glenruby
Well-Known Member
Just felt I had to reply to whoever said they didnt understand why horses were afraid of the vet and seemed to suggest it was the vet's fault. I have never in my life seen so many ill-mannered bargey horses as I have in the UK among the "amateur" population. (most professionals have better handling skills in my experience).
Countless times i have turned up to examine of inject a horse and be told hes so good or "he's an angel" only to have it barge through the door, walk all over the client or attempt to double barrel me. I always start with having a chat with the horse (which they always accept) so its not "me" they object to. Having spoken to many many vets this is a problem every one has come across. A couple of senior vets have said they find this is because people do not tell their horses who is boss - they seem to forget that horses are big potentially dangerous animals and should (to an extent) to be seen as such. I've seen so many of these owners then being dragged back to the field afterwards - and never have i ever seen any of them make the horse stand still until it behaves before allowing it to walk on. To be fair, I would bet that many of these people with badly behaved animals wouldnt accept that behaviour from other people's horses but its hard to be hard on your own horses. Basically what I mean is most of our vets cant stand horses who dont behave but some of their own horses behave very similarly!
As regards the twitch, as long as it isnt left on for too long and the horse is given a break every 5 minutes if its needed for longer then twitching is a very usefultool. It doesnt work for all horses, some just blow up and for those, sedation is the best solution. Any horse twitched or under sedation can still kick so handlers should never stand in front and should always beware. However I think sedation is overused and twitching is definitely undeused in this country. Every yard should have a twitch but in my experience very very few have, and even fewer know how to use them correctly. As for vets insisting on using them. You might think your horse is a saint but an experienced vet can often assess a horse's attitude within a split second of walking onto the yard (just due to the number of different horses they see every day) and in most cases if he thinks it should have a twicth then it probably should (of course any good vet will ask the owner about the horse's temperament too). Another thing to think of is the vet is the person in control, it is their responsibility to ensure no one gets hurt - if that requires twitching, sedating etc then so be it. Better a quiet albeit probably uncomfortable horse for 5 minutes than a seriously injured handler and a courtcase.
I await the onslaught.
Countless times i have turned up to examine of inject a horse and be told hes so good or "he's an angel" only to have it barge through the door, walk all over the client or attempt to double barrel me. I always start with having a chat with the horse (which they always accept) so its not "me" they object to. Having spoken to many many vets this is a problem every one has come across. A couple of senior vets have said they find this is because people do not tell their horses who is boss - they seem to forget that horses are big potentially dangerous animals and should (to an extent) to be seen as such. I've seen so many of these owners then being dragged back to the field afterwards - and never have i ever seen any of them make the horse stand still until it behaves before allowing it to walk on. To be fair, I would bet that many of these people with badly behaved animals wouldnt accept that behaviour from other people's horses but its hard to be hard on your own horses. Basically what I mean is most of our vets cant stand horses who dont behave but some of their own horses behave very similarly!
As regards the twitch, as long as it isnt left on for too long and the horse is given a break every 5 minutes if its needed for longer then twitching is a very usefultool. It doesnt work for all horses, some just blow up and for those, sedation is the best solution. Any horse twitched or under sedation can still kick so handlers should never stand in front and should always beware. However I think sedation is overused and twitching is definitely undeused in this country. Every yard should have a twitch but in my experience very very few have, and even fewer know how to use them correctly. As for vets insisting on using them. You might think your horse is a saint but an experienced vet can often assess a horse's attitude within a split second of walking onto the yard (just due to the number of different horses they see every day) and in most cases if he thinks it should have a twicth then it probably should (of course any good vet will ask the owner about the horse's temperament too). Another thing to think of is the vet is the person in control, it is their responsibility to ensure no one gets hurt - if that requires twitching, sedating etc then so be it. Better a quiet albeit probably uncomfortable horse for 5 minutes than a seriously injured handler and a courtcase.
I await the onslaught.