SirBrastias
Well-Known Member
This is may be a long one...
Firstly a bit of background, horse is 8 year old ex-racer, last raced 2/3 years ago. Ridden 4/5 times a week, mostly schooling with some hacking. Turned out 2-3 days a week when not in work.
Same bit/bridle for approx. 2 years, a couple of weeks a go horse started yawning and chomping when bridled. Ah! I thought, he needs his teeth doing (needs doing every 6 months - otherwise very sharp edges appear). Vet visiting yard for several horses so asked him to have a look. Vet pokes and prods and turns around and says mouth is fine (his teeth were last done in July) and to stop worrying about his mouth. We talk about his ridden behavior (generally very good), occasionally when jumping, he has a few 'moments' when he will land and shorten up dramatically and tuck his head on, not broncing, but not his normally sweet self. General advice from instructors is to ride him through it. It is very rare, but I would say has happened maybe 3 times in last couple of months. Mostly horse is very good, but these occasional moments do knock my confidence and make me worry. Anyway, back to vet, on hearing this and some more poking about, vet wonders if horse may have some discomfort and the yawning and chomping is a pain anticipation (agreed), thinks maybe has some ulcer signs but doesn't want to scope as does not think server enough. Discuss feeding regime and says to monitor and if horses shows any additional signs or signs get worse then can investigate more but suspects will pass.
Back/saddle up to date.
Coincidentally horse is now having a few weeks off for swollen tendon sheath, so has been turned out for a couple of weeks to allow swelling to go down.
Horse may come back fine, but considering whether to offer supplement to help with any potential gut discomfort. Horse fed hay and pony nuts, not typical TB in that holds weight well and will eat for england given the chance (when on DIY I way over fed haylage and ended up with very fat, loopy horse - I've never had a TB look after himself quite so well!). Feed now managed by livery yard - very happy, horse is very happy, showing no signs of stress except for recent yawning spell when bridled.
I have always been a big supplement feeder in past (on DIY), but as horse for last 2 years have flourished on yard under their regime have not bothered adding anything to his diet.
Now for the questions...
What is comfort gut and is this likely to help? It seems very popular at yard for helping horses with behavioral issues and potential gut problems. Is it just activated charcoal?
Is there anything anyone would recommend that I could use as a preventative measure in relation to potential gut discomfort?
Obviously if horse gets worse or behavior persists will get checked more thoroughly, current vet advice is wait and it will probably pass or may get worse.
Tea and chocolate biscuits for reading through.
Firstly a bit of background, horse is 8 year old ex-racer, last raced 2/3 years ago. Ridden 4/5 times a week, mostly schooling with some hacking. Turned out 2-3 days a week when not in work.
Same bit/bridle for approx. 2 years, a couple of weeks a go horse started yawning and chomping when bridled. Ah! I thought, he needs his teeth doing (needs doing every 6 months - otherwise very sharp edges appear). Vet visiting yard for several horses so asked him to have a look. Vet pokes and prods and turns around and says mouth is fine (his teeth were last done in July) and to stop worrying about his mouth. We talk about his ridden behavior (generally very good), occasionally when jumping, he has a few 'moments' when he will land and shorten up dramatically and tuck his head on, not broncing, but not his normally sweet self. General advice from instructors is to ride him through it. It is very rare, but I would say has happened maybe 3 times in last couple of months. Mostly horse is very good, but these occasional moments do knock my confidence and make me worry. Anyway, back to vet, on hearing this and some more poking about, vet wonders if horse may have some discomfort and the yawning and chomping is a pain anticipation (agreed), thinks maybe has some ulcer signs but doesn't want to scope as does not think server enough. Discuss feeding regime and says to monitor and if horses shows any additional signs or signs get worse then can investigate more but suspects will pass.
Back/saddle up to date.
Coincidentally horse is now having a few weeks off for swollen tendon sheath, so has been turned out for a couple of weeks to allow swelling to go down.
Horse may come back fine, but considering whether to offer supplement to help with any potential gut discomfort. Horse fed hay and pony nuts, not typical TB in that holds weight well and will eat for england given the chance (when on DIY I way over fed haylage and ended up with very fat, loopy horse - I've never had a TB look after himself quite so well!). Feed now managed by livery yard - very happy, horse is very happy, showing no signs of stress except for recent yawning spell when bridled.
I have always been a big supplement feeder in past (on DIY), but as horse for last 2 years have flourished on yard under their regime have not bothered adding anything to his diet.
Now for the questions...
What is comfort gut and is this likely to help? It seems very popular at yard for helping horses with behavioral issues and potential gut problems. Is it just activated charcoal?
Is there anything anyone would recommend that I could use as a preventative measure in relation to potential gut discomfort?
Obviously if horse gets worse or behavior persists will get checked more thoroughly, current vet advice is wait and it will probably pass or may get worse.
Tea and chocolate biscuits for reading through.