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RideCamp@endurance.net
Fw: stumbling horse
Title: stumbling horse
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, August 13, 2000 7:32 AM
Subject: Re: stumbling horse
sherry- do not dispair!!!If your horse is
over weight, it is going to take allot of long slow miles to get him where he
starts to feel strong all the time---sounds to me like you have a
panter....panting isn't necessarily a bad thing---for some horses it's just
another way for them to help with the cooling off process...my daughter has a
morab mare---came in 10th on the Tevis a couple of years ago---she'll start
panting 20 minutes into a ride if its really hot...the fact that you've been
riding him lots without shoes--could be part of the problem---maybe he is foot
sore--being foot-sore all the way around can also cause him to seem pokey...how
long are his toes???before the shoer comes, look at the bottom of his foot---how
many inches is it from the tip of his frog to the front edge of his hoof?????My
daughter also owns an arab gelding who she got as a four year old and had never
been ridden..he stumbled so bad for the first three years that she almost got
rid of him..worked hard on getting the shoeing just right---did lots of dressage
type work---spent hours walking over dead-fall etc---she wouldn't sell him for
the world now- You should work on getting his shoeing just right(natural
balance), LOTS of long SLOW distance conditioning..and put him on a diet..this
,of course, is my most humble opinion...good luck..
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, August 13, 2000 6:30
AM
Subject: RC: stumbling horse
hello,
I'm usually just a reader on this list serve,
being such a beginner to this
sort of riding. I rode as a kid, did
some rodeo event in high school.
I need some advice on a horse that has
a really bad stumbling problem
and who also had a bad time recovering
today.
A little history:
I have a small (almost 14hh) mustang
that is 5 yrs. old, broke, but no
in-depth training. Last year I had
three falls: first, the mustang front
end goes down at a really slow trot
when I corrected his direction, and I
literally walk off over his head
(freak of luck) he goes all the way down
and roll;, second is a
thoroughbred-type lesson horse where I take english
lessons,
third,
mustang stumbles and goes down in front. Third one was the charmer as
they say.
I slid down his neck and when I was on top of his head he regains
his
footing and I get a flying lesson. Helmet probably saved my
life
everytime...even though I was really one hurting hombre on that last
one...
Having asked a few folks about his stumbling, most answer that
he's just a
youngster and hasn't been watching where he puts his
feet.
Well, I've been putting some miles on him in the last month as we
just
started our LSD, and today it was worse than ever. He probably
stumbled 5-6
times in front (never going down to knees though, and his back
feet kind "gave way"
under him 2-3 times. He was
also in bad shape
from a respiratory perspective too. I was pretty scared
and just
worked to cool him (sponged down with a 5 gallon bucket of water),
but he
was still panting fast and wasn't getting any better. I decided
to
get him in the trailer and head for home (only live 3-5 minute drive
away
from area.) Got him home, ran alot of water on front end and he
got better.
We had rode less than an hour, at walk/trot we've been doing
for two-three
weeks now, although it was hot and humid. This was also
the first morning ride, as
we normally ride late evening, but I did FEED
him a little more than usual
to get him in the trailer (small coffee can
almost full (about 3 cups), and he'd been
grazing all night so it wasn't on
an empty stomach).
We had a bad ride on Tuesday, rode a rocky trail and I
could tell it really
hurt his feet so I got off and we walked last half
back to grassy area, but
he also seemed really tired that day. That
was the first time he didn't seem
full-of-it for the whole ride, even when
we get back to the truck, he's usually wanting to turn
in on the trails and
go again. So I gave him a few days off. Light ride
Friday night
and then this morning...He could barely make it back to the
truck.
What did I do wrong, this was not normal for him? Too hot,
too
humid? Feet still sore? (rode only good grassy dirt trails today
and they
didn't seem to be bothering him). No limp, but stumbling
worse today than
ever.
He seems healthy and has a good appetite.
He is overweight, being one of those horses that gains weight just
thinking about supper...
Any ideas? My vet hasn't suggested any
sort of tests and doesn't have any
ideas. He's gonna get shoes this
week.
I'm beginning to think he's not going to be ride-able! I'm really
scared
he's gonna go down with me again. I'm also very worried about his
condition today, it
scared me.
I need some help here...I don't have
enough experience to be judging this
situation. I would welcome any
comments and thoughts. I'm not sure what to
do at this point and I
don't want to put my horse in danger.
sorry about the length of this post,
but I figured if I was going to ask for
help, then I better give a good
scenario. I can't think of anything else to
add to the
picture.
sherry and hudson
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