Perce
Well-Known Member
My lovely boy (rising 2 to make approx 16hh, warmblood) has developed DOD in his right hock and I have been given a very poor prognosis of him ever being a riding horse. (I think that's vet speak for "no chance!") I am obviously absolutely devasted as he was bought for life and i had great plans for us, but....what can you do!!
he became lame at about 12 months, the catalyst possibly being a knock, over winter i thought he had improved but restrictions due to mud and wet weather meant I seldom saw him do much anyway- but he now has bony changes that cannot be operated on or medicated, a hock joint with limited flexion and he is lame still. (occasionally looking ok, but after the vet visit very lame.) I have been told the vets can do no more for him , it's up to his own healing ability, or not!
I have lots of thinking to do around this, but at the moment just want to find out anything i can. He will be checked and x-rayed again in July before the insurance runs out!!
my vet has said chuck out in the field and he will only give bute if he is lame enough to box rest. (doesn't want it to mask pain and lead to more injury in the paddock.)
My present plan is just to let him be and as long as he's comfy let him enjoy himself. He obviously doesn't see some discomfort in his hock as a reason to behave in a plodding way!
there's been lots of posts on here lately about what people do with lame horses and I know I will have to see how he goes. I am lucky enough to have my own land - not enough for the expense of a 'useless' horse to go un noticed but ...- I am also lucky enough to have a nine year old riding horse who is keeping me sane/busy at the moment.
What I am really after, is any experiences of people having similar problems with youngsters. How did you manage it? How quickly did your youngster deteriorate? anything really. How did 'it' cope with doing nothing? Do you still have them?
I don't think box rest is any life for a youngster, but watching a slightly lame horse pratt around in the field is difficult too. But other than the odd day i am not willing to box rest for a lot of time - I want him to have quality of life, not longivity for the sake of it. I would box rest for weeks if i thought it would fix it, but it won't.
so any shared experiences would be appreciated. i am finding this hard to come to terms with but he is the loveliest chap; friendly, gentle, funny and loves company. spent the morning in the barn (raining here again!!) throwing my mare's feed bucket around and scaring himself- hilarious! otherwise followed me around for a cuddle!
thanks for reading - bit long - sorry!!!
he became lame at about 12 months, the catalyst possibly being a knock, over winter i thought he had improved but restrictions due to mud and wet weather meant I seldom saw him do much anyway- but he now has bony changes that cannot be operated on or medicated, a hock joint with limited flexion and he is lame still. (occasionally looking ok, but after the vet visit very lame.) I have been told the vets can do no more for him , it's up to his own healing ability, or not!
I have lots of thinking to do around this, but at the moment just want to find out anything i can. He will be checked and x-rayed again in July before the insurance runs out!!
my vet has said chuck out in the field and he will only give bute if he is lame enough to box rest. (doesn't want it to mask pain and lead to more injury in the paddock.)
My present plan is just to let him be and as long as he's comfy let him enjoy himself. He obviously doesn't see some discomfort in his hock as a reason to behave in a plodding way!
there's been lots of posts on here lately about what people do with lame horses and I know I will have to see how he goes. I am lucky enough to have my own land - not enough for the expense of a 'useless' horse to go un noticed but ...- I am also lucky enough to have a nine year old riding horse who is keeping me sane/busy at the moment.
What I am really after, is any experiences of people having similar problems with youngsters. How did you manage it? How quickly did your youngster deteriorate? anything really. How did 'it' cope with doing nothing? Do you still have them?
I don't think box rest is any life for a youngster, but watching a slightly lame horse pratt around in the field is difficult too. But other than the odd day i am not willing to box rest for a lot of time - I want him to have quality of life, not longivity for the sake of it. I would box rest for weeks if i thought it would fix it, but it won't.
so any shared experiences would be appreciated. i am finding this hard to come to terms with but he is the loveliest chap; friendly, gentle, funny and loves company. spent the morning in the barn (raining here again!!) throwing my mare's feed bucket around and scaring himself- hilarious! otherwise followed me around for a cuddle!
thanks for reading - bit long - sorry!!!