jomax
Well-Known Member
I have had a dreadful afternoon/evening, still in shock and stressed!! Whilst as work i had a call from YO saying that a walker on the bridal path had seen a horse in the river under the bridge that the path goes over. I called my daughter and my sharer both of whom got down to the yard pdq. I finished work and set off too. They couldnt get her out, the river was in full flood and she was in water of about 5ft depth, dont know how long she had been there for. I got my daughter to ring the Firebrigade and i rang my vets. When i got there, the road was cordoned off and cars and fire engines were everywhere. There was a specialist team in the river with all their equipment trying to get her out. Eventually they managed to get her to the lowest bank and with a real struggle she was got out, my mare is 17h and a real big girl. She was trembling and shivering and so very scared. The vet said it was important to get her walking and then get her rugged up, we did get her back to the stables. Where the vet could assess the full extent of her injuries after we had hosed all the mud off her. Both the insides of her back legs were a bloody mess with lacerations everywhere, one was so deep it was through the muscle and you could see the bone, both her legs where badly swollen, we dont know how long she had been in there, but the river is full of all sorts of 'stuff' including barbed wire. Once we had her 'double' rugged in stable rugs, we put her in the indoor arena, rather than her stable, and started to walk her for a little while during which the vet prepared her injections and meds. He gave her an antibiotic injection and also a painkiller injection the name of which i cannt remember, but he said it was three times stronger than bute. He didnt do any stiching to the cuts, but said that we must bathe her legs twice aday with antibacterial wash. He is coming back on Monday to see how she is doing, we have to give her antibiotic powders twice a day and painkilling powders once aday. He has recommended that we keep her off grain feeds, the important thing now is to get the swelling down and to keep her moving.
The poor darling is so very very sorry and sad. Got to get back down there for 8am to move her into her stable for the day, as the YO needs the arena for riding lessons. We have repaired the fencing that she had broken through, she appears to have crashed through it and gone straight down the embankment and into the river, the side of the river that she has gone down is too steep for her to get back up and so she ended up stuck in the river.
Really upset now and worried for her, the vet has said that the best thing now is to get the wounds to start to heal over and to get her back out into the field as soon as possible, as movement is the key, not box rest.
The poor darling is so very very sorry and sad. Got to get back down there for 8am to move her into her stable for the day, as the YO needs the arena for riding lessons. We have repaired the fencing that she had broken through, she appears to have crashed through it and gone straight down the embankment and into the river, the side of the river that she has gone down is too steep for her to get back up and so she ended up stuck in the river.
Really upset now and worried for her, the vet has said that the best thing now is to get the wounds to start to heal over and to get her back out into the field as soon as possible, as movement is the key, not box rest.