Nichola_BEquestrian
Active Member
I've been rehabbing my boy since last September. Unfortunately this has meant box rest since then. He had inflammation in his SDFT. The vet wanted to do annular ligament surgery in December, but I asked for a bit more time to rehab myself with hopes of avoiding surgery. This has worked, as at his last scan last week there is huge improvement. The vet says he is now 99% sound and there has been a remarkable improvement. My rehab, ten mins walking, ultrasound treatment, box rest and bonner bandaging obviously helped!
The vet has said I can now walk him out, 20 mins a day, building up to 25 mins next week, 30 mins the week after and so on....
We walked him out for the first time on a short hack (led from the ground) at weekend and I can't believe how good he was. This is my big chestnut WB! But he has been a star to lead out on short hacks. The vet said I can ride him, but I'm a little worried about jumping on a horse that has been box rested since September with zero turnout! I'm taking my chances on the ground for now.
This is such a long haul to get him right again and it's killing me that he is not living the life of a horse. The vet said very small paddock turnout would be fine (and I can try sedalin the first time he goes out), but my yard owners have still not sorted this out. I've been asking and asking. There is a small paddock but the fencing is down. They keep promising to get it sorted but nothing yet. I would probably feel more confident getting on board to hack if he had a least a couple of hours per day in there.
My biggest worry is long term.... I want him to enjoy his life, he is a horse at the end of the day! But my worry is how on earth do you ever get them back to being able to be turned out again? Obviously work wise, it will be a case of fittening him following my vet's strict plan and seeing if he stands up to the work or not (hacking and lower level dressage - I will just go with whatever he is comfortable with). But how on earth does he ever get back to being a horse? Surely if I turn him out eventually he will gallop around and re-injure himself? Part of me feels really selfish, that I'm rehabbing him with hopes of him coming sound for work again, maybe it would be best I retire him and let him live out, rather than rehab him for my own gain? As I'm sure he just wanted to be in the field with a couple of buddies.
Can anyone advise?
Sorry for rambling - hope that all makes sense!
The vet has said I can now walk him out, 20 mins a day, building up to 25 mins next week, 30 mins the week after and so on....
We walked him out for the first time on a short hack (led from the ground) at weekend and I can't believe how good he was. This is my big chestnut WB! But he has been a star to lead out on short hacks. The vet said I can ride him, but I'm a little worried about jumping on a horse that has been box rested since September with zero turnout! I'm taking my chances on the ground for now.
This is such a long haul to get him right again and it's killing me that he is not living the life of a horse. The vet said very small paddock turnout would be fine (and I can try sedalin the first time he goes out), but my yard owners have still not sorted this out. I've been asking and asking. There is a small paddock but the fencing is down. They keep promising to get it sorted but nothing yet. I would probably feel more confident getting on board to hack if he had a least a couple of hours per day in there.
My biggest worry is long term.... I want him to enjoy his life, he is a horse at the end of the day! But my worry is how on earth do you ever get them back to being able to be turned out again? Obviously work wise, it will be a case of fittening him following my vet's strict plan and seeing if he stands up to the work or not (hacking and lower level dressage - I will just go with whatever he is comfortable with). But how on earth does he ever get back to being a horse? Surely if I turn him out eventually he will gallop around and re-injure himself? Part of me feels really selfish, that I'm rehabbing him with hopes of him coming sound for work again, maybe it would be best I retire him and let him live out, rather than rehab him for my own gain? As I'm sure he just wanted to be in the field with a couple of buddies.
Can anyone advise?
Sorry for rambling - hope that all makes sense!