Bertolie
Well-Known Member
Well vet came out yesterday and my normally cant-wait-to-let-it-all-hang-free boy decided to come over all shy! With a bit of help from his mollasses lick he decided to let her have a peek! Vets first thought was that it was a tumour, cue me having a major panic attack! Without sedating him she wouldn't have had much chance of getting a good look, so he was duly sedated and she then proceeded to remove the largest bean she had ever seen ... it was huge and she had to break it up to remove it.
I felt really bad as its a standing joke on my yard that my boy has the cleanest bits of all the geldings on the yard. He was disgusting! She gave him a thorough clean whilst he was sedated, and I did ask her views on the great 'to clean or not' debate. She recommended cleaning but no more than once or twice a year. The pocket that the bean was situated in was quite large/stretched, whether due to his anatomy or whether the bean had caused the skin to stretch she couldn't say, but did say that my boy will probably be more prone to getting beans.
By this point we had quite an audience with most of the geldings owners never having heard of a 'bean' let alone checking their boy's bits.
Think a mass Willy cleaning session with vet (and plenty of sedation) in attendance may be on the cards!
I felt really bad as its a standing joke on my yard that my boy has the cleanest bits of all the geldings on the yard. He was disgusting! She gave him a thorough clean whilst he was sedated, and I did ask her views on the great 'to clean or not' debate. She recommended cleaning but no more than once or twice a year. The pocket that the bean was situated in was quite large/stretched, whether due to his anatomy or whether the bean had caused the skin to stretch she couldn't say, but did say that my boy will probably be more prone to getting beans.
By this point we had quite an audience with most of the geldings owners never having heard of a 'bean' let alone checking their boy's bits.
Think a mass Willy cleaning session with vet (and plenty of sedation) in attendance may be on the cards!