AmyHack
Well-Known Member
HI all, I am a huge lurker on here, I had a posting stint a few years ago and a lot has changed since then. After years of loaning I bought my very own horse 18 months ago. Long story short she is very experienced, she taught me how to ride properly and she has become the love of my life (second love of my life if OH asks). I dont really know why I am posting mainly to write a few things out to help clear my head, for some advice and also I think Im just after some sympathy from people that understand. Bear with me I think this is the record for the longest post (essay!)
Very early on into owning her I got the impression something wasnt quite right. Ridden wise she is (and has always been) absolutely perfect, never puts a foot wrong. Steady and reliable and steps it up a gear when you ask, she is pure joy to ride. However, during our first winter together she became more and more grumpy with rugs and tacking up and would pull some horrific faces, lift legs and generally seem unhappy when you were messing with her. Her nature is very placid and very sweet so I knew it wasnt her. After mentally fighting off the comments from more experienced horsey people that she was just a mare I got her checked by the vets. Queue a stream of investigations into hormones, ovary scans, sacroiliac pain, kissing spine, hock x-rays and scoping for ulcers. Only thing that came up was grade 2-3 ulcers. I put it down to spending a lot of time in due to yard rules, treated her with peptizole, 6 weeks later scoped pretty much clear. Relocated and moved yards and spent the summer out grumpy behaviour lessened and pretty much subsided but I still had a feeling something wasnt 100%. Vets thought SI pain so steroid injections, still intermittently funny with her back. Lots of messing with saddles, fortune spent on chiropractors, bowen therapy, physio tape (me being a novice owner and listening to advice from everyone and not trusting myself) and I stopped riding last summer because I just knew something wasnt right and didnt know what to do and was fed up of conflicting advice from professionals.
A close trusted friend then convinced me to bring her back into work slowly with careful saddle checks and lots of hacking. On a few occasions I saw a lame step in front on the lunge so vet back out nothing significant enough to block, horse has a lot of miles on the clock and is unfit so press on and see what happens. Lameness returned and I got fed up and sent her to Bell Equine for an assessment with the ortho lady to check head to toe. She had all four legs and SI joint scanned and blocked and trot up after trot up. After being there all day vet decided bi laterally lame in front, blocked it to feet and requested MRI. MRI showed navicular bone changes and all the inflammation on tendons around it that go with it. Vet said its not the end of the world and would still have a decent ridden life, managed well and she could continue to so everything as before and even still low level jumping. Looking back at it I believe all the other issues are secondary to the navicular. She is currently managed with pads and gel under front shoes and wedges behind and seems to be doing well. I wont jump her again (wont risk the concussion) and I am only working her to what I feel she can handle to keep her interested in life she loves working. Shes schooling (soft is better for her feet) and limited hacking as she struggles on the road downhill so we find routes that have roads uphill and softer bridlepaths back down. I am very very careful with her.
Current problem is grumpiness has returned, started at beginning of winter and has got progressively worse over it. I am now asking myself is it just because its winter? - she did the same last winter, a lot of horses get grumpy and frustrated this time of year or have the ulcers returned from low grade pain? There wasnt a huge improvement in symptoms after the last course of omeprazole the improvement was in the scope and the symptoms subsided when the warmer weather came and the grass came through. Insurance is maxed out and another scope and omeprazole will put at least £1500 on my credit card so I am hesitating a little. Obviously I would spend the money in a heart beat, I would do anything for her but I need to be sensible she cant be on omeprazole constantly can she? Vets have said not to worry unless behaviour affects her riding and handling.
She currently has ad lib hay (I am obsessed with it and she never goes without), a handful of alpha-a oil (recc for ulcers by vets) and light balancer (shes a very good doer) with Ex-egus supplement and aloe vera. Pain relief for the navicular is limited. Bute and danilon are out of the question due to history of ulcers and vets are reluctant to steroid inject the navicular bursa just yet as she looks relatively sound (vets commented that she has seen more lame horses eventing!) and she is only 10 so she may need steroid injections for a large chunk of her life, hence putting it off as much as we can.
Barefoot rehab is not an option unless I want to retire her. Farrier is open minded and willing to try but has said she wont cope with any sort of work without shoes. Would do this as a last resort but I feel we havent got there yet as she loves her work and vets are happy for her to continue working for the time being. I feel that if the shoes can patch her up for another few years so she can enjoy light work that would be better for her than spending years trying to rehab her feet when she might not have that long left in her working life.
