b8xey
Active Member
Hi all
i have had no dealings with Laminitis, navicualr or ringbone and wondered if anyone can help with advice, im going to get the vet to come out as soon as i can get a day off work, but wondered if anyone could help but bare with me as im going to sound like a complete Novice!!
ive got a 12year old Appaloosa Mare, 15.2hh. Weight carrier lives on Fresh air. Ive owned her for Four years, show jumped hacked, nothing major (talking about 80cm jumping is my limit) so not hammered.
never had laminitis in the past, not as fat now as she has been in the past but this is the FIRST summer she has not ben in full work.
Her legs are not clean, has scars lumps bumps etc all over all four, however NEVER been consistantly lame, occasionally for a day or so and then been sound. Lunges fine, though sometimes can appear uneven in the front depending on which rein, but this is worse if she is unfit.
loves work very forward will not refuse to do anything, not at all mardy but very pig headed.
2 weeks ago she became lame, on what looks like both front. she nods as if it is her left leg, but looks short in her stride on the right leg.
if you turn a circle with left leg on the outside she just nods a bit, if she turns a circle with the right to the outside she takes very small steps like she cant stride out.
no heat in feet, slight pulse in fetlock but i dont know what im looking for!
not stuck to the floor or has worse issue on hard or soft ground. lame either way. Her feet are good, shod well although ive noticed her right toe is slightly longer than the left.
i thought laminitus, i spoke to my farrier as he knows her and her feet and he said it was more like navicular.
From her fetlock down to her hoof, down her pastern, she has hard bone like bumps, someone pointed out that due to the odd length in feet this could be Ringbone, that she will always have had but the toe issue could have made it worse!!?? on this one occasion i did use a different farrier as i could not get hold of my own. He is coming out to me as soon as he can.
i know the people i have spoken to are not vets, and we are all just guessing or giving opinion, but this mare is my absolute life and i am so so worried.
if anyone can give any advice i would so apreciate it..my plan was to bring her in, keep her in, and to treat as lammy for now, but obviously if it is not lammy am i doing the wrong thing for her?
Please help me im at my wits end and so scarred im going to do wrong by her.
i have had no dealings with Laminitis, navicualr or ringbone and wondered if anyone can help with advice, im going to get the vet to come out as soon as i can get a day off work, but wondered if anyone could help but bare with me as im going to sound like a complete Novice!!
ive got a 12year old Appaloosa Mare, 15.2hh. Weight carrier lives on Fresh air. Ive owned her for Four years, show jumped hacked, nothing major (talking about 80cm jumping is my limit) so not hammered.
never had laminitis in the past, not as fat now as she has been in the past but this is the FIRST summer she has not ben in full work.
Her legs are not clean, has scars lumps bumps etc all over all four, however NEVER been consistantly lame, occasionally for a day or so and then been sound. Lunges fine, though sometimes can appear uneven in the front depending on which rein, but this is worse if she is unfit.
loves work very forward will not refuse to do anything, not at all mardy but very pig headed.
2 weeks ago she became lame, on what looks like both front. she nods as if it is her left leg, but looks short in her stride on the right leg.
if you turn a circle with left leg on the outside she just nods a bit, if she turns a circle with the right to the outside she takes very small steps like she cant stride out.
no heat in feet, slight pulse in fetlock but i dont know what im looking for!
not stuck to the floor or has worse issue on hard or soft ground. lame either way. Her feet are good, shod well although ive noticed her right toe is slightly longer than the left.
i thought laminitus, i spoke to my farrier as he knows her and her feet and he said it was more like navicular.
From her fetlock down to her hoof, down her pastern, she has hard bone like bumps, someone pointed out that due to the odd length in feet this could be Ringbone, that she will always have had but the toe issue could have made it worse!!?? on this one occasion i did use a different farrier as i could not get hold of my own. He is coming out to me as soon as he can.
i know the people i have spoken to are not vets, and we are all just guessing or giving opinion, but this mare is my absolute life and i am so so worried.
if anyone can give any advice i would so apreciate it..my plan was to bring her in, keep her in, and to treat as lammy for now, but obviously if it is not lammy am i doing the wrong thing for her?
Please help me im at my wits end and so scarred im going to do wrong by her.