kittykatcat
Well-Known Member
Hi all,
Just wanted to share my experience/warn people/see if anyone else had any experience of this......
About 3 weeks ago an elderly livery of mine (30) was attacked by SOMETHING in the field, he had sweated up to such a point that he had dried completely white (he's black), lost a shoe, lost so much weight, was scared to go in the field and had the most AWFUL scratches and gauges all over his body.
He was only out with my (shoe-less) gelding at the time, so my poor horse was blamed and branded, but i knew something didnt stack up - it was so out of character for my horse to attack another, plus he has no shoes on, plus the scratches did not look like hoof/teeth at all.
Anyway, after much thinking and pondering i decided to contact the bg cat research guy in our area and sent him photos of the scratches....he sent this email back...
''Just one look at some of those photo's suggests 'big cat' attack to me. The cat has clearly struggled to get a grip at times, causing the longer slashes, but they are very clean, some deeper than others.
It's certainly not a human inflicted injury or fence wound, as there are clusters of scratches which suggests a cat. They will pounce and try to grip the underside of the horse to get a throat bite, and at times scratch marks will appear on the flanks. Thankfully your horse was too powerful to succumb,''
Scary scary stuff.
Has anyone else had experience of this. I am just outside Canterbury in Kent, just to warn anyone else. I dont know how you could prevent an attack though..
I would post pics but i dont know how to do it :S
xx
Just wanted to share my experience/warn people/see if anyone else had any experience of this......
About 3 weeks ago an elderly livery of mine (30) was attacked by SOMETHING in the field, he had sweated up to such a point that he had dried completely white (he's black), lost a shoe, lost so much weight, was scared to go in the field and had the most AWFUL scratches and gauges all over his body.
He was only out with my (shoe-less) gelding at the time, so my poor horse was blamed and branded, but i knew something didnt stack up - it was so out of character for my horse to attack another, plus he has no shoes on, plus the scratches did not look like hoof/teeth at all.
Anyway, after much thinking and pondering i decided to contact the bg cat research guy in our area and sent him photos of the scratches....he sent this email back...
''Just one look at some of those photo's suggests 'big cat' attack to me. The cat has clearly struggled to get a grip at times, causing the longer slashes, but they are very clean, some deeper than others.
It's certainly not a human inflicted injury or fence wound, as there are clusters of scratches which suggests a cat. They will pounce and try to grip the underside of the horse to get a throat bite, and at times scratch marks will appear on the flanks. Thankfully your horse was too powerful to succumb,''
Scary scary stuff.
Has anyone else had experience of this. I am just outside Canterbury in Kent, just to warn anyone else. I dont know how you could prevent an attack though..
I would post pics but i dont know how to do it :S
xx