This horse is the sweetest, most willing horse, and I would do anything for her.
Please be kind to me, Im a sensitive sort. Thankyou.
Very early on into owning her I got the impression something wasnt quite right. Ridden wise she is (and has always been) absolutely perfect, never puts a foot wrong. Steady and reliable and steps it up a gear when you ask, she is pure joy to ride. However, during our first winter together she became more and more grumpy with rugs and tacking up and would pull some horrific faces, lift legs and generally seem unhappy when you were messing with her. Her nature is very placid and very sweet so I knew it wasnt her. After mentally fighting off the comments from more experienced horsey people that she was just a mare I got her checked by the vets. Queue a stream of investigations into hormones, ovary scans, sacroiliac pain, kissing spine, hock x-rays and scoping for ulcers. Only thing that came up was grade 2-3 ulcers. I put it down to spending a lot of time in due to yard rules, treated her with peptizole, 6 weeks later scoped pretty much clear. Relocated and moved yards and spent the summer out grumpy behaviour lessened and pretty much subsided but I still had a feeling something wasnt 100%. Vets thought SI pain so steroid injections, still intermittently funny with her back. Lots of messing with saddles, fortune spent on chiropractors, bowen therapy, physio tape (me being a novice owner and listening to advice from everyone and not trusting myself) and I stopped riding last summer because I just knew something wasnt right and didnt know what to do and was fed up of conflicting advice from professionals.
A close trusted friend then convinced me to bring her back into work slowly with careful saddle checks and lots of hacking. On a few occasions I saw a lame step in front on the lunge so vet back out nothing significant enough to block, horse has a lot of miles on the clock and is unfit so press on and see what happens. Lameness returned and I got fed up and sent her to Bell Equine for an assessment with the ortho lady to check head to toe. She had all four legs and SI joint scanned and blocked and trot up after trot up. After being there all day vet decided bi laterally lame in front, blocked it to feet and requested MRI. MRI showed navicular bone changes and all the inflammation on tendons around it that go with it. Vet said its not the end of the world and would still have a decent ridden life, managed well and she could continue to so everything as before and even still low level jumping. Looking back at it I believe all the other issues are secondary to the navicular. She is currently managed with pads and gel under front shoes and wedges behind and seems to be doing well. I wont jump her again (wont risk the concussion) and I am only working her to what I feel she can handle to keep her interested in life she loves working. Shes schooling (soft is better for her feet) and limited hacking as she struggles on the road downhill so we find routes that have roads uphill and softer bridlepaths back down. I am very very careful with her.
Current problem is grumpiness has returned, started at beginning of winter and has got progressively worse over it. I am now asking myself is it just because its winter? - she did the same last winter, a lot of horses get grumpy and frustrated this time of year or have the ulcers returned from low grade pain? There wasnt a huge improvement in symptoms after the last course of omeprazole the improvement was in the scope and the symptoms subsided when the warmer weather came and the grass came through. Insurance is maxed out and another scope and omeprazole will put at least £1500 on my credit card so I am hesitating a little. Obviously I would spend the money in a heart beat, I would do anything for her but I need to be sensible she cant be on omeprazole constantly can she? Vets have said not to worry unless behaviour affects her riding and handling.
She currently has ad lib hay (I am obsessed with it and she never goes without), a handful of alpha-a oil (recc for ulcers by vets) and light balancer (shes a very good doer) with Ex-egus supplement and aloe vera. Pain relief for the navicular is limited. Bute and danilon are out of the question due to history of ulcers and vets are reluctant to steroid inject the navicular bursa just yet as she looks relatively sound (vets commented that she has seen more lame horses eventing!) and she is only 10 so she may need steroid injections for a large chunk of her life, hence putting it off as much as we can.
Barefoot rehab is not an option unless I want to retire her. Farrier is open minded and willing to try but has said she wont cope with any sort of work without shoes. Would do this as a last resort but I feel we havent got there yet as she loves her work and vets are happy for her to continue working for the time being. I feel that if the shoes can patch her up for another few years so she can enjoy light work that would be better for her than spending years trying to rehab her feet when she might not have that long left in her working life.
This horse is the sweetest, most willing horse, and I would do anything for her.
Please be kind to me, Im a sensitive sort. Thankyou.