Tri-Cities, WA – A Milton-Freewater man is taking a natural approach to rejuvenating race horses. Instead of injecting them with steroids and other drugs, he’s massaging them back to health.
For more than a decade, equine masseuse Mike Watkins has massaged race horses back to prime condition.
He began this journey after a severe back injury and undergoing massage therapy himself.
He says it’s a passion. Using his knowledge, he alternates gentle and strong manipulation, as he rubs and kneads the animal, to relieve pain and relax the muscles.
“We ask them to do tremendous things like jumping over fences, and racing around barrels. And they’re basically doing the same thing as athletes. I ask you to show me an athlete that doesn’t have chiropractic, or massage to get back in shape. Just like that, it’s another piece of the pie in the overall horse’s health,” said Watkins.
Horse owner Kelli Barichello says it’s the best care possible for her seven-year-old mare, Lacey.
“You can tell, she’s not in pain, not swishing her tail or fighting me at all. She just wants to go out and do her job, and does it correctly,” said Barichello.
Many of the horses on Barichello’s Lazy Spur Ranch, including Lacey, are barrel racers. That’s a rodeo event where a horse and rider follow a clover-leaf pattern around barrels multiple times.
She says the race can be rough on horses and believes Watkins offers the best conditioning and recovery for her animals.
“Horses are built just like humans. They have muscles and tendons and bones and ligaments, and they are athletes,” said Watkins.
Each session is about one hour long. Watkins finds the horse’s sore spot and as in human massage, gently works on those areas. He knows it’s working when the horse licks its lips.
“It’s definitely worth the time and the expense. Seventy-five dollars for my horse to feel great afterwards and go out and perform is absolutely worth it,” said Barichello.
“I love that they’re able to go back and do their business and word as hard as they do for us. We ask a lot of them. This is one more way to treat them correctly,” said Watkins.
Watkins travels throughout the Pacific Northwest, as well as Canada and Texas to recondition horses. He’s also worked for some of the top horsemen and clinicians in the country.