AmyMay
Situation normal
I'm totally lost here! Concrete is a particularly slippery surface which is why it is controvercial to lunge on it, hence the point of the post!
Precisely!
I'm totally lost here! Concrete is a particularly slippery surface which is why it is controvercial to lunge on it, hence the point of the post!
Is it really necessary though to put a dental gag on? I was happy for it to be lightly sedated to do it if needs must, but I would imagine you can have a good look at the teeth without a gag![]()
This is an interesting discussion.
Two comments:
1) just out of interest, what type of lameness can you catch while lunging in a 10m circle on concrete, that would not be caught while trotting in a straight line following flexion? would be interesting to hear precisely which tendons/muscles/tissues it affects.
tendons/muscles/tissues it affects.
Might be being thick but surely trotting up on concrete & taking them in a circle would be to the same effect
No, because the limbs will act and fall differently on a circle.......
Lunging on a circle is NOT a compulsory part of a 5 stage vetting. It is completely up to the vet carrying out the vetting.
Of course he could have sedated it, after all the other parts o vetting were finished and the bloods taken, simplesSorry no I don't mean the horse has a full dental exam and sort out (obv not) But the gag allows you to see the majority of the teeth and have access to the back molars (which you can't really see that well even with a gag in, and as I say these are often the ones which have problems.
Also the vet couldn't sedate it as a) it would mess up the bloods and b) for trotting up, riding etc it would be unsafe to do it with the horse sedated, even lightly!