Ambers Echo
Still wittering on
I bought a 5 yo Connie a month ago. She had a 5 star vetting and nothing at all was picked up. However there is is just something about her that makes me feel as though she may not be feeling great.
I could ask a vet for advice but am reluctant at this stage because a few years ago at a routine check up (part of an annual health plan) I asked about the best way to clean wax from my dog's ears and was given a bottle of Otidine. 14 months later surgery for an intractable ear infection was excluded by the insurers on the basis that my casual conversation 14 months previously meant ear wax (which was part of the infection as bugs got trapped behind it) was a pre-existing condition! That conversation - which I did not really need to have as I could have got that very basic advice from anywhere - cost me over £500......
Anyway - when she arrived she ate mud. Lots of it! So I bought her a mineral salt lick and started her on a good quality balancer. She was (is) extremely touchy about being touched anywhere so I thought that was more behavioural/emotional. But although she is now ok with being stroked on her neck and back and having her legs handled, she still kicks out or tries to bite if you touch her belly and she is girthy.
Her eyes look a little dull as does her coat. Though I am used to my super-shiny chestnut and my other daughter's bright bay. So maybe grey coats just are dull in comparison? Her eyes are a bit gummy though no redness and the gunk is clear.
Her appetite is good, her poos are normal looking. She has plenty of energy under saddle and she plays in the field. YO does not think there is anything wrong with her!
She is on unlimited forage: plenty of long/old grass through the day and adlib haylage at night. She also gets plenty of Hifi.
Physio saw her on the first week but she was too touchy about being handled to be assessed. Physio is coming back on Monday as mare is so much better now so physio will be able to assess and work with her. But there is no reason to think she is sore - she is very well behaved ridden and carries herself well. Having said that when teeth were done as soon as we got her they were so bad her mouth was ulcerated but she never objected to being bridled when we viewed her so she seems the stoic type.
She was shipped over from Ireland a week or so before we bought her so life has been pretty stressful for her recently...
I was wondering about ulcers? Or just generally having had poor nutrient intake till we had her (hence the mud eating) and being a bit overwhelmed by her travels and all the changes. Would you ask a vet to give her a once over (though isn't that what a 5 stage is?) Would you be thinking diagnostics: bloods/scoping? Would you change her diet? Or am I looking for problems and need to stop worrying - she will just settle down and perk up with good grub, a good routine and stability.
Vet is coming back in a couple of weeks for 2nd set of vaccs. I wonder if I can have an unofficial chat then about whether or not I need to talk to a vet? Or will that put the vet in a difficult position? I don't want anything on her vet record at this stage saying that I consulted a vet about x, y or z as explained above.
I could ask a vet for advice but am reluctant at this stage because a few years ago at a routine check up (part of an annual health plan) I asked about the best way to clean wax from my dog's ears and was given a bottle of Otidine. 14 months later surgery for an intractable ear infection was excluded by the insurers on the basis that my casual conversation 14 months previously meant ear wax (which was part of the infection as bugs got trapped behind it) was a pre-existing condition! That conversation - which I did not really need to have as I could have got that very basic advice from anywhere - cost me over £500......
Anyway - when she arrived she ate mud. Lots of it! So I bought her a mineral salt lick and started her on a good quality balancer. She was (is) extremely touchy about being touched anywhere so I thought that was more behavioural/emotional. But although she is now ok with being stroked on her neck and back and having her legs handled, she still kicks out or tries to bite if you touch her belly and she is girthy.
Her eyes look a little dull as does her coat. Though I am used to my super-shiny chestnut and my other daughter's bright bay. So maybe grey coats just are dull in comparison? Her eyes are a bit gummy though no redness and the gunk is clear.
Her appetite is good, her poos are normal looking. She has plenty of energy under saddle and she plays in the field. YO does not think there is anything wrong with her!
She is on unlimited forage: plenty of long/old grass through the day and adlib haylage at night. She also gets plenty of Hifi.
Physio saw her on the first week but she was too touchy about being handled to be assessed. Physio is coming back on Monday as mare is so much better now so physio will be able to assess and work with her. But there is no reason to think she is sore - she is very well behaved ridden and carries herself well. Having said that when teeth were done as soon as we got her they were so bad her mouth was ulcerated but she never objected to being bridled when we viewed her so she seems the stoic type.
She was shipped over from Ireland a week or so before we bought her so life has been pretty stressful for her recently...
I was wondering about ulcers? Or just generally having had poor nutrient intake till we had her (hence the mud eating) and being a bit overwhelmed by her travels and all the changes. Would you ask a vet to give her a once over (though isn't that what a 5 stage is?) Would you be thinking diagnostics: bloods/scoping? Would you change her diet? Or am I looking for problems and need to stop worrying - she will just settle down and perk up with good grub, a good routine and stability.
Vet is coming back in a couple of weeks for 2nd set of vaccs. I wonder if I can have an unofficial chat then about whether or not I need to talk to a vet? Or will that put the vet in a difficult position? I don't want anything on her vet record at this stage saying that I consulted a vet about x, y or z as explained above.
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