Munchkin
Well-Known Member
Interested to hear your thoughts.
I was contacted a couple of months ago by a lady I haven't seen in about 13 years, basically to ask if I was still "horsey" and if I'd mind looking after her horses when she was on holiday in July.
A few weeks later she also asked me to look after them for a long weekend, which I did. She has a 33yo TB and a 6yo Welsh sect. C. The pony had recently recovered from its first bout of laminitis.
Pony is the fattest creature I have EVER seen in my LIFE. It's so fat that its neck and its croup meet - there is no back left, and it rolls when it waddles along. It is disgusting. They have two smallish fields which they rotate to make sure there's always plenty of grass for the TB and they will not be separated.
I can sort of understand that, but she also left me with instructions about what to feed them both. The TB has two huge buckets of hard feed a day and only one section of hay overnight... the pony has a round scoop of Happy Hoof twice a day and 2 sections of [very green] hay overnight.
When I looked after them over that weekend I couldn't bring myself to give him so much food. He was still slightly lame and it seemed like handing him a death sentence. Over three days they won't have noticed that I gave him less.
This lady is the kindest person you could ever wish to meet. She currently has her terminally ill mother living with them, her husband has recently been diagnosed with a dangerous heart condition, her eldest daughter has just come out of hospital after extensive surgery and her youngest daughter has just had a baby that is severely brain damaged. She herself has been rushed into hospital with symptoms that the doctors have attributed to stress. Can't say I'm surprised!
I've tried to suggest she feeds the pony less but she says he only got fat because he was eating his straw bed (now on shavings). However, the muckheap is in the field and the TB is still on straw... so he eats it from there anyway.
Pony is on loan from a charity. I don't want to get him taken off them as the TB is very, very clingy and he was loaned as a companion when their previous old horse died... she'd be a state if he left. I feel that this is what would happen should I contact them. That's the first dilemma.
The second dilemma is: do I feed him what I consider to be a "safe" amount during the three weeks they are on holiday, and not tell them? It seems a little pointless if there are no long term changes to his diet, but I cannot justify giving him so much food... he could live off his own reserves for about 14 years!
Under any other circumstances this would be a no-brainer to me but I feel that I cannot put this lady under any more stress. It's the first time they have been able to go away in years and years and it's taken a heck of a lot of organising as you can well imagine.
Interested to hear your views. Please try to refrain from being catty as this is quite difficult for me; if she wasn't in such a position I would be a lot firmer with my views for the sake of the pony.
I was contacted a couple of months ago by a lady I haven't seen in about 13 years, basically to ask if I was still "horsey" and if I'd mind looking after her horses when she was on holiday in July.
A few weeks later she also asked me to look after them for a long weekend, which I did. She has a 33yo TB and a 6yo Welsh sect. C. The pony had recently recovered from its first bout of laminitis.
Pony is the fattest creature I have EVER seen in my LIFE. It's so fat that its neck and its croup meet - there is no back left, and it rolls when it waddles along. It is disgusting. They have two smallish fields which they rotate to make sure there's always plenty of grass for the TB and they will not be separated.
I can sort of understand that, but she also left me with instructions about what to feed them both. The TB has two huge buckets of hard feed a day and only one section of hay overnight... the pony has a round scoop of Happy Hoof twice a day and 2 sections of [very green] hay overnight.
When I looked after them over that weekend I couldn't bring myself to give him so much food. He was still slightly lame and it seemed like handing him a death sentence. Over three days they won't have noticed that I gave him less.
This lady is the kindest person you could ever wish to meet. She currently has her terminally ill mother living with them, her husband has recently been diagnosed with a dangerous heart condition, her eldest daughter has just come out of hospital after extensive surgery and her youngest daughter has just had a baby that is severely brain damaged. She herself has been rushed into hospital with symptoms that the doctors have attributed to stress. Can't say I'm surprised!
I've tried to suggest she feeds the pony less but she says he only got fat because he was eating his straw bed (now on shavings). However, the muckheap is in the field and the TB is still on straw... so he eats it from there anyway.
Pony is on loan from a charity. I don't want to get him taken off them as the TB is very, very clingy and he was loaned as a companion when their previous old horse died... she'd be a state if he left. I feel that this is what would happen should I contact them. That's the first dilemma.
The second dilemma is: do I feed him what I consider to be a "safe" amount during the three weeks they are on holiday, and not tell them? It seems a little pointless if there are no long term changes to his diet, but I cannot justify giving him so much food... he could live off his own reserves for about 14 years!
Under any other circumstances this would be a no-brainer to me but I feel that I cannot put this lady under any more stress. It's the first time they have been able to go away in years and years and it's taken a heck of a lot of organising as you can well imagine.
Interested to hear your views. Please try to refrain from being catty as this is quite difficult for me; if she wasn't in such a position I would be a lot firmer with my views for the sake of the pony.
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