kerilli
Well-Known Member
Tell me about it, mine still looks awful.Would be interesting to know if her jump was hopeless before her crash or after. Things can happen to foals, too . . .
It was hopeless before, apparently.
Tell me about it, mine still looks awful.Would be interesting to know if her jump was hopeless before her crash or after. Things can happen to foals, too . . .
i'll fish out another vid if you want.
yes please
Sorry I cant offer any help about your predicament btw. I can't ride for toffee and wouldn't know where to start (lucky for me BH turned out to be naturally tidy over a fence or we'd be in big trouble)
Can't offer any advice on the horse but loving the crow![]()
Perhaps she does have kissing spines but I suspect a lot of horses do. One of my horses was graded Advanced and evented to 2*. We discovered his kissing spines after he retired. His XC record was only spoiled by two rider error 20 penalties.
Ellie's turned out (finally) and improving, just finishing second course of steroids. At this rate I hope she'll at least stay good enough to hack and maybe do some dressage, the odd thing is she looks 100% in herself (no atrophy anywhere etc) apart from wobblyness of hindend... but she's now cantering around and not looking as if she'll fall over, so, huge improvement.Nothing constructive to add, was just wondering how you other (patient) horses were doing?
Jinni (the yearling) is now turned out again, on vet's advice; she's coping, but her neck looks pretty awful. muscle really atrophied, equally both sides. vets say 'wait and see'... but i am heartbroken, she looked so promising before and now she looks like two different animals shoved together. her neck looks very stiff, she isn't bending it well but doesn't seem to be in any pain, just doesn't want to bend it.![]()
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Ellie's turned out (finally) and improving, just finishing second course of steroids. At this rate I hope she'll at least stay good enough to hack and maybe do some dressage, the odd thing is she looks 100% in herself (no atrophy anywhere etc) apart from wobblyness of hindend... but she's now cantering around and not looking as if she'll fall over, so, huge improvement.
Jinni (the yearling) is now turned out again, on vet's advice; she's coping, but her neck looks pretty awful. muscle really atrophied, equally both sides. vets say 'wait and see'... but i am heartbroken, she looked so promising before and now she looks like two different animals shoved together. her neck looks very stiff, she isn't bending it well but doesn't seem to be in any pain, just doesn't want to bend it.![]()
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thanks for asking, much appreciated.
dafthoss, he spat a bit of his suet bird pellet into my mouth, i just couldn't cope with that! only time he's done it too, typical.
hollyandivy, yes, good and bad with the thermal... funny, no surprises really. i had my yearling Jinni done too, and gave the lady a brief history. it shows HUGE heat in the head, as well as the known trouble spots of neck, C7 etc... and she came back with "is there any chance this one has had a head injury"... ah, yes, seriously concussed herself. amazing what the Thermal Imaging shows up, even months later. I think it's a very valuable tool... will save up for my own camera at this rate!
lynds, i have two ataxic horses at the moment and a new one in who doesn't seem to know where her front legs are when she jumps, so, 3 of them, really. i have the big TT book though, is that a good starting point? thanks.
hollyandivy, yes, good and bad with the thermal... funny, no surprises really. i had my yearling Jinni done too, and gave the lady a brief history. it shows HUGE heat in the head, as well as the known trouble spots of neck, C7 etc... and she came back with "is there any chance this one has had a head injury"... ah, yes, seriously concussed herself. amazing what the Thermal Imaging shows up, even months later.