Tuesday, February 8, 2011
Valentine's Fundraiser
This coming Saturday, February 12, from 10:00am - 2:00pm we will be holding a pre-Valentine's Day fundraiser in the Community Room at Whispering Meadows Equestrian Center. The address is 29015 Meadowview Road, Junction City, OR. Directions are available on their website.
We are raising funds to buy Fhoenix saddles for our kid's programs, and this is a great chance for you to come help, while buying something for your sweetheart, and getting some relaxation in for yourself!
Both seated and table massages will be available, on a donation basis. Nicole R. Sulick, LMT #14349, will be among those providing massages. Email us early to reserve a time for yours!
We will have items available from the following vendors, with all profits being donated to 3TF!
* Natural body-care products created by Nicole for her shop—Wildflower Essentials
* Handcrafted jewelry, designed and created by local artisan Rachel Nelson, from her shop—Lilies and Laurel
* 3TF sweatshirts, aura spray, and prints of “The Meeting” by Portland artist Raevyn Carney
Come get a relaxing massage, buy a Valentine's Day present for your loved one, and help horses and kids at the same time!
Thursday, February 3, 2011
History of a Colic
On January 4, 2011 T’Pring, our 25 year old Thoroughbred mare, colicked. While she now appears to be doing well, it took a village to get her back.
I would like to say that I by no means feel that what we did should be put forward as a colic protocol. I made choices about which chakras and areas to have people work on based off of experience and intuition, and have now learned the importance of keeping a copy of my Pranic Healing books at the barn. What I would like people to take away from this is that there are things we can do for our horses while waiting for the vet. So many of us feel completely helpless when our animal companions are sick, and that feeling of helplessness just leads to more distress for us and them.
One of our long-standing concerns with T’Pring is that she tends to be a rather picky eater, eating small portions of feed at a time. This combined with her breed and age has made it difficult to maintain an optimal weight for her. T’Pring also has melanomas (a type of skin cancer which is commonly found in gray horses) that we have been treating on and off for the past several years as funding allows, along with several lameness issues which are by-product of her career as a former hunter/jumper. We have concerns that there may be melanomas in her digestive tract, which affect her ability to maximize her nutritional intake.
Luckily, when T’Pring colicked, Amy and Alyce were on hand. Amy first realized something was wrong when T’Pring wanted to lie flat out in the arena during her free-movement time. T’Pring typically likes to roll before she gets started on her work, but does not stay down and does not lie flat out. Given T’Pring’s health history, upon recognizing her distress we immediately called the vet. We got her up and walking while we waited for him to arrive.
T’Pring’s energy level was almost non-existent and I had to encourage her to walk. I massaged the base of her ears and listened to her gut. Her abdomen was distended and hard. T’Pring’s condition appeared very serious and I called upon various members of our Intern Massage Class to work on her chakras from a distance, while I massaged her physically. Our focus on the chakras was primarily just cleaning and cutting of inappropriate cords. One of the reasons I prefer to work on horses over people is that horses have such an amazing ability for self-healing. Often, even just cleaning their energy field allows them to heal themselves, without the need for energizing.
Amy worked on the liver, kidney, and basic chakras, while Jessica also worked on the liver chakra as well as the minor chakras in the soles of the feet, the digestive system, and the health rays.
Meanwhile, Nicole worked on the crown and forehead chakras. Nicole mentioned that when she first scanned the crown chakra it felt empty. She cleaned and energized the crown first for 5-10 min. Then an hour later she did the same to the forehead chakra. Nicole has training in several areas of energy work and integrated that knowledge into assisting us with the Pranic Healing we were attempting to use to treat T’Pring.
What was really interesting to me was how Nicole, Jessica, and I noticed independently that the congestion was mostly on the left side of T’Pring’s body. Alyce was our point person, coordinating the whole effort, so at the time none of us knew that we were finding the same thing.
As the person doing the physical massage, I felt very lucky that I got to witness firsthand the effect our work was having on T’Pring. Almost every 15 minutes her energy level would take a major step up. She began walking more briskly, had multiple releases of gas, and her guts began making a great deal of noise. Even though I am already familiar with the results possible from Pranic Healing and the other techniques that we used to assist T’Pring, I still always feel somewhat humbled by seeing it in action.
