Damnation
Well-Known Member
A toothbrush.. good god..
People on my yard think I'm crazy when I initially clean a wound (small nicks and cuts, not needing vet treatment!) with a toothbrush (sterilized!), then use sterile gauze pads and sterile water for after care. There is no way I would use our yard hosepipe for wound cleaning knowing how it's kept! A breeding ground for all kinds of nasties.
Irrigation is just as effective as scrubbing, and less likely to break down the wound bed though!
Wise words from days gone by.
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One story involving the owner using honey was quite a shocker. Poor horse had had a puncture wound to it's knee (which should have meant a same day vet call out at least) but it was left for a few days minimum. They then noticed it had started to swell significantly and were coldhosing it once a day then covering it in honey because the knee 'smelled infected'. They weren't wrong about that tbf but sadly the joint was so badly infected and the window of opportunity to treat was past, the only choice was to put her down. Poor mare was in agony.
Water from a tap is not as sterile as you would think.
I'd have reported the owner of that horse. I may not get many fans for saying it, but that is a perfect example of neglect. When most people think of neglect, they picture horses left starving in poor conditions. Neglect is also the failure to properly care for an animal or person.
To be honest I would call it ignorance, meaning "lacking knowledge or awareness" and not ignorance in the meaning "rude or bad mannered".
Agreed that people should know all about horses before embarking on the ownership of one, but as you are aware the subject is vast and owners cannot be assumed to know everything there is to know, I am sure they thought they were doing the correct thing. I wouldn't call it neglect.
An example (both of which I have experience with, not personally);
Example A - a horse with a huge apron of skin hanging down from its chest to below its knees exposing the muscles following a freak accident in the field.
Example B - a small puncture wound over a joint barely visible to the human eye.
I know many horsey people who think that the worse scenario was example A and the horse would have to be PTS immediately.
Haphazardly trying out suggestions from an Internet forum is not care...it's potentially harmful.
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It needs to be gamma irradiated so that you don't risk the addition of potentially infective spores into the wound. I am a microbiologist, this is not debatable and it has nothing to do with the health of the bees!
Is no one else seriously worried that this horse has had an infection for quite a few days now (specifics not given) that it hasn't been resolved and if becoming systemic in that leg is not going to bee resolved by some saline and animalintex!?!
I am sorry Ester, but you really do come across as a little, shall we say 'hard' so as not to sound rude. Everyone makes mistakes in life, please don't say you have never made a genuine mistake with your horse??? I am sure there is something that you will have done that others won't have agree with or would have done differently.Quite, ignorance is no defence in life or in the eyes of the law even more so in the days of the internet.
I'd have reported the owner of that horse. I may not get many fans for saying it, but that is a perfect example of neglect. When most people think of neglect, they picture horses left starving in poor conditions. Neglect is also the failure to properly care for an animal or person. Condoning home treatment of a wound that is not healing is condoning neglect because, as horrible as it must be to hear, that is the hard truth of the matter. We all learn by experience and I'm sure the OP will learn some lessons here, to be honest, we should all be open to still learning what's best.
I'd rather upset a person but know that a horse is going to get proper care than worry about offending someone and leaving a horse to be a guinea pig for trying home remedies advised by strangers on an internet forum!
There is always at least one yard 'expert' whom has apparently bred the Popes donkey, trained Mark Todd or has owned horses for 274 yrs and therefore their word can be taken as gospel, from using honey for infection, vaseline to work out imbedded straw from behing the eyeball, to peppermint tea and performing their own rectal exams for colic.
The amount of unintentional cases of the kind of neglect you refer to is so common it's frightening. There is always at least one yard 'expert' whom has apparently bred the Popes donkey, trained Mark Todd or has owned horses for 274 yrs and therefore their word can be taken as gospel, from using honey for infection, vaseline to work out imbedded straw from behing the eyeball, to peppermint tea and performing their own rectal exams for colic. Then there is the 'too many cooks will spoil the broth' scenario where practically everyone on the yard has poked grubby fingers into and around the wound, advised contradictory advice from the last person and the owner picks and chooses a new thing to try a couple of times a day, disaster. Honestly, at times if we could've have laughed we'd have cried.
