Mango_goose
Well-Known Member
My horse has been in and out of work over the last few years due to uni, so shoes are taken off in the winter and he’s put out, with a few short road hacks once a month or so. Put back on for summers. Only fronts. Anyway, this summer he was struggling with being shod - he only had fronts on but had a nasty slip on the tarmac. Road nails didn’t help so i had them pulled.
He was tender for the first few days on rough tarmac/ gravel. Not lame, but stumbling occasionally on the gravel and felt cautious. Once asked to power from behind and march any symptom went away. One day he hopped lame for a few strides but I got off, picked out a huge stone lodged in his hoof against the frog and he moved on completely fine. Since then I’ve been so paranoid. He’s quickly improved - in fact from the get go he felt much happier schooling on grass than he did previously. Felt like he had more traction and was more confident.
In the meantime he’s moved yards and is now on a pea shingled pen with access to grazing. The pea shingle has improved him hugely.
However, while I believe he’s improved I’m being paranoid. I’ve trotted him up for lameness so many times but can’t see anything. Genuinely. Before he shoes were taken off the physio trotted him up ( as her usual ) and was happy with him, and he won a dressage competition the week prior to them being taken off with no mention of stiffness/ soreness so I’m fairly sure that if he is lame, it’s being unshod.
He took two odd steps yesterday out hacking, on very uneven tarmac, very gravelly, and downhill on a tight turn. He was rushing to turn home to perhaps he just lost balance, and upon inspection he only did this with a rider, turning to go home, like he’s falling in on his shoulder.
Got off, trotted him up, nothing. Level, no head bob - or at least not noticeable to me. Tight circles with really nothing remarkable - when I asked for more power from behind he looked perfect and anything I thought I saw went away. he then went beautifully on turf when we got home.
I feel like I’m losing my mind. Sometimes I feel like he’s “off” trotting but I take light seat or sitting trot and he feels perfectly equal, level. And again, this has become more infrequent as he’s conditioned to handle tarmac.
Often when moving from gravel / hardcore surfaces he feels sensitive / stumbling for the first step onto tarmac but then a stone dislodges or the gravel falls out of his hooves and he moves off fine.
Today, he rode really well. 40 mins of waking 2 mins of trot on the road. Felt fabulous in the walk - really marching, although his trot was lacklustre and felt a bit lazy - but it was very uphill and on a new route so he was looking all over the place - and storming. He felt equal and happy.
This happened years ago to us when he was shod and even the vet found nothing. He begrudgingly did a flexion test, which he thought was outdated but I was desperate to find something, to which my horse seemed a bit stiff for the first stride and then corrected - something which the vet thought wasn’t of concern. The following week he had the physio and loosened up all over - and the leg that was stiff on the flexion was remarkably tight and then fixed. Physio couldn’t see lameness either.
Eventually I had to just trust that he was fine.
He’s being turned away soon anyway, as I’m back to uni for a PG. I also have a lot of personal life stress right now and my well known coping mechanism is project onto my horse. I’m not kidding. I see lameness which isn’t there, become paranoid about sarcoids. His breathing suddenly seems erratic to me and i swear I can hear a rasp. I see what I think are cataracts and I could swear he has a sarcoid which is actually an inflamed fly bite. The list could go on and on and on. It becomes the thing of if you look long and hard enough at any horse you begin to see something which isn’t there and you end up concluding the horse is lame on all four when in actuality it’s not.
He was tender for the first few days on rough tarmac/ gravel. Not lame, but stumbling occasionally on the gravel and felt cautious. Once asked to power from behind and march any symptom went away. One day he hopped lame for a few strides but I got off, picked out a huge stone lodged in his hoof against the frog and he moved on completely fine. Since then I’ve been so paranoid. He’s quickly improved - in fact from the get go he felt much happier schooling on grass than he did previously. Felt like he had more traction and was more confident.
In the meantime he’s moved yards and is now on a pea shingled pen with access to grazing. The pea shingle has improved him hugely.
However, while I believe he’s improved I’m being paranoid. I’ve trotted him up for lameness so many times but can’t see anything. Genuinely. Before he shoes were taken off the physio trotted him up ( as her usual ) and was happy with him, and he won a dressage competition the week prior to them being taken off with no mention of stiffness/ soreness so I’m fairly sure that if he is lame, it’s being unshod.
He took two odd steps yesterday out hacking, on very uneven tarmac, very gravelly, and downhill on a tight turn. He was rushing to turn home to perhaps he just lost balance, and upon inspection he only did this with a rider, turning to go home, like he’s falling in on his shoulder.
Got off, trotted him up, nothing. Level, no head bob - or at least not noticeable to me. Tight circles with really nothing remarkable - when I asked for more power from behind he looked perfect and anything I thought I saw went away. he then went beautifully on turf when we got home.
I feel like I’m losing my mind. Sometimes I feel like he’s “off” trotting but I take light seat or sitting trot and he feels perfectly equal, level. And again, this has become more infrequent as he’s conditioned to handle tarmac.
Often when moving from gravel / hardcore surfaces he feels sensitive / stumbling for the first step onto tarmac but then a stone dislodges or the gravel falls out of his hooves and he moves off fine.
Today, he rode really well. 40 mins of waking 2 mins of trot on the road. Felt fabulous in the walk - really marching, although his trot was lacklustre and felt a bit lazy - but it was very uphill and on a new route so he was looking all over the place - and storming. He felt equal and happy.
This happened years ago to us when he was shod and even the vet found nothing. He begrudgingly did a flexion test, which he thought was outdated but I was desperate to find something, to which my horse seemed a bit stiff for the first stride and then corrected - something which the vet thought wasn’t of concern. The following week he had the physio and loosened up all over - and the leg that was stiff on the flexion was remarkably tight and then fixed. Physio couldn’t see lameness either.
Eventually I had to just trust that he was fine.
He’s being turned away soon anyway, as I’m back to uni for a PG. I also have a lot of personal life stress right now and my well known coping mechanism is project onto my horse. I’m not kidding. I see lameness which isn’t there, become paranoid about sarcoids. His breathing suddenly seems erratic to me and i swear I can hear a rasp. I see what I think are cataracts and I could swear he has a sarcoid which is actually an inflamed fly bite. The list could go on and on and on. It becomes the thing of if you look long and hard enough at any horse you begin to see something which isn’t there and you end up concluding the horse is lame on all four when in actuality it’s not.