Thursday, October 28, 2010

Farriers and feminine absorbent pads heal abscess.

All is well if you call a hole in the bottom of your foot and you are a horse.

We had our farrier (Lincoln Todd) out on Monday to trim both Fiona and Megan's hooves and find the problem with Megan.  Lincoln got Fiona all trimmed up and looking pretty good but only after a small fight with her feet.  I have not put as much work into Fiona as I wanted or should have and it has been about a month since I picked up her feet.

Megan on the other hand was a little more challenging at first.  I caught her and worked with her just a bit, although with her pain I was cautious about how much I worked with her.   Lincoln grabbed her front left hoof and started trimming away and did some pressure tests on the hoof where amazingly enough, he found a abscess in the hoof just like a local trainer told me it would be.

Once he found the abscess location he dug out some of the hoof and was able to get some drainage, then he dug out a tiny bit more and the abscess let go.  "Yaay, no more pressure" is what Megan was saying at that point.  It was time to trim up the rest of the feet so he went to the back left, she wouldn't stand still.  At that point I had to tell Lincoln, "Let me work her feet for a few minutes" and I did just that.  Foreward, backwards, yield her hind end left, then right and the front end left and right finally getting her to listen, calm down and drop her head so we could work her hind feet.

Lincoln went to her left hind foot and she moved away again, so I worked her again.  I remembered, she does not like her rump to be petted as you are getting ready to pick up her feet, bypass her rump and go right down the leg and lift the hoof.  She knows you are there and will lift every time.

We were on a roll, she picked up all four feet and got all trimmed up for the first time since April when we got her. No telling when the last time she had all four hooves trimmed or had shoes on.
 

Megan now has a hole in her foot we had to do something right away to keep it clean, clear of mud, sticks and horse poop.  It was now the perfect time to get a boot so we could have her foot soaking in Epsom Salt water and draw out the poison in the abscessed hoof.



We got the boot and mixed up some saltwater, that was the easy part and the hard part was soon to come.  Putting the boot on was more than I expected and at one point it put me in a position of questionable safety, That was not fun at all!!  She was flipping her foot in the air kicking off the boot once, then finally stopped. I got the boot back on and she was much calmer but not completely liking this huge chunk of rubber on her foot.  I got Megan calmed down again and was able to pour saltwater into the boot and without her freaking out and sloshing out all the water.  We have done this over three days now and it is time to dry out the boot and hoof.

After doing research on the web, calling trainers, farriers and the local horse people, everyone said they used diapers to draw out the moisture. Well, I know diapers are expensive and there will be a lot of waste in cutting down the diaper to fit her foot. I did some thinking and went to the local drug store (Bi-Mart) and asked one of the pharmacists about using a feminine absorbent pad for something like this. She felt sorry for the horse but was very understanding and helpful finding the correct product to draw moisture out of the open hoof.  I stuffed 3 absorbent pads  (with sticky backs) into the bottom of the soaking boot and wrapped the top with two more. There will not be any moisture, dirt or sticks floating around in that boot!!

Tomorrow we add iodine to the mix and will be done with it in a few more days once the hoof closes up.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

A lame end to a new start!

A New Start!
I took a chance on Megan and now she is lame. 

I wanted to start getting Megan out and around to see how she would be in unknown areas to her so I took her for a walk out of the corral through the hall/stall about 4 times until she was mostly calm and used to the surroundings, smells and grass. 

Yaay, there was clumps of grass to eat everywhere and she found them.

After taking megan out and back in then working her feet for a few minutes she was ready for uncharted territory and get to work.

She was very curious and wide eyed but I still had control of her feet. If she pushed into me I moved her hind feet with the hindquarter disengagement exercise and had her back down a bit.  We would walk another 10 feet and she would spike back up again and we would do another two or three circles until she calmed down again.   I think we did this four times in about 300 feet.

We got to the well tilled area where our round pen will be built soon and just walked her in circles, and then went through a whole group of  exercises moving and controlling her feet forward, back, side to side with her front and hind end.

We are now ready to work!

I sent her into a trot with the lunge line (only 12 feet) and she loved it.  Her head was up, tail and mane were blowing in the wind and she looked like she was smiling and I was sweating.

All went well and she got used to going from the barn to the round pen area real well, it was like she anticipated the run and liked it.

Last Sunday I took her out and was working with her pretty slow, I had her trot around for a while getting warmed up and then went into a canter, pulled her back to a trot and she was doing great until she stopped very quick and pulled her front left foot up and was limping very bad. 

She either hit something in the ground impacting/bruising the bottom of her hoof, punctured the bottom of her hoof (couldn't see any injury)  It could have been an abscess or old injury that came to the surface after impacting the hoof but we are still not sure what happened.

So now we wait, I have talked to many people and they in general have a 3 to 10 day waiting period before they are real worried.  An abscess will likely blow out or burn out in a few days, the impaction/bruise will calm in about 4-5 days and I am hoping for one of those!


I called two farriers with injury experience and I have yet to hear from them.

Stay tuned for updates on Mare Megan to see how she is doing.

Wish us luck!