Flibble
Well-Known Member
Yesterday evening I discovered that Drifter has some scabs on 1 hind leg and on the heel of same hind leg and front leg on same side.
Those on the hind leg just feel like dirt in the coat and a little bit gritty. So when I used my fingers to pull the bits of dirt out it turned out to be very flat sort of tiny scabs.
This prompted further searching and I discovered he had two little mounds of grey crunchy scabs on the heel of this leg about the size of a small pea (petit pois not marrowfat).
Checking the other legs I found a couple of small lesions at the back of his pastern on the foreleg crusted over. Now stupidly he had a little something like this a while ago on the same foreleg and I thought it was a little over-reach duh! so now I perceive different.
Before we say mud fever this is a fully stabled horse on Rubber matting and sawdust worked in a sand school.
My unprofessional opinion now is that it is something to do with sand/sawdust and sweat.
I havent seen it today as I dont do him in morning but when I left yesterday there was no heat,inflammation or swelling.
I washed it of with warm water and weak hibiscrub solution and now in hindsight I wish I had dried more thoroughly than I did but it was getting late and dark.
I will have a good poke around in daylight this pm but as its not major (yet) I am tempted to tea tree cream it ? as that is antibacterial.
Those on the hind leg just feel like dirt in the coat and a little bit gritty. So when I used my fingers to pull the bits of dirt out it turned out to be very flat sort of tiny scabs.
This prompted further searching and I discovered he had two little mounds of grey crunchy scabs on the heel of this leg about the size of a small pea (petit pois not marrowfat).
Checking the other legs I found a couple of small lesions at the back of his pastern on the foreleg crusted over. Now stupidly he had a little something like this a while ago on the same foreleg and I thought it was a little over-reach duh! so now I perceive different.
Before we say mud fever this is a fully stabled horse on Rubber matting and sawdust worked in a sand school.
My unprofessional opinion now is that it is something to do with sand/sawdust and sweat.
I havent seen it today as I dont do him in morning but when I left yesterday there was no heat,inflammation or swelling.
I washed it of with warm water and weak hibiscrub solution and now in hindsight I wish I had dried more thoroughly than I did but it was getting late and dark.
I will have a good poke around in daylight this pm but as its not major (yet) I am tempted to tea tree cream it ? as that is antibacterial.