Checkmate12
Member
Hi
Wondering whether anyone has any ideas what the root of the problem could be?
4 weeks ago my young mare was lame in a lesson, right at the start of the trot work. She was doing 'hoppity' paces and wanting to grind to a halt.
I took her home, and apart from having hind shoes put on to match the front, have rested her for those 4 weeks, bar riding her a couple of times to see if there was any change in the way of going. No.
Since then, I have had 2 practitioners look at her.
The 2nd was a Chiropractor. She gave her a good going over, watched me walking and trotting my cob in hand and noticed various things in her way of going.
I'd stated that I thought my cob was very stiff through the body, and she agreed with me. Said also that the action of her hocks was variable, and as they also click, that could mean the start of osteo arthritis.
As far as the fit of my saddle, although she advised she was no expert in this area, she thought the general shape was correct, but that the saddle was a tad too long on my cobs back and although correctly placed initially, if it slipped back even an inch, it would be going past the last rib and into the soft tissue area.
She said my mare wasn't sore in her back at all, but then since she hadn't been ridden for a month, she may have been so beforehand.
I am due to have an SMS saddle fitter out tomorrow to look at my saddle and possibly fit a new one.....
As far as exercise goes, the Chiro said that I should continue to ride my mare, should warm up in walk, go straight into canter to 'open her up' and then do the trot work and preferably quite a bit of trotting pole work including those raised alternately either end.
I rode my cob yesterday and today and both times she was fairly awful.
Sound in walk and canter. Sound in fast trot. But at working trot on both reins she feels 'double disunited' behind and just grinds back to walk. Though happily trotted over the raised trotting poles and felt fine at that point.
Today, a friend came and rode her for me so I could see what it looked like from the ground.
Observations were that when my cob trotted down the slight slope in my field, and then along the bottom straight, she was fine, but up the slight slope, after about the 3rd stride, she started to look laboured and by the time she'd reached the top straight was looking very uncomfortable behind. Whereas the hinds had been bending and kicking out behind her/tracking up nicely, suddenly they were doing neither of those things. Hardly bending, just going up and down like pistons, and from the riders perspective, feeling very jarring, and no doubt for the cob too as she gets slower and slower.
My friend rode her round the same route bareback, and the same thing happened. But when we lunged her on the only vaguely flat circuit I have in the vicinity - approx 15m circle with no rider at all, she was sound in all speeds of trot. Albeit the action of the hinds was variable from good step to slightly less bend in the hock.
She's a 5yr old Welsh D. She trips quite a lot.....
Does this sound like Arthritis in the hock to you? Further up back problem? Any ideas??
Chiro said to give it 4 weeks and she'll come out again.... of course I can ring her for a chat in between
I'm not sure what to do now. Just call the vet?
Thanks
Wondering whether anyone has any ideas what the root of the problem could be?
4 weeks ago my young mare was lame in a lesson, right at the start of the trot work. She was doing 'hoppity' paces and wanting to grind to a halt.
I took her home, and apart from having hind shoes put on to match the front, have rested her for those 4 weeks, bar riding her a couple of times to see if there was any change in the way of going. No.
Since then, I have had 2 practitioners look at her.
The 2nd was a Chiropractor. She gave her a good going over, watched me walking and trotting my cob in hand and noticed various things in her way of going.
I'd stated that I thought my cob was very stiff through the body, and she agreed with me. Said also that the action of her hocks was variable, and as they also click, that could mean the start of osteo arthritis.
As far as the fit of my saddle, although she advised she was no expert in this area, she thought the general shape was correct, but that the saddle was a tad too long on my cobs back and although correctly placed initially, if it slipped back even an inch, it would be going past the last rib and into the soft tissue area.
She said my mare wasn't sore in her back at all, but then since she hadn't been ridden for a month, she may have been so beforehand.
I am due to have an SMS saddle fitter out tomorrow to look at my saddle and possibly fit a new one.....
As far as exercise goes, the Chiro said that I should continue to ride my mare, should warm up in walk, go straight into canter to 'open her up' and then do the trot work and preferably quite a bit of trotting pole work including those raised alternately either end.
I rode my cob yesterday and today and both times she was fairly awful.
Sound in walk and canter. Sound in fast trot. But at working trot on both reins she feels 'double disunited' behind and just grinds back to walk. Though happily trotted over the raised trotting poles and felt fine at that point.
Today, a friend came and rode her for me so I could see what it looked like from the ground.
Observations were that when my cob trotted down the slight slope in my field, and then along the bottom straight, she was fine, but up the slight slope, after about the 3rd stride, she started to look laboured and by the time she'd reached the top straight was looking very uncomfortable behind. Whereas the hinds had been bending and kicking out behind her/tracking up nicely, suddenly they were doing neither of those things. Hardly bending, just going up and down like pistons, and from the riders perspective, feeling very jarring, and no doubt for the cob too as she gets slower and slower.
My friend rode her round the same route bareback, and the same thing happened. But when we lunged her on the only vaguely flat circuit I have in the vicinity - approx 15m circle with no rider at all, she was sound in all speeds of trot. Albeit the action of the hinds was variable from good step to slightly less bend in the hock.
She's a 5yr old Welsh D. She trips quite a lot.....
Does this sound like Arthritis in the hock to you? Further up back problem? Any ideas??
Chiro said to give it 4 weeks and she'll come out again.... of course I can ring her for a chat in between
I'm not sure what to do now. Just call the vet?
Thanks