Vetwrap
Well-Known Member
Can you help?
My horse has been away for schooling for just over 10 weeks, but had an accident just before he was to come home. He has now had surgery and his foot is in a cast. Obviously, he is now very fit and is starting to get a little bored. He has always weaved around meal times, but this is now becoming more common. He was also starting to crib and windsuck this morning, which I really am sad to see.
I've done some research and have emailed a company about ordering a large stable mirror for him - other than that, people talk about diet. He is on calmer chaff and a handful of pony nuts. The breakdown on the nuts is:
Typical analysis: Protein 9, Oil 4, Fibre 17, Ash 10, Vitamin A 8,000 iu/kg, Vit D3 1,000 iu/kg, Vit E 75 iu/kg, Copper 22 mg/kg, Selenium 0.2 mg/kg
The breakdown on the chaff is:
Ingredients - Straw, fibre, pellets, molasses, dried grass, soya oil, vitamin & mieral pre-mix, herbs, limestone,salt,flour.
Protein 7.8%
Energy 9.8mj per kg
Crude Fibre 27.6%
Oil 5.7%
Ash 8%
Calcium 0.83%
Phosphorous 0.4%
Magnesium g/kg 3.4
Both the vets and his trimmer advised to treat his as a laminitic, therefore, the haylage is soaked (no hay available) for 12 hours to remove the sugar. He has a salt lick hanging up, but due to the warning about laminitis, I wouldn't go for the usual route of lickits and hanging swedes that I have done in the past.
Is there anything else that I can do? I am ashamed to say that this morning, when he started to crib and windsuck, all I could think of was trying to make the stable gate taste unpleasant, so coated them with fairy liquid. Not ideal, but it was the only thing that I could find to hand and I had to get to work...
Other than a mirror, I really don't know what else to do. I did think of a playball, but then he is on box rest and supposed to be resting. Giving him something to chase round the stable would defeat the object, I suspect...
Any thoughts, advice or anything would be gratefully received.
Thanks all!
My horse has been away for schooling for just over 10 weeks, but had an accident just before he was to come home. He has now had surgery and his foot is in a cast. Obviously, he is now very fit and is starting to get a little bored. He has always weaved around meal times, but this is now becoming more common. He was also starting to crib and windsuck this morning, which I really am sad to see.
I've done some research and have emailed a company about ordering a large stable mirror for him - other than that, people talk about diet. He is on calmer chaff and a handful of pony nuts. The breakdown on the nuts is:
Typical analysis: Protein 9, Oil 4, Fibre 17, Ash 10, Vitamin A 8,000 iu/kg, Vit D3 1,000 iu/kg, Vit E 75 iu/kg, Copper 22 mg/kg, Selenium 0.2 mg/kg
The breakdown on the chaff is:
Ingredients - Straw, fibre, pellets, molasses, dried grass, soya oil, vitamin & mieral pre-mix, herbs, limestone,salt,flour.
Protein 7.8%
Energy 9.8mj per kg
Crude Fibre 27.6%
Oil 5.7%
Ash 8%
Calcium 0.83%
Phosphorous 0.4%
Magnesium g/kg 3.4
Both the vets and his trimmer advised to treat his as a laminitic, therefore, the haylage is soaked (no hay available) for 12 hours to remove the sugar. He has a salt lick hanging up, but due to the warning about laminitis, I wouldn't go for the usual route of lickits and hanging swedes that I have done in the past.
Is there anything else that I can do? I am ashamed to say that this morning, when he started to crib and windsuck, all I could think of was trying to make the stable gate taste unpleasant, so coated them with fairy liquid. Not ideal, but it was the only thing that I could find to hand and I had to get to work...
Other than a mirror, I really don't know what else to do. I did think of a playball, but then he is on box rest and supposed to be resting. Giving him something to chase round the stable would defeat the object, I suspect...
Any thoughts, advice or anything would be gratefully received.
Thanks all!