Isabeau
Active Member
Greetings from New Jersey, USA!
Regarding older, "melting" horses, what are the standards in the UK? Here were have clients insisting on keeping going with older horses that are quite unhealthy and unsound. Horses that lay down and cannot get back up, repeatedly. Perpetual jaw and foot abscesses (6 months or more of oozing puss.) Quite lame on 2 feet. Breathing so impaired there is 'whistling' and swallowing difficulty Etc.
Not riding these horses, but insisting to treat and keep alive horses that cannot hardly walk to the paddock.
If you have your own facility, and want to torment your old horses, then that's your own business (so many would feel here.) But where do business owners in the UK draw the line on "this horse is in too much pain, I'm not going to help you keep torturing it?"
Regarding older, "melting" horses, what are the standards in the UK? Here were have clients insisting on keeping going with older horses that are quite unhealthy and unsound. Horses that lay down and cannot get back up, repeatedly. Perpetual jaw and foot abscesses (6 months or more of oozing puss.) Quite lame on 2 feet. Breathing so impaired there is 'whistling' and swallowing difficulty Etc.
Not riding these horses, but insisting to treat and keep alive horses that cannot hardly walk to the paddock.
If you have your own facility, and want to torment your old horses, then that's your own business (so many would feel here.) But where do business owners in the UK draw the line on "this horse is in too much pain, I'm not going to help you keep torturing it?"