Michen
Well-Known Member
Such a long, complex story for anyone that doesn't already know from the Boggle thread but I have a beautiful rising 5 year old who sadly got EPM (we think), something that causes neuro symptoms here in the US. He made a remarkable recovery and was cleared as non neuro on several different occasions by different vets.
He has since moved with me to California and the terrain here is very different. We have these crazy short very sharp hills. The kind that make your shins hurt to walk down! Whereas before in Colorado there were plenty of hills but it was more of a constant, albeit very much a work out, gradient rather than anything too crazy. That said I did notice last summer he was rushing down a little sharp bank I had, and going up it he’d sort of climb up on his toes a little. I put it down to being a young baby horse and because he checked out neurologically under all the vet tests with their hill at the clinic etc I didn’t worry. However it’s been more and more at the front of my mind as he’s just not been improving with a particularly steep hill here. He starts getting fidgety and either overly rushy or overly cautious going down hill when long reining or in hand. My biggest suspicion was that he was lame in front as he does have some significant side bone.
Anyway, I had the vet out today. He’s sound as anything- he looks fantastic on a hard trot circle even. He passed every neuro test. Then we got to the hill (I wanted this specific one because I just didn’t think anything less would show what I was worried about) and the vet agreed I was right to be concerned and felt it was most definitely neuro. She said she’d be hard pushed to say he wasn’t safe to ride on the flat given everything, he literally walked perfectly through a row of thick wide raised cavelleti poles. But ultimately, there’s a tiny deficit left there and it’s one that I now know is there. He has also tripped a bit when spooking or whatnot, it’s nothing that I’d have been concerned about as a young horse but of course now I am. I think ultimately, I just can’t imagine ever riding this horse outside of an arena. And maybe not even then frankly.
And that leaves me to where I am now as to what to do with him. He gets fat on thin air. If he’s to retire which I suspect is really the only way forward, he really must be out with a herd on good acerage so that his life is enriched. His current barn is not ok for that. Finding that around here is not really that feasible (though I’d definitely try) and in Northern California the grass is lethally sugary when you do get the acerage. The vet agreed with my concerns. I could send him to Arizona to a barn that I really trust (ironically he got the EPM there but that is what it is and is done now and it’s prevalent everywhere really). But he got fat there too once they started irrigating the pasture so he’d need to spend probably a third of the year or so in a muzzle. Is that even fair I don’t know. I don’t really want to send him anywhere else out of state, particularly because I wouldn’t then be able to check on him.
The other option is do I try and get him going and maybe someone would want him as a little low key dressage horse? I just don’t even know… maybe I’m being way too fussy? He also needs a new saddle, so I’d need to front up another chunk of cash to invest in that. I spent the best part of 25k on this horse last year as he also landed in hospital with an infection that took a lot of dollar to save him from, plus the EPM, plus a lameness etc.
I just don’t know what to do. He looks so good, so sound, it’s just this last 5% and now that I know.. I can’t ignore it and ultimately I love hacking. It’s not worth it for me to put the time and energy into bringing on a young horse that I’ll never feel comfortable hacking. Putting him down is definitely not on the cards, he’s super happy and looks so great in himself and his body in general right now. And I love him, and I owe him the best life I can give him. I’m hoping that one day I’ll have a place with land and I can manage him exactly as needed for his weight and movement.
Sorry for the essay and sob story, horses eh? They just break our hearts. Photo of my gorgeous, plucky little dude. The irony is I was just getting excited about a potential second youngster to put in a field because I felt uncertain atlas would stand up to much work. But because of future long term soundness, not neuro. Yet he’s super sound. And any ideas of a second horse leave me cold, I just want to pack up my horsey things and have a break from it all.

He has since moved with me to California and the terrain here is very different. We have these crazy short very sharp hills. The kind that make your shins hurt to walk down! Whereas before in Colorado there were plenty of hills but it was more of a constant, albeit very much a work out, gradient rather than anything too crazy. That said I did notice last summer he was rushing down a little sharp bank I had, and going up it he’d sort of climb up on his toes a little. I put it down to being a young baby horse and because he checked out neurologically under all the vet tests with their hill at the clinic etc I didn’t worry. However it’s been more and more at the front of my mind as he’s just not been improving with a particularly steep hill here. He starts getting fidgety and either overly rushy or overly cautious going down hill when long reining or in hand. My biggest suspicion was that he was lame in front as he does have some significant side bone.
Anyway, I had the vet out today. He’s sound as anything- he looks fantastic on a hard trot circle even. He passed every neuro test. Then we got to the hill (I wanted this specific one because I just didn’t think anything less would show what I was worried about) and the vet agreed I was right to be concerned and felt it was most definitely neuro. She said she’d be hard pushed to say he wasn’t safe to ride on the flat given everything, he literally walked perfectly through a row of thick wide raised cavelleti poles. But ultimately, there’s a tiny deficit left there and it’s one that I now know is there. He has also tripped a bit when spooking or whatnot, it’s nothing that I’d have been concerned about as a young horse but of course now I am. I think ultimately, I just can’t imagine ever riding this horse outside of an arena. And maybe not even then frankly.
And that leaves me to where I am now as to what to do with him. He gets fat on thin air. If he’s to retire which I suspect is really the only way forward, he really must be out with a herd on good acerage so that his life is enriched. His current barn is not ok for that. Finding that around here is not really that feasible (though I’d definitely try) and in Northern California the grass is lethally sugary when you do get the acerage. The vet agreed with my concerns. I could send him to Arizona to a barn that I really trust (ironically he got the EPM there but that is what it is and is done now and it’s prevalent everywhere really). But he got fat there too once they started irrigating the pasture so he’d need to spend probably a third of the year or so in a muzzle. Is that even fair I don’t know. I don’t really want to send him anywhere else out of state, particularly because I wouldn’t then be able to check on him.
The other option is do I try and get him going and maybe someone would want him as a little low key dressage horse? I just don’t even know… maybe I’m being way too fussy? He also needs a new saddle, so I’d need to front up another chunk of cash to invest in that. I spent the best part of 25k on this horse last year as he also landed in hospital with an infection that took a lot of dollar to save him from, plus the EPM, plus a lameness etc.
I just don’t know what to do. He looks so good, so sound, it’s just this last 5% and now that I know.. I can’t ignore it and ultimately I love hacking. It’s not worth it for me to put the time and energy into bringing on a young horse that I’ll never feel comfortable hacking. Putting him down is definitely not on the cards, he’s super happy and looks so great in himself and his body in general right now. And I love him, and I owe him the best life I can give him. I’m hoping that one day I’ll have a place with land and I can manage him exactly as needed for his weight and movement.
Sorry for the essay and sob story, horses eh? They just break our hearts. Photo of my gorgeous, plucky little dude. The irony is I was just getting excited about a potential second youngster to put in a field because I felt uncertain atlas would stand up to much work. But because of future long term soundness, not neuro. Yet he’s super sound. And any ideas of a second horse leave me cold, I just want to pack up my horsey things and have a break from it all.

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