It doesn't sound as if you are at the end of the diagnostic road yet and this recent lameness may a) have aggravated the last condition or b) pulled something else new. I think your plan to get him sound enough to travel to CA is a good one and then just see what the vets there make of the whole picture these last few months. He has had a lot going on in that time for a youngster so, depending on their opinion, maybe some extended time just chilling is what might be needed.
With all the tests you have had done on him there surely can't be too much more they can test (or am I being naive?!!) and it is their expert opinion you need so I would just take a deep breath for now and get yourselves settled in your new location and try and get some steady routine into all your lives before making any final decisions.
Oh MNo wonder you’re at a loss, they break your heart these horses don’t they!
I think follow your gut. My young gorgeous, funny, needy, cuddly lad was having issues following various treatments. My gut said bring him home from full livery so that (as you said) I could have ‘my’ eyes on him. I hoped to turn him away and see how he went, even resigned myself to a very loooong retirement for him, sadly his deterioration continued catastrophicallyBUT I was so glad I spent the time with him, I was his human.
You know Atlas better than anyone and you can trust yourself to do right by/for him. You are in a position where you can try and get him comfortable enough to be turned away and cross your fingers. On the other hand I can’t imagine you’d ever PTS without a definite diagnosis. How much would it cost to keep him for 18 months versus cost of an MRI? Also on another thought, is it still the same foot that had the abscess? Again these can rumble along - and coincidentally my lad that had recurring abscesses also had intolerance to any form of anti inflammatories
Trying to do right for any of our animals can be so overwhelming at times. We can only look at what’s in front of us and make our decisions with their best interests at heart, even though it does sometimes feel like playing god.
Echo Troupers advise above about taking a deep breath too![]()
Very sorry you have had another blow. It could be some very deep seated soft tissue injury/abscess. My old horse was hopping lame for 8 months, x rays etc did not find anything. We chucked him out in the field and he came sound. He was 8 and I rode him until he was 27 and he lived to 29. No idea if this is anything similar but if it not going to do him any harm maybe it is worth just resting him for a while and see what happens.Well Atlas is still lame.. sigh. He looks great in walk but not in trot although he does look more comfortable on his feet in general in terms of stride length etc but definitely unlevel. He came sound and then it seems any amount of running around and being a fool re aggravates things. This is a hard pill to swallow having just spent five figures for him to be hospitalized for some kind of virus, and also a kidney issue that may or may not get him short term or long term- fine for now, but he has one kidney smaller than another and had a huge reaction to bute he was on for lameness.
I'm honestly at a bit of a loss, I have to assume some kind of soft tissue injury in the foot at this point though I'll be getting some blocks at the very least to be sure it's the feet but it sure seems that way. I don't really feel like spending $4,000 ish for an MRI when I've already plowed so much money into him and I'm not even sure what it would change given I would not do any kind of months on end stall rest.
He is currently chilling out on stall/run rest at the barn I used to be at. He's in great spirits and I'm confident with a few weeks rest and no running around, he would be fit/sound enough to travel to California and he will have had a good chunk of time to recover from his illness with consistent great bloodwork (the vets said give him a month, I'm aiming for 6 weeks). Up until he galloped around like a lunatic, he looked really good and sound and I was confident that the composite shoes I'd had put on him had sorted him out. Sigh. I'd honestly prefer to leave him here in Colorado and forget about him for a bit but frankly I don't feel like the snow and ice that's incoming is a great option for a horse with a lameness issue either and I feel like he does need careful eyes on him (my eyes).
But what do I do with him then? Stall/run rest and do some kind of in hand rehab assuming it's soft tissue and/or the sidebone is active? Lob him out in a pasture (he's not a quiet, unplayful pasture mate). Find a happy medium and maybe do 6 weeks stall/run with in hand rehab to try and get him a little further along and then lob him out?
