WoodysMum
Well-Known Member
Just some background history. My boy is 17 in January, he's got bone spavins in both hocks (fused I think), he broke the point of his pelvis before I got him which left him very asymmetric. When the vet first came out to give him an MOT he said he was 2/10th lame on his right hind, and when he came out at around christmas he said he was bilaterally lame on his right hind and left fore
When I first got him just over 2 years ago, he would canter, although he had a 4time canter as well as 3-time canter. However as I was a nervous nellie (still am!) it took me a while to build up the courage to canter him, and so most of the time I just walked and trotted him (had a serious setback from falling off another horse about a month before I got him, I used to sit on the mounting block in tears freaking out and not wanting to get on him
) so I was only happy to walk and occasionally trot.
Anyway, he went lame with an abscess in his foot and back spasms, the vet said it was the worst back pain he had ever seen. It took him a few months to come sound. And then cue my confidence crisis of not having ridden properly for months so I would not try and ask for canter.
When we eventually got round to asking for canter (other people, not me!) he just didn't want to know. At first, he wouldn't canter at all when one person rode him, and then when she rode him a few months on he gave about 4 steps then fell back into trot. Although this person wasnt completely ideal to ride him I decided to stick to me being the only person riding him again!
I got the vet out to look at his canter problem, and they were very unhelpful, said it would take lots of expensive scans and even then they couldnt guarantee a fix for him, and that he would only be able to deal with light work. Fed up, I sort of accepted this.
Then a few months later I got the same vet out for a swollen leg and just asked him again about the canter problem, as he had suggested to put my boy on bute (he refused to eat it!) and see if there was any difference. I said it didnt work and he said that there wasn't anything they could do because my insurance now excludes claims on lameness and associated muscles (because of my claim from when he was really lame previously). Nice and helpful vet!
But, the next day...er...I fell off at canter in the school...He didnt have the balance for the corners so would dive in, and got faster and faster up the long sides until one big motorbike move in and I was off!
My boy was feeling quite fresh as he had had a few weeks off work because of his sore leg, so when he got the ok to be ridden again he was full of himself. I was trotting and he sprung into his extended trot and then burst into canter, and wouldn't stop!
I had been working on encouraging him to go forward with the rider on, so we had been doing lots of big trot in fields so he didnt feel restricted and that he could learn it was okay to go forward with the rider on. When he canters he panics and throws his legs everywhere and is reluctant to go forward.
So I have a horse that may never canter again, the vets wont do anything about it. My instinct says to take him out and canter him in straight lines so he can find his own balance and rhythm without having to worry about turning in a school, to see if he still can. BUT, i simply dont have the confidence to do this! And he is quite a sensitive and specific ride that there is no one around I would trust to do it for me.
I have tried lunging him with the clicker to build up his balance and confidence without a rider, but the places to lunge are very unsuitable. We aren't allowed to lunge in the schools, so we only have this rubbish lunging ring with a sand surface with stones in it! Not good for a horse with joint problems! I have tried lunging him in a field but last time I did he fell over because he slipped
, he is barefoot.
The owners of the yard wont give any exceptions to let anyone lunge in the school even for medical reasons, as it ruins the membrane of the surface apparently. So i have nowhere to lunge him to just try, and I dont have the nerve to canter him out hacking, especially when he bolted off with me in the school in 8 circuits of canter and wouldn't stop!
He is barefoot, has regular physio who hasnt picked up anything alarming that would stop him from cantering, is on 24/7 turnout with a few hours in his stable and I used magnetic boots on his back legs for his spavins. Im just completley at a loss as to what to do. I haven't cantered him properly for over 2 years now
He will canter no problem in the field with his mates, although the balance is very different, and when freeschooled he will canter although will dart in from the corners. I just dont know what to do!
If you have read this far...lots of cookies and hugs for you!
When I first got him just over 2 years ago, he would canter, although he had a 4time canter as well as 3-time canter. However as I was a nervous nellie (still am!) it took me a while to build up the courage to canter him, and so most of the time I just walked and trotted him (had a serious setback from falling off another horse about a month before I got him, I used to sit on the mounting block in tears freaking out and not wanting to get on him
Anyway, he went lame with an abscess in his foot and back spasms, the vet said it was the worst back pain he had ever seen. It took him a few months to come sound. And then cue my confidence crisis of not having ridden properly for months so I would not try and ask for canter.
When we eventually got round to asking for canter (other people, not me!) he just didn't want to know. At first, he wouldn't canter at all when one person rode him, and then when she rode him a few months on he gave about 4 steps then fell back into trot. Although this person wasnt completely ideal to ride him I decided to stick to me being the only person riding him again!
I got the vet out to look at his canter problem, and they were very unhelpful, said it would take lots of expensive scans and even then they couldnt guarantee a fix for him, and that he would only be able to deal with light work. Fed up, I sort of accepted this.
Then a few months later I got the same vet out for a swollen leg and just asked him again about the canter problem, as he had suggested to put my boy on bute (he refused to eat it!) and see if there was any difference. I said it didnt work and he said that there wasn't anything they could do because my insurance now excludes claims on lameness and associated muscles (because of my claim from when he was really lame previously). Nice and helpful vet!
But, the next day...er...I fell off at canter in the school...He didnt have the balance for the corners so would dive in, and got faster and faster up the long sides until one big motorbike move in and I was off!
My boy was feeling quite fresh as he had had a few weeks off work because of his sore leg, so when he got the ok to be ridden again he was full of himself. I was trotting and he sprung into his extended trot and then burst into canter, and wouldn't stop!
I had been working on encouraging him to go forward with the rider on, so we had been doing lots of big trot in fields so he didnt feel restricted and that he could learn it was okay to go forward with the rider on. When he canters he panics and throws his legs everywhere and is reluctant to go forward.
So I have a horse that may never canter again, the vets wont do anything about it. My instinct says to take him out and canter him in straight lines so he can find his own balance and rhythm without having to worry about turning in a school, to see if he still can. BUT, i simply dont have the confidence to do this! And he is quite a sensitive and specific ride that there is no one around I would trust to do it for me.
I have tried lunging him with the clicker to build up his balance and confidence without a rider, but the places to lunge are very unsuitable. We aren't allowed to lunge in the schools, so we only have this rubbish lunging ring with a sand surface with stones in it! Not good for a horse with joint problems! I have tried lunging him in a field but last time I did he fell over because he slipped
The owners of the yard wont give any exceptions to let anyone lunge in the school even for medical reasons, as it ruins the membrane of the surface apparently. So i have nowhere to lunge him to just try, and I dont have the nerve to canter him out hacking, especially when he bolted off with me in the school in 8 circuits of canter and wouldn't stop!
He is barefoot, has regular physio who hasnt picked up anything alarming that would stop him from cantering, is on 24/7 turnout with a few hours in his stable and I used magnetic boots on his back legs for his spavins. Im just completley at a loss as to what to do. I haven't cantered him properly for over 2 years now
If you have read this far...lots of cookies and hugs for you!