IRL, if asked my opinion on such a matter, I always respond 'Well if it were my horse, I would *advise initial first aid etc situation depending* and end with 'however with all things like this it is best to at least speak to your Vet asap about it and get their opinion' and if I'm not sure it's always 'I think you should call your Vet'. I don't mind offering an opinion but only where appropriate as I want to sleep easy that night and not wake up to find that my advice has caused complications and/or suffering to any animal.
I understand your opinion re: reporting neglect in the previous case I described but sadly this would (well, has) deter people further from seeking Vet advise/assistance for fear of prosecution. Ultimately it is always best to encourage Vet involvement regardless of previous home treatments etc for the benefit of the animal, even if that results in euthansia rather than further suffering. It is hard not to be angry about ignorance/neglect but believe me, these people usually learn a very big lesson, very quickly, especially when at the end of the visit their horse is a corpse.
After watching my horse have three separate rectal examinations in four days a couple of weeks ago for splenic entrapment I cannot say that I would fancy that one! The only surprise was how well my horse dealt with having an injection in his neck, a tube down his nose, a hand shoved up his a**e and taken for a 'bumpy' trailer ride all in the space of one hour repeated over the course of three days! I wonder horses really think of us - they must think we exhibit very bizarre behaviour
Of course you get all sorts of advice (unwanted or not as the case may be) by yard people but all meant with good intentions. Sometimes its a case of separating the wheat from the chaff.
My rule of thumb is...if someone starts by saying things like, "check with your vet first", "I'm not sure but...", "I'm not qualified and you should check with someone who is but" usually are knowledgeable and trustworthy because they can admit they may not actually KNOW for certain. Anyone who says things like, "Yeah, it worked wonders on my horse, save yourself the call out charge", "I know what it is/what to do", "Ignore (insert qualified persons name) advice, I've been doing this for years" etc...should be wholly ignored in favour of those who are actually qualified to diagnose and help.
Every yard has one, it won't change, we all learn sooner or later who to trust and who to ignore.![]()
Gosh I am not disagreeing at all with you _GG_ but I wouldn't think about all that in that detail.... I would just say "I did XY and Z and it worked for me". Not "I did XY and Z and it worked for me but I am not a qualified person".
By the time I get to the yard after a busy day I am wiped out anyway without having to work out how to rephrase every sentence so it sounds 'correct' or to add a disclaimer to it. I guess I get straight to the point without going 'around the houses'. Bit lazy in structuring sentences but certainly never claimed to be something I am not (although I would probably be rich if I were a vet the amount I've given mine over the last 12 years)
If my horse has a problem (where he is not on his back with legs in air/standing on three legs) I like to step back, watch my horse, assess the situation, watch his symptoms, take notes for the vet and then ascertain whether I actually need the vet in a calm manner. It could take seconds to reach a conclusion, or it could take longer depending on what the problem is. Although I am conscious of vet=cost I also know that I have a responsibility to the animal and that takes precedence. I assume that this is what most people with a brain do.
I also assume that some people come on this forum hoping to avoid vets bills. If this is for minor things then they are justified I guess. I wouldn't think it was right if someone said "I've just spent an hour bringing my horse in from the field, as he is on three legs but I thought I'd come on here and ask what you think I should do before/if I call the vet out".
This is an interesting discussion.
I don't follow that last bit? I may be missing something but prosecution would only come for not getting vet attention. I don't understand why people would fear prosecution for seeking vet advice/care? If you mean, people would be afraid to call the vet after trying and failing to home treat, then I get it and it's tricky one for sure. Definitely wouldn't want to discourage people from turning to their vets at any time...but at the same time, we shouldn't let it go that a horse has suffered either?
Yep, it's a tricky one, I see your point and am scratching my head! Not much is black and white is it?
I see Ester has been targeted for something a few people have said...not sure why she's been singled out, but I'll reiterate, there should always be a level of understanding, but ignorance is no excuse.
After watching my horse have three separate rectal examinations in four days a couple of weeks ago for splenic entrapment I cannot say that I would fancy that one! The only surprise was how well my horse dealt with having an injection in his neck, a tube down his nose, a hand shoved up his a**e and taken for a 'bumpy' trailer ride all in the space of one hour repeated over the course of three days! I wonder horses really think of us - they must think we exhibit very bizarre behaviour
Of course you get all sorts of advice (unwanted or not as the case may be) by yard people but all meant with good intentions. Sometimes its a case of separating the wheat from the chaff.
well I presumed you were only here because of your current experience of non-healing limbs![]()