AdorableAlice
Well-Known Member
Thoughts learned friends please.
In my work I get to view a lot of horses. It has become apparent that many owners are preferring to use so called EDT's instead of equine vets to maintain mouths. I am not interested in why, it may be cost or convenience etc, it matters not. What does matter is the amount of mouths that have been power tooled to such an extent that the teeth are now rounded off and unable to grind correctly. In the past two weeks I have seen two yards using differing EDTs and both have horses with smooth rounded teeth. One yard said to me they thought their horses had been made sore by the dentist as their horses were quidding after the work had been done and not before. Those horses are not sore they simply had billiard ball teeth courtesy of power tools.
In any horse this has a considerable impact as the years go by but for the older ones is can be a disaster.
In years gone by a horse was kept comfortable, today it seems the normal for teeth to excessively rasped - why ?
In my work I get to view a lot of horses. It has become apparent that many owners are preferring to use so called EDT's instead of equine vets to maintain mouths. I am not interested in why, it may be cost or convenience etc, it matters not. What does matter is the amount of mouths that have been power tooled to such an extent that the teeth are now rounded off and unable to grind correctly. In the past two weeks I have seen two yards using differing EDTs and both have horses with smooth rounded teeth. One yard said to me they thought their horses had been made sore by the dentist as their horses were quidding after the work had been done and not before. Those horses are not sore they simply had billiard ball teeth courtesy of power tools.
In any horse this has a considerable impact as the years go by but for the older ones is can be a disaster.
In years gone by a horse was kept comfortable, today it seems the normal for teeth to excessively rasped - why ?