Flame_
Well-Known Member
I'm frustrated at reading all these stories on here about young, talented horses who are dangerous to ride. On the odd occasion that an owner is particularly persistent, the vet is particularly thorough and with a bit of luck or intuition it is confirmed that the horse has something unusual very wrong with it physically/medically.
I know there is rarely anything vets can do to fix the horse when they occasionally, eventually locate these problems, but surely if more cases were investigated in depth, things would at least improve? There are so many strange, mis-understood horses because no-one looks hard enough for what's wrong.
Is it all about money? Would it not be worth the expense of the investigations? Is technology not up to finding problems deep inside horse's bodies and brains or do vets just not have easy access to the necessary technology to really see what's going on?
I really wish some budding super-vet would do a large-scale study of many dangerous horses, find out all the causes and then maybe someone could work on doing something about them.
Just random thoughts, I suppose, but these stories of injured, despairing owners and wasted, screwed-up horses are so common it shocks me there's still so little insight or solutions.
I know there is rarely anything vets can do to fix the horse when they occasionally, eventually locate these problems, but surely if more cases were investigated in depth, things would at least improve? There are so many strange, mis-understood horses because no-one looks hard enough for what's wrong.
Is it all about money? Would it not be worth the expense of the investigations? Is technology not up to finding problems deep inside horse's bodies and brains or do vets just not have easy access to the necessary technology to really see what's going on?
I really wish some budding super-vet would do a large-scale study of many dangerous horses, find out all the causes and then maybe someone could work on doing something about them.
Just random thoughts, I suppose, but these stories of injured, despairing owners and wasted, screwed-up horses are so common it shocks me there's still so little insight or solutions.