wundahoss
Posted : 6/3/2010 6:43:08 AM
Hi,
I am lucky to have built a strong relationship with my vet and farrier, and will discuss all possible causes and solutions.
Yep, that's good of course. I'm trying to say that even if they are great, there may still be recent findings they're not aware of, so it pays to learn a bit yourself, and don't discount thing *just* because they may, or they don't know about it.
I guess it was in my head that it was a hock issue, .....
I am now trying to invision how down hill slopes can put the horse on it's toes, and cause pain. Why would he drag his rear legs and shorten stride in the rear? If it is in his hocks...is that fixable, reoccurring?
I'm no vet, haven't had too much experience with hock probs. It could well be what you imagined. Think I mentioned earlier what I *guessed* might be the prognosis for a youngster, well managed with hock probs? But don't discount other possibilities.
Down hill slopes don't put the horse on it's toes - it's already moving in that manner due to heel sensitivity. It's just that it's a lot more noticeable, as the horse becomes pottery trying to avoid heel pressure. This is what often manifests as very short strides.
If the toes are long or stretched, especially if he's 'tippy-toeing' too, this can lead to him dragging his toes. But another thing that I didn't think of till now is the possibility of patella problem. This causes a horse to drag his back toes, be a bit pottery when they lock up and can make lifting feet difficult.
Don't know why I didn't think of it earlier, considering I have a pony who has(well, hopefully had) the prob. First I noticed was every now & then he was reluctant to lift one back leg, but when he did, it was often extremely stiff, until he stretched it & flexed it by kicking out suddenly(yes, it was def. physical, not behavioural
Then I noticed every now & then he'd get 'pottery' & short stride, especially on hills. He would also drag his toes sometimes & wear them flat across the front if he was on bitumen.
After having vets & bodyworkers previously tell me it's a conformational thing that he'll probably always have, I tried a 'cranio-sacral' practitioner who came highly recommended.(Not the kind of 'spooky stuff' I usually give much credence to, but thought it worth a try after seeing changes in friend's horses) Well! to cut a long story short, this problem hasn't surfaced for about 3 months now, since not long after her first visit, and this pony also had some other major, supposedly unchangeable spinal probs that have greatly reduced, if not seemingly disappeared all together... I only had her to him twice & she told me to play it by ear, but she didn't expect him to need her again, at least not in the near future. Part of the treatment for the patella prob was to get him stepping regularly over low logs or cavaletti, to strengthen his knees. Thankfully I already keep my boys on a 'paddock paradise' circuit, so I just put about 10 logs across the track, which effectively means he does these exercises a number of times a day without me having to go there.
Anyway, just telling you about that in case that's his main prob.... keep us posted.