jcberry
Well-Known Member
A bit of history first....
Last summer oscar was diagnosed by the vvet as having sidebones, he had to have 9 months off for them to grow.
We started riding again in the autumn when he was sound and he has been sound everscince and we have been doing fun rides, sj etc...
I had my lesson today and after my instructor thought he looked ever so slightly lame on the left rein. As he got going about 10 mins into the lesson he looked completely fine all the way through the rest. My instructor even got on did trot and canter work, and he looked as sound as anything.
Oscar IS a very lazy horse and tends to be quite heaviy on his front legs and he suggested that he might be resisting to do the work or just unbalanced....but he was only lame on one leg, i say lame, he wasnt nodding his head, and if you werent concentrating on his front legs quite severly you would think he was totaly sound, So its not terrible.
I just wandered if anyone had any ideas about it?
Sorry its a bit of a ramble
xxx
Last summer oscar was diagnosed by the vvet as having sidebones, he had to have 9 months off for them to grow.
We started riding again in the autumn when he was sound and he has been sound everscince and we have been doing fun rides, sj etc...
I had my lesson today and after my instructor thought he looked ever so slightly lame on the left rein. As he got going about 10 mins into the lesson he looked completely fine all the way through the rest. My instructor even got on did trot and canter work, and he looked as sound as anything.
Oscar IS a very lazy horse and tends to be quite heaviy on his front legs and he suggested that he might be resisting to do the work or just unbalanced....but he was only lame on one leg, i say lame, he wasnt nodding his head, and if you werent concentrating on his front legs quite severly you would think he was totaly sound, So its not terrible.
I just wandered if anyone had any ideas about it?
Sorry its a bit of a ramble
xxx