wispagold
Well-Known Member
I dissected lots of horse legs for my dissertation at uni and 1 camel!
Most of the legs came from the local abbatoir, the phd student I was working with use to go and come back with a huge plastic bag full of them and we had to try and pair them up. Also harder than you think trying to work out left and right when cut off below the chesnut. I had to take cartilage and synovium from the fetlock joints and then grow the cells in the lab so I could run experiments on them.
A few times we had ex-police horses come in that were PTS on site. I never went to watch, always made sure I didn't arrive until it was dead. I did end up dissecting the whole horse with another student one day and he kept telling me how much it looked like his horse at home whilst hacking bits off it :-S. It was pretty much first come first served, you had to fight the vet students for the bits you wanted!!
Most of the legs came from the local abbatoir, the phd student I was working with use to go and come back with a huge plastic bag full of them and we had to try and pair them up. Also harder than you think trying to work out left and right when cut off below the chesnut. I had to take cartilage and synovium from the fetlock joints and then grow the cells in the lab so I could run experiments on them.
A few times we had ex-police horses come in that were PTS on site. I never went to watch, always made sure I didn't arrive until it was dead. I did end up dissecting the whole horse with another student one day and he kept telling me how much it looked like his horse at home whilst hacking bits off it :-S. It was pretty much first come first served, you had to fight the vet students for the bits you wanted!!