WelshMisfit
Well-Known Member
Hi,
I have a mini Shetland who is currently very footsore. He IS overweight and I have tried everything to get weight off him over the winter but he seems to exist on fresh air!
He's been turned out during the day over the winter in a muzzle, with no rug on and no extra hay on the field. He's had no bucket feeds, one small haynet overnight, 3/4 filled with hay and I've triple netted it so he has to really work at getting at it. He has no treats whatsoever.
I noticed he was a little footy about a month ago on taking him down the field.
The path down to the field is quite stony and he was paddling a little bit as he walked down it, but once he was in the field, he was galloping around like a lunatic. I stopped turning him out and soaked his hay for 12 hours to leach the nutrients out of it. I've had the farrier out, he's trimmed his feet and he says he can't see any signs of laminitis. He's been in on a deep shavings bed for over a week now, but he still seems very sore on his fronts. There's no heat or digital pulse and he's not rocking back on his fronts at all. He's standing very square.
I'm baffled as to what it could be as he's not obviously lame on either front leg, just footy
Any thoughts?
I have a mini Shetland who is currently very footsore. He IS overweight and I have tried everything to get weight off him over the winter but he seems to exist on fresh air!
He's been turned out during the day over the winter in a muzzle, with no rug on and no extra hay on the field. He's had no bucket feeds, one small haynet overnight, 3/4 filled with hay and I've triple netted it so he has to really work at getting at it. He has no treats whatsoever.
I noticed he was a little footy about a month ago on taking him down the field.
I'm baffled as to what it could be as he's not obviously lame on either front leg, just footy