moon_and_spoon
Active Member
Hi everyone. I have an 11 y/o tb who was diagnosed with kissing spines last year. She is the type to suck things up and get on with it. Incredibly polite, would never complain. More manifests as spookiness and a pain face.
Her kissing spines are so severe and have began remodelling. I know she wouldn't let me know outright if it was hurting her to be ridden, but I can take notice of the little signs and ultimately decided to retire her. I believe she also has ulcers and that the KS is not the whole story.
I had suspected something had been going on for a while... since I've had her in fact. She's always been tricky to ride & stressy when asked to do anything other than walk. Especially canter, in the three years I've had her I've not had one 'normal' canter, which of course is synonymous with her diagnosis.
In 2024 I decided not to push it anymore and to just walk. She was still the spooky type going solo, so we just walked around the farm with someone on the ground with us and it was great. She was fab and I loved it. It reached the point however when I thought about doing more than just 15 minute strolls, and decided to get her X-rayed.
Following her horrific X-rays I stopped riding her. I could not imagine sitting on this spine. Surgery was presented as a viable option, but I do not have the time, money or knowledge to rehab her, and based on nerve blocks and the fact that I am quite tall for her (5'11' on a 15.3) I know that I would probably rehab her just to sell her on for someone else to ride. Guttingly, the plan was always to sell her this year as I am moving away. And now selling her has become a rather dangerous option. She is uninsured. I can't seem to justify spending thousands and then never seeing her again. On the other hand I will end up spending thousands to give her a retired life for possibly the next 20+ years.
I am filled with guilt every day, because my own wishes to ride, require more money than I have if keeping her.
I'm not sure how happy she is at the mo. She's certainly not getting much attention. But she is living and hopefully comfortable. She's a wired tb though. Chilled in the field and on the ground but built to work really. It seems that since she's been retired everything has just slipped downhill. Mud fever, abscesses, chronically gunky eyes. I am not sure I am cut out to give her the life she deserves at all for years.
When do I say enough?
Her kissing spines are so severe and have began remodelling. I know she wouldn't let me know outright if it was hurting her to be ridden, but I can take notice of the little signs and ultimately decided to retire her. I believe she also has ulcers and that the KS is not the whole story.
I had suspected something had been going on for a while... since I've had her in fact. She's always been tricky to ride & stressy when asked to do anything other than walk. Especially canter, in the three years I've had her I've not had one 'normal' canter, which of course is synonymous with her diagnosis.
In 2024 I decided not to push it anymore and to just walk. She was still the spooky type going solo, so we just walked around the farm with someone on the ground with us and it was great. She was fab and I loved it. It reached the point however when I thought about doing more than just 15 minute strolls, and decided to get her X-rayed.
Following her horrific X-rays I stopped riding her. I could not imagine sitting on this spine. Surgery was presented as a viable option, but I do not have the time, money or knowledge to rehab her, and based on nerve blocks and the fact that I am quite tall for her (5'11' on a 15.3) I know that I would probably rehab her just to sell her on for someone else to ride. Guttingly, the plan was always to sell her this year as I am moving away. And now selling her has become a rather dangerous option. She is uninsured. I can't seem to justify spending thousands and then never seeing her again. On the other hand I will end up spending thousands to give her a retired life for possibly the next 20+ years.
I am filled with guilt every day, because my own wishes to ride, require more money than I have if keeping her.
I'm not sure how happy she is at the mo. She's certainly not getting much attention. But she is living and hopefully comfortable. She's a wired tb though. Chilled in the field and on the ground but built to work really. It seems that since she's been retired everything has just slipped downhill. Mud fever, abscesses, chronically gunky eyes. I am not sure I am cut out to give her the life she deserves at all for years.
When do I say enough?