kerrieberry2
Well-Known Member
Every year, normally in august my 27yr old connie x tb mare colics! And this often happens twice a year! Its never really anything too serious, just needs an antispasmodic injection as she's right as rain again!
Each time the vet comes up with a different for why it might happen! Firstly there's a lot of clover in our summer field, so could be giving her gas and she is have a drama queen reaction about it!! Which is very likely! She is defo a drama queen! Then her front teeth have lost a lot of the enamel from her front teeth so she might struggle to eat the short grass and maybe taking in a lot of soil which could upset her tummy! so this year I kept her out summer field and it seemed to be working but a few weeks ago when she got colic! So this time the vet has suggest it could be that part of her tummy isn't working and every so often the food isn't getting passed along and is causing her discomfort and to show these colic signs!
So anyway my question is really, for anyone who has a horse that suffers like this, how do you manage it? I got a call this morning from my friend as we all panic if she's laying down and/or rolling! Luckily by the time I got there she was ok, so was just a panic but I wish there was something I could do that could stop this happening again?
Each time the vet comes up with a different for why it might happen! Firstly there's a lot of clover in our summer field, so could be giving her gas and she is have a drama queen reaction about it!! Which is very likely! She is defo a drama queen! Then her front teeth have lost a lot of the enamel from her front teeth so she might struggle to eat the short grass and maybe taking in a lot of soil which could upset her tummy! so this year I kept her out summer field and it seemed to be working but a few weeks ago when she got colic! So this time the vet has suggest it could be that part of her tummy isn't working and every so often the food isn't getting passed along and is causing her discomfort and to show these colic signs!
So anyway my question is really, for anyone who has a horse that suffers like this, how do you manage it? I got a call this morning from my friend as we all panic if she's laying down and/or rolling! Luckily by the time I got there she was ok, so was just a panic but I wish there was something I could do that could stop this happening again?