It's sooooo tempting to go chasing diagnostics but I'm honestly not even sure what an MRI would change in terms of what I do. Even if it was pretty dire news, I'd at the very least want to give him a year turned away to give him some sort of chance at coming pasture sound but even then what- he gets fat on fresh air. He's not the kind of horse you can just turn away in a grassy pasture 24/7 and I don't believe those dry lot type situations are really fun for a horse for the rest of it's life when it's getting no stimulus from being ridden etc.
I'm trying to remember the last time I got consistent joy from owning horses and it truly feels like a distant memoryIf I was reading this I'd be thinking PTS PTS PTS this horse has too much going on, but it's really hard when you have a very cheeky, cheerful, beautiful little horse in front of you that does seem to have a way of overcoming things against all odds.
My gut is saying take him to CA, do a 6 week or so stall and run rest period with controlled walking under my care and then turn him out and cross my fingers. But maybe that's just pointless and stupid, IDK at this point.
Sorry all I know this is boring I’m just at a loss![]()
There's no 'right' or 'wrong' in this, so just go with your gut xxWell Atlas is still lame.. sigh. He looks great in walk but not in trot although he does look more comfortable on his feet in general in terms of stride length etc but definitely unlevel. He came sound and then it seems any amount of running around and being a fool re aggravates things. This is a hard pill to swallow having just spent five figures for him to be hospitalized for some kind of virus, and also a kidney issue that may or may not get him short term or long term- fine for now, but he has one kidney smaller than another and had a huge reaction to bute he was on for lameness.
I'm honestly at a bit of a loss, I have to assume some kind of soft tissue injury in the foot at this point though I'll be getting some blocks at the very least to be sure it's the feet but it sure seems that way. I don't really feel like spending $4,000 ish for an MRI when I've already plowed so much money into him and I'm not even sure what it would change given I would not do any kind of months on end stall rest.
He is currently chilling out on stall/run rest at the barn I used to be at. He's in great spirits and I'm confident with a few weeks rest and no running around, he would be fit/sound enough to travel to California and he will have had a good chunk of time to recover from his illness with consistent great bloodwork (the vets said give him a month, I'm aiming for 6 weeks). Up until he galloped around like a lunatic, he looked really good and sound and I was confident that the composite shoes I'd had put on him had sorted him out. Sigh. I'd honestly prefer to leave him here in Colorado and forget about him for a bit but frankly I don't feel like the snow and ice that's incoming is a great option for a horse with a lameness issue either and I feel like he does need careful eyes on him (my eyes).
But what do I do with him then? Stall/run rest and do some kind of in hand rehab assuming it's soft tissue and/or the sidebone is active? Lob him out in a pasture (he's not a quiet, unplayful pasture mate). Find a happy medium and maybe do 6 weeks stall/run with in hand rehab to try and get him a little further along and then lob him out?
It's sooooo tempting to go chasing diagnostics but I'm honestly not even sure what an MRI would change in terms of what I do. Even if it was pretty dire news, I'd at the very least want to give him a year turned away to give him some sort of chance at coming pasture sound but even then what- he gets fat on fresh air. He's not the kind of horse you can just turn away in a grassy pasture 24/7 and I don't believe those dry lot type situations are really fun for a horse for the rest of it's life when it's getting no stimulus from being ridden etc.
I'm trying to remember the last time I got consistent joy from owning horses and it truly feels like a distant memoryIf I was reading this I'd be thinking PTS PTS PTS this horse has too much going on, but it's really hard when you have a very cheeky, cheerful, beautiful little horse in front of you that does seem to have a way of overcoming things against all odds.
My gut is saying take him to CA, do a 6 week or so stall and run rest period with controlled walking under my care and then turn him out and cross my fingers. But maybe that's just pointless and stupid, IDK at this point.
Sorry all I know this is boring I’m just at a loss![]()
Noooo, knowing Mitchen’s luck she’s get a pet pig for Atlas then the pig will run up a vets bill!Tell Atlas he can have a pet pig only if he stops worrying you!
Oh well, perhaps Atlas would be content with a life sized cuddly toy pig?...Noooo, knowing Mitchen’s luck she’s get a pet pig for Atlas then the pig will run up a vets bill!
(Apologies Mitchen if that’s in bad taste)