Caol Ila
Well-Known Member
As I was coming back from a hack, I passed a friend setting out on one. I was still faffing - I don't think I had even turned Fin out yet - when they returned. Friend said her horse did not feel quite right. He wasn't striding out. Horse is an 18-year old KWPN, fairly overweight, and he's in inconconsistent work. His field is not ideal for good doers.
I suggested we check for pulses and then did. He had an obvious pulse in both front pasterns. I said that probably wasn't ideal, and she kept the horse in overnight.
The next day, she turned him out and said she reckoned he was sore because she'd trotted on rocky ground earlier in the week. Horse is barefoot. I haven't seen the horse, so I don't know if he's better or not.
It's not really my circus, and she's probably going to do what she's going to do anyway, but I don't want to give terrible advice, should she ask for it again.
Can pulses be caused by sore feet because you ran it over some rocks?
Should you start treating it like a laminitic horse if you feel pulses?
Is feeling a digital pulse always a sign of bad things?
I suggested we check for pulses and then did. He had an obvious pulse in both front pasterns. I said that probably wasn't ideal, and she kept the horse in overnight.
The next day, she turned him out and said she reckoned he was sore because she'd trotted on rocky ground earlier in the week. Horse is barefoot. I haven't seen the horse, so I don't know if he's better or not.
It's not really my circus, and she's probably going to do what she's going to do anyway, but I don't want to give terrible advice, should she ask for it again.
Can pulses be caused by sore feet because you ran it over some rocks?
Should you start treating it like a laminitic horse if you feel pulses?
Is feeling a digital pulse always a sign of bad things?