Kelpie
Well-Known Member
My horse has been diagnosed with Sidebone so I'm on a fact finding mission!
Although he is currently sound, he's been intermittently lame since the spring and I'm desparate not to do anything to send him unsound again if I can help it.
I should add that he is barefoot, so as I understand it, that means that the foot would move side to side a bit more than it would do than if shod and so at the moment (or at least back in the spring) that my be why it was causing intermittant lameness (i.e. so shoes would have masked the problem).
Now, although I'm pro barefoot, if I thought it would rectify a problem I would go back to shoes - but, it seems that the reason the sidebone may have developed is that my horse has a slight conformational default higher up the limb (i.e. so canon bone and pastern are not totally alligned) so the vet that diagnosed the problem (and who is familiar with barefoot) cautioned that while yes shoes would solve the immediate problem the horse would only compensate later on anyway (e.g. develop splints).
The vet reckons that the sidebone would be irritated by the side to side movement caused by uneven/ rocky ground - which would be worse over longer rides. So, we're pretty much good to go on a surface and on nice even fields with a good grass covering. It seems that what may have been the last straw in actually causing lameness (bearing in mind that the sidebones develop over time) would have been the endurance we were doing.
So, fine, I'll knock the endurance on the head but I'd really like to keep him eventing if I can. We can do a lot of fittening work for that on a surface/ go to all weather gallops/ take him to places with nice grass to gallop on, etc, and obviously if the ground is hard in the summer months then I won't event him then.
However, although of course I will be careful, I fear that there may be times when in effect I won't know where the line is until I cross it - i.e. so I'll have to wait for my horse to tell me when he's sore from too much work on ground that is too tough for him to handle.
What I'm looking for, therefore, is experience that any of you may have in working horses with sidebone, particularly if barefoot?
Thanks all
Although he is currently sound, he's been intermittently lame since the spring and I'm desparate not to do anything to send him unsound again if I can help it.
I should add that he is barefoot, so as I understand it, that means that the foot would move side to side a bit more than it would do than if shod and so at the moment (or at least back in the spring) that my be why it was causing intermittant lameness (i.e. so shoes would have masked the problem).
Now, although I'm pro barefoot, if I thought it would rectify a problem I would go back to shoes - but, it seems that the reason the sidebone may have developed is that my horse has a slight conformational default higher up the limb (i.e. so canon bone and pastern are not totally alligned) so the vet that diagnosed the problem (and who is familiar with barefoot) cautioned that while yes shoes would solve the immediate problem the horse would only compensate later on anyway (e.g. develop splints).
The vet reckons that the sidebone would be irritated by the side to side movement caused by uneven/ rocky ground - which would be worse over longer rides. So, we're pretty much good to go on a surface and on nice even fields with a good grass covering. It seems that what may have been the last straw in actually causing lameness (bearing in mind that the sidebones develop over time) would have been the endurance we were doing.
So, fine, I'll knock the endurance on the head but I'd really like to keep him eventing if I can. We can do a lot of fittening work for that on a surface/ go to all weather gallops/ take him to places with nice grass to gallop on, etc, and obviously if the ground is hard in the summer months then I won't event him then.
However, although of course I will be careful, I fear that there may be times when in effect I won't know where the line is until I cross it - i.e. so I'll have to wait for my horse to tell me when he's sore from too much work on ground that is too tough for him to handle.
What I'm looking for, therefore, is experience that any of you may have in working horses with sidebone, particularly if barefoot?
Thanks all