of the individual horse (sport/competitive, pet/family member, retired, etc) is a must. Volunteering at a barn or shelter would give an inexperienced person great exposure, if they didn't grow up around horses.
I grew up with horses, but riding is just not my thing. Although I'm formally trained in equine sports and myofascial therapy, my horse clients are not competitive athletes. If I had someone call that was competing, I'd refer them out to a practitioner more suited to the required knowledge and skill set...more qualified in other words. It would be very difficult - for me - to really help a competitive horse not ever being in the saddle. I think it's imperative to know ones limits.