sheep
Well-Known Member
Just a few musings, really!
I have a lovely 18 yo ISH that I have had now for about 18months. I knew his previous owner fairly well and bought him after she had a nasty accident on him (broken pelvis). As the horse was well known to me and the YO, I decided to not have him vetted - he was 16 at the time with no issues so I thought I would take a chance on him.
Our first year was great, out hacking, doing some RC competitions and jumping, little bit of low level dressage. Then in late summer this year he started displaying mild lameness. There was little improvement with the recommended rest so in October he went to horsepital for the day for lameness investigations.
Unfortunately the results weren't great! He has DJD in his coffin joints in both feet, sidebone and arthritic changes in his hocks. Nerve blocks showed him to be lame in 3 of 4 legs, which seemed to present itself as forelimb lameness. He also has kissing spines.
Vet recommended a course of cortisone injections into the affected areas and remedial shoeing to help alleviate the strain on his front feet. Initially he was box rested for a week, then allowed to walk in hand for the second week, with turnout and light lunging permitted from week three. He had been coming along well and I first sat on him again a couple of days before Christmas, and had been lightly hacking him (walk only) with some hillwork to get him fit again.
Unfortunately on Monday, just three months after his treatment, he felt lame again during our hack - in exactly the same way he had when he went for his lameness workup. Trotted him up last night and he is definitely lame! I'm so disappointed as I know that repeated treatments become less and less effective over time, so to me it doesn't make sense to repeat it, from a practical and I suppose financial point of view.
He is due to be shod again tomorrow - I am vaguely hoping that his lameness may be linked to needing his feet done, but he has very slow growing feet so I don't think it'll make much of a difference. Should this fail to help, when our mare is due to be seen by the farrier (in approx 3 weeks) I think I will remove his shoes completely and consider him retired for the time being, and let him go to grass and be a horse for a few months.
How did you decide the time was right to retire? Have any of you retired and then a while down the line brought back in to work?
I have a lovely 18 yo ISH that I have had now for about 18months. I knew his previous owner fairly well and bought him after she had a nasty accident on him (broken pelvis). As the horse was well known to me and the YO, I decided to not have him vetted - he was 16 at the time with no issues so I thought I would take a chance on him.
Our first year was great, out hacking, doing some RC competitions and jumping, little bit of low level dressage. Then in late summer this year he started displaying mild lameness. There was little improvement with the recommended rest so in October he went to horsepital for the day for lameness investigations.
Unfortunately the results weren't great! He has DJD in his coffin joints in both feet, sidebone and arthritic changes in his hocks. Nerve blocks showed him to be lame in 3 of 4 legs, which seemed to present itself as forelimb lameness. He also has kissing spines.
Vet recommended a course of cortisone injections into the affected areas and remedial shoeing to help alleviate the strain on his front feet. Initially he was box rested for a week, then allowed to walk in hand for the second week, with turnout and light lunging permitted from week three. He had been coming along well and I first sat on him again a couple of days before Christmas, and had been lightly hacking him (walk only) with some hillwork to get him fit again.
Unfortunately on Monday, just three months after his treatment, he felt lame again during our hack - in exactly the same way he had when he went for his lameness workup. Trotted him up last night and he is definitely lame! I'm so disappointed as I know that repeated treatments become less and less effective over time, so to me it doesn't make sense to repeat it, from a practical and I suppose financial point of view.
He is due to be shod again tomorrow - I am vaguely hoping that his lameness may be linked to needing his feet done, but he has very slow growing feet so I don't think it'll make much of a difference. Should this fail to help, when our mare is due to be seen by the farrier (in approx 3 weeks) I think I will remove his shoes completely and consider him retired for the time being, and let him go to grass and be a horse for a few months.
How did you decide the time was right to retire? Have any of you retired and then a while down the line brought back in to work?
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