Exasperated
Well-Known Member
Not knowing your circumstances and opportunities, difficult to advise specifics, but:Thank you. The overrugging is the thing I think I’ll struggle with because I’m so wired to be very careful not to overrug. I know every horse is different but what sort of weight rug should I be putting on him in this temperature?
In terms of keeping him moving, obviously more difficult when they’re in over night, would people suggest light exercise every day?
If stabled overnight, good deep bed, plenty of rug warmth (probably use higher tog rugs than loads of weighty layers to carry around on weakened muscles; consider leg warmers if we get down to some of the bone-chill temperatures experienced in the last cold snap); try to minimise draughts while also managing a fresh air flow.
Will be a trial and error balancing act with almost everything, to optimise things for you both.
When turned out, hopefully with friends and some grass to encourage movement, because if he’s just going to stand miserably at a cold gate - better off stabled and walked out several times during the day than ‘hanging around’ getting stiff. You’ll have to judge the rugging , but ASSUME he will need to be FAR warmer than an unaffected horse.
Exercise : get yourself very well wrapped up AS WELL as the horse, decent quarter sheets, and set off for a good, long, walking hack as often as you can fit in. My experience, hacking is much more effective than circling in a school, and probably less boring. If he long reins, that would at least keep you warm! If leading out from another, use a horse walker type rug, and probably stick to walk rather than allow any competition between them to overdo things.
If your horse volunteers faster than a walk, go for it but don’t push him until you have a clearer idea what you are dealing with. Walking would start any fittening programme for healthy horses, anyway.
Everything you’ve said screams PSSM, but other conditions show similarities, and some PSSM horses can be managed more happily than others. I hope you are lucky.