When our vet, Dr. Chris Wickcliffe, arrived, he gave T’Pring a muscle relaxant and tubed her to check her stomach and to make certain that the colic wasn’t caused by a back-up from undigested foods, and to ensure she received electrolytes and mineral oil to aid her digestion. We discussed what to watch out for the rest of the day, and made a plan to ensure she would have the highest chance of surviving the night, as well as some diet changes to make that might help her in the long term.
At the time of her colic, T’Pring was getting free choice second cutting orchard grass hay, rice bran pellets, wheat bran mash mixed in warm water, and orchard grass pellets soaked in warm water. Her supplements were ground flax seed, 1,000 mg human grade Ester-C, Earth Angel Herbs’ Easy Stride formula and diatomaceous earth. The second cutting orchard grass did wonders for adding weight, but greatly increased the amount of gas she had and sometimes caused constipation, which we attempted to counteract with the wheat bran mash.
After the colic, the major change was that we switched T’Pring back to local hay, with an increase in the orchard and alfalfa pellets to make up the calories. Dr. Wickliffe mentioned that the problem horses have digesting orchard grass is the small barbs that are on it, and the pelletization process appears to neutralize that. T’Pring receives the second cutting orchard grass twice a day instead of all day long and only gets a flake per feeding instead of the two to three she was previously on, and no longer receives orchard grass hay at lunch. We also increased the quantity of wheat bran mash she receives to almost five times what she was getting prior to the colic. So far, these changes seem to be working.
As scary and stressful as this situation was, I am grateful to T’Pring for teaching us to bring Eastern and Western ideas together in a harmonious way. In this situation I feel we were able to maximize the teachings of both. It also inspired us to work together to assist in healing an animal, teaching us that together we are greater than alone. T’Pring—ever the great teacher—has started a new chapter in our Equine Massage Intern program. As part of their homework, our Interns are now working on the various chakras of horses with specific problems. When learning something new, especial something as overwhelmingly large as trying to help another individual in his or her healing process, we find this group approach much easier.
We will keep you posted on T’Pring’s process.
--Ferronato
I would like to say that I by no means feel that what we did should be put forward as a colic protocol. I made choices about which chakras and areas to have people work on based off of experience and intuition, and have now learned the importance of keeping a copy of my Pranic Healing books at the barn. What I would like people to take away from this is that there are things we can do for our horses while waiting for the vet. So many of us feel completely helpless when our animal companions are sick, and that feeling of helplessness just leads to more distress for us and them.
One of our long-standing concerns with T’Pring is that she tends to be a rather picky eater, eating small portions of feed at a time. This combined with her breed and age has made it difficult to maintain an optimal weight for her. T’Pring also has melanomas (a type of skin cancer which is commonly found in gray horses) that we have been treating on and off for the past several years as funding allows, along with several lameness issues which are by-product of her career as a former hunter/jumper. We have concerns that there may be melanomas in her digestive tract, which affect her ability to maximize her nutritional intake.
Luckily, when T’Pring colicked, Amy and Alyce were on hand. Amy first realized something was wrong when T’Pring wanted to lie flat out in the arena during her free-movement time. T’Pring typically likes to roll before she gets started on her work, but does not stay down and does not lie flat out. Given T’Pring’s health history, upon recognizing her distress we immediately called the vet. We got her up and walking while we waited for him to arrive.
T’Pring’s energy level was almost non-existent and I had to encourage her to walk. I massaged the base of her ears and listened to her gut. Her abdomen was distended and hard. T’Pring’s condition appeared very serious and I called upon various members of our Intern Massage Class to work on her chakras from a distance, while I massaged her physically. Our focus on the chakras was primarily just cleaning and cutting of inappropriate cords. One of the reasons I prefer to work on horses over people is that horses have such an amazing ability for self-healing. Often, even just cleaning their energy field allows them to heal themselves, without the need for energizing.
Amy worked on the liver, kidney, and basic chakras, while Jessica also worked on the liver chakra as well as the minor chakras in the soles of the feet, the digestive system, and the health rays.
Meanwhile, Nicole worked on the crown and forehead chakras. Nicole mentioned that when she first scanned the crown chakra it felt empty. She cleaned and energized the crown first for 5-10 min. Then an hour later she did the same to the forehead chakra. Nicole has training in several areas of energy work and integrated that knowledge into assisting us with the Pranic Healing we were attempting to use to treat T’Pring.
What was really interesting to me was how Nicole, Jessica, and I noticed independently that the congestion was mostly on the left side of T’Pring’s body. Alyce was our point person, coordinating the whole effort, so at the time none of us knew that we were finding the same thing.
