YasandCrystal
Well-Known Member
Hi, advice/comments welcomed please. Potted history is we bought a 5 yr old warm blood well bred gelding. Ridden his paces were poor and had clearly been schooled in draw reins - he was very tensed up. Had his back treated and comments were muscles so bunched up, also interesting comment that he had maybe been overgirthed. Temperament he seemed sweet as can be on viewing and I was happy with that being the one that does on the ground. 5 stage vetting went beautifully albeit unridden ( I am told that is not uncommon as its a long affair). Daughter watched and all went well vet very complimentary. That was some 3 and a half months ago now. New horse arrived home and turned into devil overnight (should have sent it back I hear you cry!). Anyway hes here so he needs to be properly diagnosed/sorted. He does the following: box walks, cribs, bites, strikes, kicks is hyper sensitive to being groomed or girthed or rugged, bites his sides, makes a roaring noise intermittently when eating, stops eating mid way through feed and has got progressively worse. Also shows other repetitive behaviour when eating pacing back and forth and he hay duks if I give him haylage near his waterer he dunks ever mouthfull! Have stopped rugging him as it became a nightmare and very dangerous. Have now ceased ridden work - daughter rode him 2 weeks ago and he bucked so hard 4 times during time she ended up very sore from the sheer force of the bucks inspite of staying on. He was objecting simply to leg on and bending at walk.That day it took her and the trainer to saddle him and he tail swished throughout the training session. We all agreed something was very wrong and we would step back. I have read so much now about ulcers that I am convinced he may have them. The only niggling doubts are people saying to me that the horse is anxious because I am not acting as a strong leader to him, so he is insecure. I freely admit having been bitten badly by him (he is 17hh by the way)I am very cautious around him and will not put myself into a position to get injured, but I am happy to lead him about and handle him in a headcollar. We even did a semi join up thing last night where he was following me loose in the manege; so I would say there must be some trust in me by him (he was abused ridden in the past this much I do know, so trust probably doesnt come easily). I can't stand there and groom him - he hates it and will bare teeth and legs at every brush stroke. The only thing he enjoys is a good wither scratch. Rugging was so hard unless you tied his head with a 6 inch rope he would a) try to bite you and then strike at you with the front leg and if you got that far with the rug the back leg was extremely flexible and could reach the girth area!!!
Would the horse really be so aggressive not only to people but to the chickens, cats, birds, dogs anything alive basically if this were just an anxiety issue? He faces off anything living in his sight range.
I have tried to change his management as much as possible as to that of a horse with ulcers. He is on adlib haylage( I have just now got hay for him as I know this would be better) and he has 2 cereal free feeds a day. He is fed copra and beet pulp (unmollassed) and chaff with U-Guard Plus, 5 x Antepsin tablets and Supercalm herbal supplement as well as a general vit and min supplement. He also gets Fast Fibre and Alfa A Oil in separate buckets at night to ensure he has several available forage stuffs. He is turned out daily although I have no grass to speak of so he is reliant again on adlib haylage. He had a 3 week course of GastroGold which I now read is rubbish! I only started him the Antepsins a few days a go and the first day I made the mistake of giving him 10 tablets in his morning feed instead of splitting them. I also gave him a small feed of pulp and chaff before my friend came over to assist me with some ground work with the horse. He was really calm and good and all the ground work we did went very well. He was happy for me to rub him from his head down to an including his girth area on both sides. To me this shrieked a pointer that yes he may well have ulcers and the antiacids suppressed the acid decreasing his sensitivity. However I have continued for the last 2 days dosing him as I should have 5 tablets twice a day and I have to say this morning he is just so aggressive and sensitive again. I despair, I suppose I wanted a clear indication that ulcers could well be the problem and now I am not so sure. Was it possibly that he has them that bad that the 10 tablets at once had an effect but 5 simply arent enough? I dont want to put him through scoping uneccessarily, but on the other hand my instincts inspite of others comments are that this horse is in pain and not taking the mickey? Most 5 year olds of his breeding are only too willing to work and infact love work. Would a horse who has been in pain for a long time ( I am talking a couple of years) actually instantly drop the aggressiveness if the pain is relieved slightly? Obviously the previous owner has not been honest, but I did get some other history. He has been through a few homes already, so I am hoping that the temperament has been caused by something physical and as it hasn't been addressed he has got worse and worse. Thanks for reading sorry for the novel!
Would the horse really be so aggressive not only to people but to the chickens, cats, birds, dogs anything alive basically if this were just an anxiety issue? He faces off anything living in his sight range.
I have tried to change his management as much as possible as to that of a horse with ulcers. He is on adlib haylage( I have just now got hay for him as I know this would be better) and he has 2 cereal free feeds a day. He is fed copra and beet pulp (unmollassed) and chaff with U-Guard Plus, 5 x Antepsin tablets and Supercalm herbal supplement as well as a general vit and min supplement. He also gets Fast Fibre and Alfa A Oil in separate buckets at night to ensure he has several available forage stuffs. He is turned out daily although I have no grass to speak of so he is reliant again on adlib haylage. He had a 3 week course of GastroGold which I now read is rubbish! I only started him the Antepsins a few days a go and the first day I made the mistake of giving him 10 tablets in his morning feed instead of splitting them. I also gave him a small feed of pulp and chaff before my friend came over to assist me with some ground work with the horse. He was really calm and good and all the ground work we did went very well. He was happy for me to rub him from his head down to an including his girth area on both sides. To me this shrieked a pointer that yes he may well have ulcers and the antiacids suppressed the acid decreasing his sensitivity. However I have continued for the last 2 days dosing him as I should have 5 tablets twice a day and I have to say this morning he is just so aggressive and sensitive again. I despair, I suppose I wanted a clear indication that ulcers could well be the problem and now I am not so sure. Was it possibly that he has them that bad that the 10 tablets at once had an effect but 5 simply arent enough? I dont want to put him through scoping uneccessarily, but on the other hand my instincts inspite of others comments are that this horse is in pain and not taking the mickey? Most 5 year olds of his breeding are only too willing to work and infact love work. Would a horse who has been in pain for a long time ( I am talking a couple of years) actually instantly drop the aggressiveness if the pain is relieved slightly? Obviously the previous owner has not been honest, but I did get some other history. He has been through a few homes already, so I am hoping that the temperament has been caused by something physical and as it hasn't been addressed he has got worse and worse. Thanks for reading sorry for the novel!