Fatonfreshair
Well-Known Member
Our 'characterful' gelding broke down some fencing and helped himself to half the contents of an apple tree midweek - he had clearly eaten as many apples as he could reach because there is a line of apples half way up the tree and above, but none below. I was worried he would colic having eaten so many and kept checking him but he was fine. However, he seems to instead have come down with mild footiness and discomfort - not full blown lami but he was uncomfortable when ridden and is now on box rest and soaked hay for a few days. He is not hopping from foot to foot and is very bright in himself. Digital pulse is faintly present (now I know how to find it!) and his hooves are warmer than normal (although unhelpfully the same temperature as his field companion's hooves but she does have attacks of lami type episodes from time to time - she is on a roped off starvation paddock most of the time).
Is this an overdose of sugar? I cannot imagine a previously very sound pony with very strong hooves would suddenly come down with something normally as he has been on the same well eaten paddock with his field mate all summer. I am guessing he did not get off scott free from his scrumping exploits?
Is there anything else I should be doing for him? He does not look so uncomfortable that he needs pain killers (but then who am I to know) - he is standing on both front hooves without shifting from one to the other.
He is unshod and the farrier has always said he had great strong hooves and no signs of any previous lami episodes. We have owned him for just over a year and he is 9.
Blooming ponies!
Is this an overdose of sugar? I cannot imagine a previously very sound pony with very strong hooves would suddenly come down with something normally as he has been on the same well eaten paddock with his field mate all summer. I am guessing he did not get off scott free from his scrumping exploits?
Is there anything else I should be doing for him? He does not look so uncomfortable that he needs pain killers (but then who am I to know) - he is standing on both front hooves without shifting from one to the other.
He is unshod and the farrier has always said he had great strong hooves and no signs of any previous lami episodes. We have owned him for just over a year and he is 9.
Blooming ponies!