Hepsibah
Well-Known Member
What do you do? If your vet/farrier/edt tells you things you know to be incorrect, do you challenge it? Find someone else to work with?
Engage them in conversation about the issue.
Professionals can most certainly be wrong. But there are often many roads to Rome and plenty of misguided owners who think they are right along the way!
What do you do? If your vet/farrier/edt tells you things you know to be incorrect, do you challenge it? Find someone else to work with?
It depends how they say it, whether they will discuss their reasoning, how wrong they are and how much it matters that they are wrong.
I don't work with any pro who don't discuss with me what they are doing to my horse and why. My colt's recent gelding was great, I got a blow by blow account and a detailed view of the offending parts without even asking![]()
The short version is that my vet didn't suggest x rays for my laminitic mare, my farrier wanted my mare to be exercised as much as possible although she could barely walk and my vet said I didn't need to test my 20 year old pony for cushings because it only needs to be treated if she is constantly getting lami. My research suggests they're both wrong.
I said it was the short version.20 year old pony has long curly coat, random sweating, drinks and wees a lot and has started dropping weight in the same field my other one is overweight from. I really don't think anything was lost in translation with the farrier either: He was there when we arrived at the yard. I told him I'd had to bute her so she was able to travel and he trimmed her as soon as she got off the box because she could barely walk. Mine usually live out so we had to move to be able to stable.
I said it was the short version.20 year old pony has long curly coat, random sweating, drinks and wees a lot and has started dropping weight in the same field my other one is overweight from. I really don't think anything was lost in translation with the farrier either: He was there when we arrived at the yard. I told him I'd had to bute her so she was able to travel and he trimmed her as soon as she got off the box because she could barely walk. Mine usually live out so we had to move to be able to stable.
The short version is that my vet didn't suggest x rays for my laminitic mare, my farrier wanted my mare to be exercised as much as possible although she could barely walk and my vet said I didn't need to test my 20 year old pony for cushings because it only needs to be treated if she is constantly getting lami. My research suggests they're both wrong.
If you dont have confidence in them dont use them.
The short version is that my vet didn't suggest x rays for my laminitic mare, my farrier wanted my mare to be exercised as much as possible although she could barely walk and my vet said I didn't need to test my 20 year old pony for cushings because it only needs to be treated if she is constantly getting lami. My research suggests they're both wrong.
I don't work with any pro who don't discuss with me what they are doing to my horse and why. My colt's recent gelding was great, I got a blow by blow account and a detailed view of the offending parts without even asking![]()