LankyDoodle
Well-Known Member
And I don't think it's going to be very good news.
He was sound for all of about 2 weeks in about November when he started going out. However, he is now lame. Not as lame as he was, but noticeably so on circles and in trot. He will canter/gallop out in the field and while the lameness is there, it is clearly not bothering him enough to stop him being a prat.
The bit that worries me is that he goes down to roll and struggles to get down and then back up some of the time. He doesn't tend to bend the legs when going down, he just bends his fronts and then crashes down to the side! Then getting up is a mission for him some of the time.
He has terrible sweet itch that we do manage to control with a lot of hard work; and his feet crumble like biscuits in the spring and summer. I think the vet is going to tell us today that he's not going to be able to be ridden again, which in fairness was the prognosis we were given before the op, by the osteo surgeon from Liphook who did the op, so is not a total surprise but is upsetting.
I could give him longer (we have until 1st August for the claim to be closed), but I realistically know that the vet at the clinic was right in their prognosis and that with no meniscus in his nearside stifle, he is never going to be totally sound and is going to have bouts of severe lameness on and off for however many years of natural life he has left.
I don't see that there's much point to this post really. I just feel a bit defeated. The vet will probably ask us to transport him to the clinic for a final lameness workup (great now we've sold our 4x4 and the equitrek is parked up waiting to be sold!) as he can only do a limited assessment at our yard (no school). I just don't know what I should be saying to the vet etc. I'm half guessing he will recommend Lanky is retired... but a horse with sweet itch as bad as his and feet as bad as his, is going to do very poorly as a field ornament. Just in a hormonal, pregnant, confuddled mess.
He was sound for all of about 2 weeks in about November when he started going out. However, he is now lame. Not as lame as he was, but noticeably so on circles and in trot. He will canter/gallop out in the field and while the lameness is there, it is clearly not bothering him enough to stop him being a prat.
The bit that worries me is that he goes down to roll and struggles to get down and then back up some of the time. He doesn't tend to bend the legs when going down, he just bends his fronts and then crashes down to the side! Then getting up is a mission for him some of the time.
He has terrible sweet itch that we do manage to control with a lot of hard work; and his feet crumble like biscuits in the spring and summer. I think the vet is going to tell us today that he's not going to be able to be ridden again, which in fairness was the prognosis we were given before the op, by the osteo surgeon from Liphook who did the op, so is not a total surprise but is upsetting.
I could give him longer (we have until 1st August for the claim to be closed), but I realistically know that the vet at the clinic was right in their prognosis and that with no meniscus in his nearside stifle, he is never going to be totally sound and is going to have bouts of severe lameness on and off for however many years of natural life he has left.
I don't see that there's much point to this post really. I just feel a bit defeated. The vet will probably ask us to transport him to the clinic for a final lameness workup (great now we've sold our 4x4 and the equitrek is parked up waiting to be sold!) as he can only do a limited assessment at our yard (no school). I just don't know what I should be saying to the vet etc. I'm half guessing he will recommend Lanky is retired... but a horse with sweet itch as bad as his and feet as bad as his, is going to do very poorly as a field ornament. Just in a hormonal, pregnant, confuddled mess.