jes_nibley
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 30 September 2006
- Messages
- 568
- Location
- Wiltshire / Dorset borders
Hi there,
Before I start I would just like to say that i have the vet coming out tomorrow but thought i would pick your brains in the meantime...
My section A broke through an electric fence a few times a couple of weeks ago and pigged out on sheep creep (he has to share field with sheep so there food is fenced off). Since then he has been in a starvation paddock as that combined with grass starting to grow he got a bit fat. He got happier and started lots of whickering and talking again v quickly then broke out one day but just into the rest of the field, not the creep thankfully!.
Since then he has been stabled at night as the weather changed and it's very open up here (and the TB won't come in by himself!), but in my limited knowledge of laminitis i thought that stabling was supposed to be better for the horse / pony. However, in the morning's he is very 'footy' and walks quite slowly to his field. In the evenings he will walk much quicker back in from the field.
There is no heat in his feet / legs but he is now right. He'll be 15 this summer and I've had him since he was 6 months old - he's never had laminitis before but I'm not sure what else it could be...?!
Hoping someone has some ideas / thoughts / things to try or look for.
Many thanks!
Before I start I would just like to say that i have the vet coming out tomorrow but thought i would pick your brains in the meantime...
My section A broke through an electric fence a few times a couple of weeks ago and pigged out on sheep creep (he has to share field with sheep so there food is fenced off). Since then he has been in a starvation paddock as that combined with grass starting to grow he got a bit fat. He got happier and started lots of whickering and talking again v quickly then broke out one day but just into the rest of the field, not the creep thankfully!.
Since then he has been stabled at night as the weather changed and it's very open up here (and the TB won't come in by himself!), but in my limited knowledge of laminitis i thought that stabling was supposed to be better for the horse / pony. However, in the morning's he is very 'footy' and walks quite slowly to his field. In the evenings he will walk much quicker back in from the field.
There is no heat in his feet / legs but he is now right. He'll be 15 this summer and I've had him since he was 6 months old - he's never had laminitis before but I'm not sure what else it could be...?!
Hoping someone has some ideas / thoughts / things to try or look for.
Many thanks!