HeresHoping
Well-Known Member
Am blubbing.
'So what?' you might ask.
In November 2013 Larry, my 17hh ISH ready to go BE Novice, sat down in the field. He was fairly motoring and his back legs shot past his front. It seemed like forever before he got up. I'd had him just three months (with four failed vettings on four other horses behind me, but that's another story). Initially we thought he had just pulled a muscle, but by January we knew it was something worse.
He was viewed by Sue Dyson at the AHT, and was more or less written off completely. The diagnosis after an MRI was a 'crushed' lumbosacral joint and a torn hind suspensory (not too badly, but never the less damaged). After much deliberation, not least because I'd not long had my TB PTS due to his horrendous, aggressive, dangerous behaviour which turned out to be due to a fractured ilial shaft that had never healed, we decided to see if a period (9 months to a year) of 'field' rest would allow things to settle enough for him to become a happy hacker at least.
After 6 months of mooching I finally managed to get enough money together to buy an ArcEquine unit - I wish it could have been sooner but needs must when the devil vomits broken cars, flooded bathrooms, and the like in to your kettle. We started with 6 weeks of it on its 'intro setting' (to be used until no longer lame) and I was getting a bit frustrated as I would think he looked sounder, then he'd be a numpty in the field and we'd be back to square one. The good news was that his sarcoids dropped off.
He finally looked good enough to up the programmes to 'repair and regenerate' mode about 6 weeks ago and have been following the recommendations on the various AE sites.
Today, out in the new winter fields, calm as you like (that might be the valerian but anywhere new has been incitement enough for him to throw shapes and charge about), he rolled. Right over. He hasn't been seen to do that in almost a year. Being unable to roll right over can be an indicator of something not right in the pelvis/SI/lumbosacral region. If he feels well enough to do that, I think I can start hoping a little bit more!
'So what?' you might ask.
In November 2013 Larry, my 17hh ISH ready to go BE Novice, sat down in the field. He was fairly motoring and his back legs shot past his front. It seemed like forever before he got up. I'd had him just three months (with four failed vettings on four other horses behind me, but that's another story). Initially we thought he had just pulled a muscle, but by January we knew it was something worse.
He was viewed by Sue Dyson at the AHT, and was more or less written off completely. The diagnosis after an MRI was a 'crushed' lumbosacral joint and a torn hind suspensory (not too badly, but never the less damaged). After much deliberation, not least because I'd not long had my TB PTS due to his horrendous, aggressive, dangerous behaviour which turned out to be due to a fractured ilial shaft that had never healed, we decided to see if a period (9 months to a year) of 'field' rest would allow things to settle enough for him to become a happy hacker at least.
After 6 months of mooching I finally managed to get enough money together to buy an ArcEquine unit - I wish it could have been sooner but needs must when the devil vomits broken cars, flooded bathrooms, and the like in to your kettle. We started with 6 weeks of it on its 'intro setting' (to be used until no longer lame) and I was getting a bit frustrated as I would think he looked sounder, then he'd be a numpty in the field and we'd be back to square one. The good news was that his sarcoids dropped off.
He finally looked good enough to up the programmes to 'repair and regenerate' mode about 6 weeks ago and have been following the recommendations on the various AE sites.
Today, out in the new winter fields, calm as you like (that might be the valerian but anywhere new has been incitement enough for him to throw shapes and charge about), he rolled. Right over. He hasn't been seen to do that in almost a year. Being unable to roll right over can be an indicator of something not right in the pelvis/SI/lumbosacral region. If he feels well enough to do that, I think I can start hoping a little bit more!