noobs31
Well-Known Member
"Back people" are a new phenomenon to me, I started out in a most basic environment. But after a move down South and the entirely new experience which is the livery yard, they seem to be prolific. Now don't get me wrong, after a particularly nasty fall I've used an osteopath for years to keep me riding and working. However, I've moved yards a few times already, yet the "back person" is always present. Personally I've no desire to ever involve one, because from what I've seen so far, his/her "pelvis is out" every time. And I firmly believe, if this were true, the animal would not walk. Yet it does.
So these were my suspicions. But today a horse on my yard, pronounced fine by a "back person", was diagnosed with kissing spine. Ok so they don't have x-ray eyes (despite their ability to proclaim where a pelvis is). But what I would expect them to have, is the ability to identify tight muscle (which is not hard). An injury such as KS must, surely, result in some muscle tightening and abnormality? Yet none was detected?
I just don't understand?
What is it, exactly, you all see in them?
So these were my suspicions. But today a horse on my yard, pronounced fine by a "back person", was diagnosed with kissing spine. Ok so they don't have x-ray eyes (despite their ability to proclaim where a pelvis is). But what I would expect them to have, is the ability to identify tight muscle (which is not hard). An injury such as KS must, surely, result in some muscle tightening and abnormality? Yet none was detected?
I just don't understand?
What is it, exactly, you all see in them?