Beatrice5
Well-Known Member
Here in the South West we have had just a little rain........like 3 times the rest of the country according to the man on the news 
So fields are horrendous and very very deep on top of being hilly and steep.
Rode Friday all fine, horses spent the weekend out with hay as we don't have proper facilities as is a friends field and we are just eating the grass and keeping elderly mare company supposedly for the summer although fields worse than in winter.
Brought madam in yesterday morning and washed several inches of mud off her legs. Rear fetlock joints and just above are hot filled and hard.
Made a make do corral on tiny bit of hard standing available for her lastnight with a hay net to rest her from the mud. She is walking out short and due to the hill we are on I haven't tried to trot her up on the road as very steep.
In my 35 years of owning and living with horses I have been very fortunate to have not had an major lameness problems so am not very educated on tendons. What is the best course of action and how do I know if it is tendons. I am guessing she has pulled or twisted someting in the deep mud.
I have made a small clean paddock in the rested peice of field for her to wander around on today then will corral her again tonight.
What is the best cause of action and what do I need to know and do?
Many thanks.
So fields are horrendous and very very deep on top of being hilly and steep.
Rode Friday all fine, horses spent the weekend out with hay as we don't have proper facilities as is a friends field and we are just eating the grass and keeping elderly mare company supposedly for the summer although fields worse than in winter.
Brought madam in yesterday morning and washed several inches of mud off her legs. Rear fetlock joints and just above are hot filled and hard.
Made a make do corral on tiny bit of hard standing available for her lastnight with a hay net to rest her from the mud. She is walking out short and due to the hill we are on I haven't tried to trot her up on the road as very steep.
In my 35 years of owning and living with horses I have been very fortunate to have not had an major lameness problems so am not very educated on tendons. What is the best course of action and how do I know if it is tendons. I am guessing she has pulled or twisted someting in the deep mud.
I have made a small clean paddock in the rested peice of field for her to wander around on today then will corral her again tonight.
What is the best cause of action and what do I need to know and do?
Many thanks.