
This is a placeholder text
Group text

by Red Sable on 14 February 2012 - 20:02
I asked the trainer what the foals were vaccinated for and he has no idea.

As for bugs, I have never vaccinated my race horse for anything since I've had him (as a 3 year old). I use Immune Plus, and Equine Choice and he's never been sick. He is stabled in race barns with many other horses at the races once per week during his racing season.
Our other race horses usually catch a cold upon arrival to our barns, especially the babies (2 year olds) from the stress of moving I think. Sometimes the bugs are long lasting, but only really affect their racing abilities, and the discharge looks awful. It never knocks them down so much they stop eating.
We did have one horse ( a really good one too) that got a persistent sore throat from which he never recovered approx. 4 years ago. He had to go on Prednisone long term. The vet thought he caught the Herpes virus, but was just guessing as no test was conclusive so no one really knew for sure. I have my own suspicions but that is all they are, suspicions.
That to date is the worst case of anything we've had.

by Ruger1 on 15 February 2012 - 16:02
Any thought on rabies??..The chances are so small that a rabid raccoon will come onto the property and bite my horse, but if it happened,,,if,,if,,if,,Sigh..

by Jenni78 on 16 February 2012 - 00:02
Does anyone seriously still believe that you need to booster vaccines yearly or <gag> twice a year???



by Ruger1 on 16 February 2012 - 18:02
Do you have something against shoeing a horse???,,,To my knowledge as long as you are using a knowledgeable farrier that knows your horses use and conformation there should be no problems...??? There are a lot of "buthchers " "so called " in the field so you need to be very careful that you get references and that there is a true knolege of hoof anatomy and experience...

by Jenni78 on 16 February 2012 - 21:02

I always thought shoes were horrible, but then I started studying under a renowned therapeutic barefoot trimmer and now they are absolutely horrifying to me. There is plenty to be found on that subject if people care to look into it. Most would rather just do what they're told, however. Why do mustangs have the best feet?

by Ruger1 on 17 February 2012 - 03:02
I was born barefooted as nature intended, but shoes are kind of necessary in my line of work!!..lol..:) I could not resist Jenni..;)
Mustangs in the wild are not asked to perform gaits that could lead to wear/strain/injury as are sport or work horses..Shoes are also necessary and/or beneficial IMO to prevent injury or to promote better balance at the walk, jog/trot, canter/lope. When my horses are standing in the pasture all winter I don't worry about shoes unless there is an issue... I can not imagine race horses not wearing shoes..Maybe RedSable can shed some light on that...

by Red Sable on 17 February 2012 - 23:02
At the track we cannot go more than a day without a shoe on or the horses feet wear down to the point of where they cannot walk. We jog on tracks covered in stone dust.
Shoeing doesn't scare me as much as who is doing it. They can certainly make a horse lame in no time. Our farrier has been doing racehorses for eons and knows much about the hoof and corrective shoeing.
We will take the shoes off for a couple of months during turn out to let the foot get it's natural shape back but also because a horse can do serious damage to another with shoes on.

by mollyandjack on 17 February 2012 - 23:02

by Ruger1 on 18 February 2012 - 03:02
RS,,"Shoeing doesn't scare me as much as who is doing it. " I agree..and thanks for the input..:)
MAJ,,,I am sure that some horses to wonderfully barefoot, but IMO there are situations that make shoes a better option...:)
Contact information Disclaimer Privacy Statement Copyright Information Terms of Service Cookie policy ↑ Back to top