Equine Services » Who's Who - Equine Services » Sal Salvetti - Equine Massage Therapist
Location, January through March: Wellington, Florida
Location, April through December: Boston, Massachusetts
Phone: 978-502-2232
Email:
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Website: www.salmassage.com
Marital Status: Single
Date of Birth: June 6, 1966
Profession: Equine Massage Therapist
Discipline: All disciplines, primarily dressage, specializing in sporthorses
Country: United States
Robert Salvetti, known by all as “Sal,” is perhaps the best-known equine massage therapist in the east coast sporthorse world. He launched his practice in New England in 2001 and by 2003 he was working on horses for the U.S. Equestrian Team at the 2003 Pan American Games in the Dominican Republic. Sal has also served as massage therapist for U.S. team horses competing in dressage, show jumping, and driving at topnotch competitions including the 2005 World Equestrian Festival Aachen CHIO in Germany, the 2005 Dressage World Cup in Las Vegas and the 2008 Dressage World Cup Final in The Netherlands.
Sal works coast-to-coast on hundreds of horses ridden by amateurs and non-competitors, but the core of his equine massage therapy business is the professional rider in any discipline. A few of the top dressage riders who’ve entrusted horses to Sal include Carol Lavell, Michelle Gibson, Shannon Dueck, Lisa Wilcox, Leslie Morse, Todd Flettrich, Mikala Munder Gunderson, Elisabeth Austin, Jane Hannigan, George Williams, and Betsy Steiner.
“Sal has a wonderful way about working with the horses that addresses issues with immediate results,” says Betsy Steiner. “I always feel the benefit of his work from the saddle in supple, free movement. The horses trust him with his gentle demeanor, which is very important to me with someone working with my horses.”
One of the reasons Sal focuses on professionals is because they feel the difference better than amateurs. “Amateurs come as a result of my working for professionals,” he explains. “There have been times the rider is on the horse in the arena, we’ll talk about what he or she is feeling, and then I’ll work on specific muscles in an effort to improve what the rider is talking about – right there in the ring. The rider will ride off and say, ‘That was better’ or ‘That had no change’ and then I go further from there. I learn the most from these relationships and as a result I’m better at extracting information from a less experienced rider as to what’s going on with the horse and then can better determine how to treat it.”
Also key to Sal’s success are his in-depth studies of skeleton and muscle structure. He completed an internship with equine massage therapist Mike Scott nearly a decade ago and has kept his practice current by continual study. In the past eight years, Sal has completed five equine cadaver labs offered by Scott through the Tufts University Veterinary School in Massachusetts. “That’s huge with regard to accuracy and to knowing where you are and what layers you’re affecting,” Sal emphasizes. “There’s so much superficial muscle structure on a horse that the labs reveal. In the labs, we’re literally peeling back the layers of tissue in order to see what lies underneath. I carry my lab book, which was assembled by Tufts anatomists, in my briefcase everywhere I go.”
In 2009, Sal is adding a new dimension to his practice – he will be teaching clinics and internships. “What I’ve learned over the years is a result of working on top horses for top trainers who work with top vets,” Sal says. “Now it’s time share that with others who want to learn.”
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Who's Who - Equine Services/Sal Salvetti - Equine Massage Therapist
Author:Mary Hilton for DressageDaily.com
Carol Lavel and Much Ado
Sal Salvetti - Equine Massage Therapist
During his first year as an equine massage therapist, Sal became a regular at New England shows, working on Jane Hannigan’s horses. “Jane recognized what massage...
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Who's Who - Equine Services/Sal Salvetti - Equine Massage Therapist
Author:Mary Hilton for DressageDaily.com
Sal Salvetti - Equine Massage Therapist
Sal Salvetti doesn’t mince words when it comes to describing what horses have done for him. “They saved my life,” he says. “When I stepped into a barn, I’d already had nearly 10 years of an adult...
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Who's Who - Equine Services/Sal Salvetti - Equine Massage Therapist
Author:Mary Hilton for DressageDaily.com
Sal Salvetti - Equine Massage Therapist
Saddle: “The one that works for that horse and rider.”
Supplements: “SmartPak – that’s genius.”
Products: “Back on Track therapeutic products for horses and humans, and Sport Innovations...
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Who's Who - Equine Services/Sal Salvetti - Equine Massage Therapist
Author:Mary Hilton for DressageDaily.com
Sal Salvetti - Equine Massage Therapist
“For years there’s been demand from around the country for me to teach, to let people shadow me, and to give workshops to horse owners and horse massage therapists,” Sal Salvetti says. “I’m at the...
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Who's Who - Equine Services/Sal Salvetti - Equine Massage Therapist
Author:Mary Hilton for DressageDaily.com
Sal Salvetti - Equine Massage Therapist
photo credit: Brigitte Bouchard Volk bbvphotography.com
His affinity with horses is instantly recognizable, but surprisingly Sal Salvetti never set foot in a barn or a stirrup until 1995...
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Who's Who - Equine Services/Sal Salvetti - Equine Massage Therapist
Author:Mary Hilton for DressageDaily.com
Sal Salvetti - Equine Massage Therapist
Jane Hannigan's Maksymilian's
stall at the World Cup Final
“Eight years into this, I still love what I do,” beams Sal Salvetti. “The everyday is wonderful. The cherry on top is when I get to...
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