MochaDun
Well-Known Member
I'm in a total quandary what to do with my pony. The field they have for winter turnout is a veritable bog for about a third of it and many including mine have recurring mud fever, in some cases leading to infection (mine included a couple of months ago). I have him on restricted turnout at the moment so he has some days stabled out of the mud, but as a pony he needs some time out just to be a pony and eat the limited grass. Tonight after 2 days in he's got more scabs appeared all tight up in under one heel, they feel huge, and the scabbiness seems to go up as far as his ergots, and round them. Have treated them this evening but I can tell the scabs are pulling on his skin and he's a bit sore. It's like it appears overnight as I check his heels every day.
I'm at the point where I just don't know whether just to clip out his back heels (he's got medium feather I'd say) so I can really get to the root of the problem on the skin and then if I then turn him out would slather on barrier cream but is he at more risk without feather of getting more problems with mud fever? I do think his feather offers some protection but it is also trapping the mud significantly too. Or do I just leave him in until I can clear up the scabs totally and not clip? (it's hard getting sudocrem etc on through the hair at the moment but it does seem to work regardless). The mud isn't going to go away anytime soon. So my query is do I risk a worse problem by clipping out and turning out though with good barrier protection or should he be in until I've really got the last batch of scabs cleared up? I feel like the field must be rife with the bacteria.
I know mud fever is not a life threatening condition but it's doing my nut in this winter and just trying to manage it as best I can for him without leaving him stuck in for weeks at a time.
I'm at the point where I just don't know whether just to clip out his back heels (he's got medium feather I'd say) so I can really get to the root of the problem on the skin and then if I then turn him out would slather on barrier cream but is he at more risk without feather of getting more problems with mud fever? I do think his feather offers some protection but it is also trapping the mud significantly too. Or do I just leave him in until I can clear up the scabs totally and not clip? (it's hard getting sudocrem etc on through the hair at the moment but it does seem to work regardless). The mud isn't going to go away anytime soon. So my query is do I risk a worse problem by clipping out and turning out though with good barrier protection or should he be in until I've really got the last batch of scabs cleared up? I feel like the field must be rife with the bacteria.
I know mud fever is not a life threatening condition but it's doing my nut in this winter and just trying to manage it as best I can for him without leaving him stuck in for weeks at a time.