ironhorse
Well-Known Member
I have an 8yo quarter horse that has cribbed since we bought him as a 2yo - it really only became apparent when he was backed, and the trainers' regime probably didn't help, but that's another story.
After a few false starts with vets that refused to believe there was anything wrong with him he was scoped and treated for ulcers. I changed his diet to fibre based (alfalfa chaff, linseed and thunder brooks balancers)and management to ad lib hay and more turnout he improved in condition and generally in attitude - although he needed careful management at shows - but continued to crib.
Throughout this time he was often not quite right soundness wise - never enough to really demand a lameness work up and some small changes to shoeing or physio treatment often improved matters for a while.
In October 2015 he was finally diagnosed with hind leg PSD and bone bruising - this was treated with shockwave and tildren and he came back into work.
We're at a new yard which has 24/7 turnout in summer and he has looked amazing since moving there but still cribs - paddocks are electric fenced but he can get at the fence posts on one side of the paddock and continues to crib on these.
This summer he went lame again - the vet was mystified as he had made such a good recovery, and after further remedial shoeing, hock injections and osphos, he's been on field rest since mid summer.
We'll soon have the vet back out to re-assess but as he can spend several hours a day cribbing, leaning backwards as he sucks the air in, i'm not convinced that even if he is sound, he will stay that way.
Worth mentioning that in the early years he did wear a collar but still managed to crib unless it was so tight he could hardly breathe.
Just feel that there's not much more we can do and I'm setting myself up for more heartbreak, and the horse for more lameness and pain.
Anyone else got experiences with cribbers and lameness? Sorry for the long post!
After a few false starts with vets that refused to believe there was anything wrong with him he was scoped and treated for ulcers. I changed his diet to fibre based (alfalfa chaff, linseed and thunder brooks balancers)and management to ad lib hay and more turnout he improved in condition and generally in attitude - although he needed careful management at shows - but continued to crib.
Throughout this time he was often not quite right soundness wise - never enough to really demand a lameness work up and some small changes to shoeing or physio treatment often improved matters for a while.
In October 2015 he was finally diagnosed with hind leg PSD and bone bruising - this was treated with shockwave and tildren and he came back into work.
We're at a new yard which has 24/7 turnout in summer and he has looked amazing since moving there but still cribs - paddocks are electric fenced but he can get at the fence posts on one side of the paddock and continues to crib on these.
This summer he went lame again - the vet was mystified as he had made such a good recovery, and after further remedial shoeing, hock injections and osphos, he's been on field rest since mid summer.
We'll soon have the vet back out to re-assess but as he can spend several hours a day cribbing, leaning backwards as he sucks the air in, i'm not convinced that even if he is sound, he will stay that way.
Worth mentioning that in the early years he did wear a collar but still managed to crib unless it was so tight he could hardly breathe.
Just feel that there's not much more we can do and I'm setting myself up for more heartbreak, and the horse for more lameness and pain.
Anyone else got experiences with cribbers and lameness? Sorry for the long post!