PucciNPoni
Well-Known Member
I could use some unbiased balanced views on what to do with my mare. I have had my mare for four years, have had a fantastic time with her. Training has been long and hard slog - we were ONLY just getting to grips with a canter that wasn't on the forehand and so on....getting out and doing a few shows and dressage was something we were learning together.
However, we've had a rather rough year. Last winter she had a wee bit of time off as she'd hurt her hip/pelvis. She came back to work stronger and better than ever after a slow start and lots of TLC. End of May she came back from a show not quite right, she came in a couple of days later lame - got the vet/farrier up immediately and she was diagnosed with Laminitis. She was box rested for six weeks (she was cleared earlier but Laminitis Clinic recommended 30 days, which we did every minute of plus a week or so). She came back to work carefully and slowly. One vet thinks her lami was perhaps due to hormone levels (her weight a little high, but her management shouldn't have been cause of it). Another vet suggested checking metabolic rate on her.
So a couple of small dressage shows, making progress - still a bit hard work at canter, but coming on. Started jumping to help improve this - but not big and on a sand arena to avoid concussion.
More disaster, suddenly went lame in the back end. Off to the horsepital, scintigraphy, ultrasound, xray etc. Not quite sure but think it's a possible tear in a ligament in the stifle. She came home for three weeks on strict box rest and hand walking. Most of the time she's been really good, but at times she's bungeed me around the arena as she's getting fed up with this off work nonsense! NOw she's coughing (I reckon from being stabled - her hay is being soaked...so not that).
Vet back yesterday to check to see if we could restart work. She's been getting cartrophen, she's had HA injections (no steroid due to lami)....and still lame. Some improvement but not enough (she's sounder at walk now, but def not trot). The next thing is possibly key-hole. I'm now worried about the recovery from arthroscopy being more box rest. The coughing isn't going to be helped certainly with more box rest. One thought certainly might be just to turn her away for a year and see if she comes right (this has been suggested to me and a friend who has land of her own could take her and manage it even during the summer with a starvie, which we haven't got where she's stabled currently.
I haven't got facilities to properly turn her away - but I do have the ability to box rest indefinitely. But as much as I love the horse and I want to do the best for her I don't see a horse as a "pet". They are too large and too expensive to be pets. However, I'm not sure she can cope with much more box rest (for coughing and mentally). I also can't afford another horse to ride, and as much as I love keeping a horse and looking after her, (and I know this is selfish) but it's horrible to not ride as well. My feeling is that she's a horse that loves to have a job, I have a horse to do a job. I owe her the best possible treatment, but what is that - is it just good old rest and recovery or is it throwing all the science at her and finding out exactly what and how long the recovery will be???
Thanks for reading. As it's early, a hot cuppa coffee if you got this far...
However, we've had a rather rough year. Last winter she had a wee bit of time off as she'd hurt her hip/pelvis. She came back to work stronger and better than ever after a slow start and lots of TLC. End of May she came back from a show not quite right, she came in a couple of days later lame - got the vet/farrier up immediately and she was diagnosed with Laminitis. She was box rested for six weeks (she was cleared earlier but Laminitis Clinic recommended 30 days, which we did every minute of plus a week or so). She came back to work carefully and slowly. One vet thinks her lami was perhaps due to hormone levels (her weight a little high, but her management shouldn't have been cause of it). Another vet suggested checking metabolic rate on her.
So a couple of small dressage shows, making progress - still a bit hard work at canter, but coming on. Started jumping to help improve this - but not big and on a sand arena to avoid concussion.
More disaster, suddenly went lame in the back end. Off to the horsepital, scintigraphy, ultrasound, xray etc. Not quite sure but think it's a possible tear in a ligament in the stifle. She came home for three weeks on strict box rest and hand walking. Most of the time she's been really good, but at times she's bungeed me around the arena as she's getting fed up with this off work nonsense! NOw she's coughing (I reckon from being stabled - her hay is being soaked...so not that).
Vet back yesterday to check to see if we could restart work. She's been getting cartrophen, she's had HA injections (no steroid due to lami)....and still lame. Some improvement but not enough (she's sounder at walk now, but def not trot). The next thing is possibly key-hole. I'm now worried about the recovery from arthroscopy being more box rest. The coughing isn't going to be helped certainly with more box rest. One thought certainly might be just to turn her away for a year and see if she comes right (this has been suggested to me and a friend who has land of her own could take her and manage it even during the summer with a starvie, which we haven't got where she's stabled currently.
I haven't got facilities to properly turn her away - but I do have the ability to box rest indefinitely. But as much as I love the horse and I want to do the best for her I don't see a horse as a "pet". They are too large and too expensive to be pets. However, I'm not sure she can cope with much more box rest (for coughing and mentally). I also can't afford another horse to ride, and as much as I love keeping a horse and looking after her, (and I know this is selfish) but it's horrible to not ride as well. My feeling is that she's a horse that loves to have a job, I have a horse to do a job. I owe her the best possible treatment, but what is that - is it just good old rest and recovery or is it throwing all the science at her and finding out exactly what and how long the recovery will be???
Thanks for reading. As it's early, a hot cuppa coffee if you got this far...