As the person doing the physical massage, I felt very lucky that I got to witness firsthand the effect our work was having on T’Pring. Almost every 15 minutes her energy level would take a major step up. She began walking more briskly, had multiple releases of gas, and her guts began making a great deal of noise. Even though I am already familiar with the results possible from Pranic Healing and the other techniques that we used to assist T’Pring, I still always feel somewhat humbled by seeing it in action.
When our vet, Dr. Chris Wickcliffe, arrived, he gave T’Pring a muscle relaxant and tubed her to check her stomach and to make certain that the colic wasn’t caused by a back-up from undigested foods, and to ensure she received electrolytes and mineral oil to aid her digestion. We discussed what to watch out for the rest of the day, and made a plan to ensure she would have the highest chance of surviving the night, as well as some diet changes to make that might help her in the long term.
At the time of her colic, T’Pring was getting free choice second cutting orchard grass hay, rice bran pellets, wheat bran mash mixed in warm water, and orchard grass pellets soaked in warm water. Her supplements were ground flax seed, 1,000 mg human grade Ester-C, Earth Angel Herbs’ Easy Stride formula and diatomaceous earth. The second cutting orchard grass did wonders for adding weight, but greatly increased the amount of gas she had and sometimes caused constipation, which we attempted to counteract with the wheat bran mash.
After the colic, the major change was that we switched T’Pring back to local hay, with an increase in the orchard and alfalfa pellets to make up the calories. Dr. Wickliffe mentioned that the problem horses have digesting orchard grass is the small barbs that are on it, and the pelletization process appears to neutralize that. T’Pring receives the second cutting orchard grass twice a day instead of all day long and only gets a flake per feeding instead of the two to three she was previously on, and no longer receives orchard grass hay at lunch. We also increased the quantity of wheat bran mash she receives to almost five times what she was getting prior to the colic. So far, these changes seem to be working.
As scary and stressful as this situation was, I am grateful to T’Pring for teaching us to bring Eastern and Western ideas together in a harmonious way. In this situation I feel we were able to maximize the teachings of both. It also inspired us to work together to assist in healing an animal, teaching us that together we are greater than alone. T’Pring—ever the great teacher—has started a new chapter in our Equine Massage Intern program. As part of their homework, our Interns are now working on the various chakras of horses with specific problems. When learning something new, especial something as overwhelmingly large as trying to help another individual in his or her healing process, we find this group approach much easier.
We will keep you posted on T’Pring’s process.
--Ferronato
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Pizza Fundraiser Day
We're hoping to expand our Introduction to Horsepersonship program in order to provide classes for more kids during Spring Term, but we can't do this without you!
How you can help-- On Tuesday, February 1st, the Papa's Pizza on Coburg Road in Eugene is hosting a Pizza Fundraiser day for us. We will receive 50% of the value of your food purchases and 25% of your gift certificate purchases, ALL DAY LONG!!! You MUST bring along a copy of our fundraiser flyer in order to have your purchase count! The flyer can be downloaded and printed from here.
Please pass this invitation along to your family, friends and co-workers as well. This is a great opportunity to help us help the kids, while having a fun lunch or dinner!
We will be there with some of our kids and volunteers between 4:30 and 8:00 PM; stop by and say hi.
Friday, January 7, 2011
Friday, December 24, 2010
Free Pranic Healing Class
Liza Burney, of Heart to Heart Healing, will be giving a free, 2-hour introductory class on Pranic Healing here in Eugene on January 8th.
From Liza:
You’ve heard of acupuncture and acupressure. Come learn about the “next generation” technique for accelerating healing and enhancing your health and well being in this free 2-hour class.
Your ENERGY determines how quickly you recover from illness and injury,
your overall feelings of well-being, and your general attitude towards life.
When you are clear mentally and emotionally, obstacles to your daily tasks just
melt away. Pranic Healing will teach you how to work with your energy
anatomy and accelerate the body’s natural healing ability to increase wellness,
reduce stress and enhance your daily life.
In this class, you will learn to:
• Understand your energy anatomy
• Feel your own energy
• Determine what makes your energy stronger
• Increase your vitality by avoiding what makes your energy weaker
• Treat common issues such as cuts, burns, strains and pain
• Remove energy that causes disease, depression and stress
This no-touch class is interactive and experiential, and does not require any special tools or skills. Space is limited, so please RSVP.
