soloequestrian
Well-Known Member
I have day to day care of two horses other than my own. The care offered is 'full grass livery' i.e. they are out 24/7, come in once for a feed and check over, looked over at least one other time. One of the horses has EMS which I wasn't aware of when he arrived. He has needed to be in a tiny paddock on his own for the summer, fed small amounts of soaked hay. This has made more work for me that I was really offering. I could obviously ask his owner to take him elsewhere but I like her and I know she doesn't have many other options. The horse escaped his paddock recently and had a night on grass with the others. After that his owner asked if I could check his pulses every day, as standard. This is what I would like your opinion on because it is making me a bit uncomfortable and I'm not sure why. I pick his feet out daily anyway so it's not that much extra work but it's not something I've ever really done before - if I take a pulse I would choose the jaw area, not the fetlock, so I've little experience of finding a leg pulse. I'm also not sure what would constitute a bounding pulse - I've never had to deal with laminitis (had TBs before). I'm also not sure what we could do differently if the pulse was up - he is already being intensively managed. So what do you think? Should I just say no, I'm not going to do that or is that unreasonable in the circumstance when the owner is worried and not able to visit very often? Thanks!