JingleTingle
Well-Known Member
Thats interesting Milesjess that you recommend that other horses be out of view.
Over the years it has been recommended to me, and is a rule of thumb I have followed, that companions are allowed to witness the death and the final removal or burial, and are allowed several hours with the body, to sniff, paw and take in the fact that the horse is dead.
Sounds rather macabre, but I have always found that this allows the companions to realise that their friend has, indeed, gone forever and helps them to move on from the sad event.
Interestingly though, the only time this did NOT work and had the opposite effect on the remaining horses, was when I had the horse shot and taken away by the hunt. But PTS by lethal injection has always been peaceful and calm for all the herd, although watching them pawing and sometimes whinnying loudly at their friends body can be quite distressing.
Over the years it has been recommended to me, and is a rule of thumb I have followed, that companions are allowed to witness the death and the final removal or burial, and are allowed several hours with the body, to sniff, paw and take in the fact that the horse is dead.
Sounds rather macabre, but I have always found that this allows the companions to realise that their friend has, indeed, gone forever and helps them to move on from the sad event.
Interestingly though, the only time this did NOT work and had the opposite effect on the remaining horses, was when I had the horse shot and taken away by the hunt. But PTS by lethal injection has always been peaceful and calm for all the herd, although watching them pawing and sometimes whinnying loudly at their friends body can be quite distressing.