Rowreach
Adjusting my sails
A few months ago someone booked their horse and pony in for livery with me this week while they went on holiday. About a month ago, she told me that the pony, which had Cushings and laminitis, had got worse and she thought the time had come to have him PTS.
However, she keeps the horses at her mum's, and her mum likes going out and patting them and giving them carrots, and was appalled when she said she was going to do it. At my suggestion, she got an equine vet out to see him (rather than the local pet-vet she normally uses), but unfortunately she didn't prime him properly, and he told her that they could keep the pony going a bit longer on Danilon. Cue happy mum who still had a pony to pat
On Tuesday night the horses arrived here. I have never seen the pony before, and to say I and OH (who is a farrier) were appalled would be an understatement. The pony could hardly move, and she admitted she had to shout at it to get it on the trailer. I got her to write me an authority to have the pony euthanased if it's condition deteriorated further - I was hoping she would agree to having it done immediately - but an hour or so later I rang her and told her straight that it needed to be PTS.
We than had the mum here in floods of tears, telling us that she "wouldn't want to see him suffering" (at which point I had to withhold OH from telling her exactly what he thought) and the owner saying it was probably a good thing that the decision had been taken out of her hands.
So I have had a great time nursing the poor little beggar, waiting for the vet, whose car broke down delaying things even further, having to extricate the pony's body from the stable because I refused to make him walk a step further, and getting the knackerman out to collect him, while the owner suns herself on some Spanish beach.
I have been in this business a long time, and seen a lot of horses PTS, but this one has upset me (and even OH shed a tear over him) because the SUFFERING WAS UNNECESSARY and was entirely due to human beings thinking more about their own sensibilities than the quality of life of the animal in their care. And I include the vet in that as well.
So when the time comes, I beg you, please, please do the right thing by your horses - they deserve it from us.
However, she keeps the horses at her mum's, and her mum likes going out and patting them and giving them carrots, and was appalled when she said she was going to do it. At my suggestion, she got an equine vet out to see him (rather than the local pet-vet she normally uses), but unfortunately she didn't prime him properly, and he told her that they could keep the pony going a bit longer on Danilon. Cue happy mum who still had a pony to pat
On Tuesday night the horses arrived here. I have never seen the pony before, and to say I and OH (who is a farrier) were appalled would be an understatement. The pony could hardly move, and she admitted she had to shout at it to get it on the trailer. I got her to write me an authority to have the pony euthanased if it's condition deteriorated further - I was hoping she would agree to having it done immediately - but an hour or so later I rang her and told her straight that it needed to be PTS.
We than had the mum here in floods of tears, telling us that she "wouldn't want to see him suffering" (at which point I had to withhold OH from telling her exactly what he thought) and the owner saying it was probably a good thing that the decision had been taken out of her hands.
So I have had a great time nursing the poor little beggar, waiting for the vet, whose car broke down delaying things even further, having to extricate the pony's body from the stable because I refused to make him walk a step further, and getting the knackerman out to collect him, while the owner suns herself on some Spanish beach.
I have been in this business a long time, and seen a lot of horses PTS, but this one has upset me (and even OH shed a tear over him) because the SUFFERING WAS UNNECESSARY and was entirely due to human beings thinking more about their own sensibilities than the quality of life of the animal in their care. And I include the vet in that as well.
So when the time comes, I beg you, please, please do the right thing by your horses - they deserve it from us.