Evergreen
Well-Known Member
I am going to have a chat with my vet tomorrow regarding my gelding who has recently had (unsuccessful) cortisone injections into both his spavined hocks.
There is obviously something else going on. These are his symptoms:
He is not lame. Hardly at all even after flexion and therefore not a candidate for nerve blocks. He has quite severe changes in both hocks however, hence the injections.
He has a saddle phobia which I have largely overcome with patience and clicker training. I have isolated the problem to his being girthed. Not when you actually do the girth up (he does not bite or kick or squirm or swish his tail), but when he tries to move after the girth is done up. He has to be girthed up one hole at a time and walked around inbetween. I have to ride with the girth quite loose. When I did it up from the saddle the other day he stood nicely, but then exploded when he walked forwards, bucking and rearing before freezing. I jumped off him and led him forward. He panicked again and his sides were quivering, but he was fine after a short lunge, when I got back on board.
He stands beautifully to be mounted.
He pins his ears and throws his head up when first being asked to trot. His trot is very pottery and his head carried high, ears back for the first few minutes, before he works beautifully.
He cannot canter very well and sometimes refuses to canter at all. He panics when being asked, pins his ears and the canter is very bouncy. He canters as though his hind legs are joined together. Again, this improves after a couple of minutes and he comes nice and round.
When ridden, he often stumbles behind and also treads on one hind with the other, but he does not do this on the lunge.
He hates the farrier, or having his feet picked out. He snatches his front legs away and kicks out with his hinds.
Teeth are regularly seen to.
Tack has been checked and both saddles fitted professionally.
Physio and chiropractor and vet all say he is not sore in his back.
I weight 9 stone 12 and he is a 16.1 hh 9 year old ex racer.
So, what do you think could be wrong? Could it be kissing spines as some have suggested on another thread, or ulcers? Or something else? Vet does not think it is either of these things due to no soreness in the back or other symptoms that could indicate ulcers, but could she be wrong?
There is obviously something else going on. These are his symptoms:
He is not lame. Hardly at all even after flexion and therefore not a candidate for nerve blocks. He has quite severe changes in both hocks however, hence the injections.
He has a saddle phobia which I have largely overcome with patience and clicker training. I have isolated the problem to his being girthed. Not when you actually do the girth up (he does not bite or kick or squirm or swish his tail), but when he tries to move after the girth is done up. He has to be girthed up one hole at a time and walked around inbetween. I have to ride with the girth quite loose. When I did it up from the saddle the other day he stood nicely, but then exploded when he walked forwards, bucking and rearing before freezing. I jumped off him and led him forward. He panicked again and his sides were quivering, but he was fine after a short lunge, when I got back on board.
He stands beautifully to be mounted.
He pins his ears and throws his head up when first being asked to trot. His trot is very pottery and his head carried high, ears back for the first few minutes, before he works beautifully.
He cannot canter very well and sometimes refuses to canter at all. He panics when being asked, pins his ears and the canter is very bouncy. He canters as though his hind legs are joined together. Again, this improves after a couple of minutes and he comes nice and round.
When ridden, he often stumbles behind and also treads on one hind with the other, but he does not do this on the lunge.
He hates the farrier, or having his feet picked out. He snatches his front legs away and kicks out with his hinds.
Teeth are regularly seen to.
Tack has been checked and both saddles fitted professionally.
Physio and chiropractor and vet all say he is not sore in his back.
I weight 9 stone 12 and he is a 16.1 hh 9 year old ex racer.
So, what do you think could be wrong? Could it be kissing spines as some have suggested on another thread, or ulcers? Or something else? Vet does not think it is either of these things due to no soreness in the back or other symptoms that could indicate ulcers, but could she be wrong?
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