For more information:
www.Heart-to-Heart-Healing.com
www.pnwpranichealing.com
E-mail: info@pnwPranicHealing.com
Saturday, January 8, 2011
2:00 - 4:00 pm
Cost: free
Eugene Public Library, Singer Room
100 West 10th Street, Eugene, OR 97401
We're looking forward to the class and hope to see you there!
From Liza:
You’ve heard of acupuncture and acupressure. Come learn about the “next generation” technique for accelerating healing and enhancing your health and well being in this free 2-hour class.
Your ENERGY determines how quickly you recover from illness and injury,
your overall feelings of well-being, and your general attitude towards life.
When you are clear mentally and emotionally, obstacles to your daily tasks just
melt away. Pranic Healing will teach you how to work with your energy
anatomy and accelerate the body’s natural healing ability to increase wellness,
reduce stress and enhance your daily life.
In this class, you will learn to:
• Understand your energy anatomy
• Feel your own energy
• Determine what makes your energy stronger
• Increase your vitality by avoiding what makes your energy weaker
• Treat common issues such as cuts, burns, strains and pain
• Remove energy that causes disease, depression and stress
This no-touch class is interactive and experiential, and does not require any special tools or skills. Space is limited, so please RSVP.
For more information:
www.Heart-to-Heart-Healing.com
www.pnwpranichealing.com
E-mail: info@pnwPranicHealing.com
Saturday, January 8, 2011
2:00 - 4:00 pm
Cost: free
Eugene Public Library, Singer Room
100 West 10th Street, Eugene, OR 97401
We're looking forward to the class and hope to see you there!
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
RecZone -- Introduction to Horsepersonship
We are excited to be working with the City of Eugene’s Youth and Family Services, to provide kids from Madison Middle School’s RecZone program with the opportunity to attend a special series of our Introduction to Horsepersonship classes.
There are dozens of skills kids need to safely handle and interact with horses that traditional riding lessons aren’t equipped to cover. This lack of knowledge and control in-hand undermines the magical experience horseback riding can provide children with. Our Introduction to Horsepersonship Class was designed to fill in these gaps by allowing students to take the time they need to practice skills such as correctly haltering, brushing, leading, tacking up, blanketing and many other aspects of horse care in a safe environment.
To help promote learning that will stay with the kids, students are provided with our book, Introduction to Horsepersonship, which highlights everything they will be working on in the class. These books include pictures of the exercises in a step-by-step format, a place for students to take notes on their learning, and some fun horse facts and horse activities.
We hope that we will have the opportunity and funding to provide many more children with the opportunity to experience this course!
There are dozens of skills kids need to safely handle and interact with horses that traditional riding lessons aren’t equipped to cover. This lack of knowledge and control in-hand undermines the magical experience horseback riding can provide children with. Our Introduction to Horsepersonship Class was designed to fill in these gaps by allowing students to take the time they need to practice skills such as correctly haltering, brushing, leading, tacking up, blanketing and many other aspects of horse care in a safe environment.
To help promote learning that will stay with the kids, students are provided with our book, Introduction to Horsepersonship, which highlights everything they will be working on in the class. These books include pictures of the exercises in a step-by-step format, a place for students to take notes on their learning, and some fun horse facts and horse activities.
We hope that we will have the opportunity and funding to provide many more children with the opportunity to experience this course!
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Why Learn Equine Massage Therapy?

Three Treasures Farms' Equine Massage courses are unique in that we provide an intensive, two-year, certification program, covering a broad range of massage education. In our Introduction to Equine Massage class we cover not only the basics of a wide variety of massage techniques and basic muscle structure, but also safe handling and how certain behaviors in the horse can indicate biological problems.
Licensed Massage Therapists, who ordinarily work on humans, are able to take our Equine Massage classes and count them toward their continuing education requirements with the state.
With over 15 years of experience, some of our horses have been teaching people about massage as long as our instructor has! With a new group of students about to embark on the Massage Intern Program and a new Introduction to Equine Massage class beginning in November, we invite you to become a fan and join us at our Facebook page for a look back over the years at some of the people and horses who have worked with us.
If you live in the Eugene area and are interested in getting started in our class next month, or are outside the area and would like to discuss hosting a massage clinic instead, please contact us at threetreasuresfarms @ gmail.com (spaces in the address need to be removed prior to sending).
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