AllieBaba
Posted : 11/18/2009 5:52:18 AM
[quote=CrookedPostQH]
Having a horse stumble is potentially dangerous and it is natural to try and pick the horse up and stay with them. Sometimes all is good.
A friend of my daughter and I, who I traded horses with to get my mare was riding her 4 yo and the last anyone in the arena saw was her begin to collect the mare. A minute later, they looked and she was on the ground non-responsive - not breathing. She had evidently went headfirst into the ground resulting in severe brain swelling and continuous seizures. She was on life support and in a drug induced coma for six days before the family made the decision to turn off the machines.
Ten days after our friend passed, I almost pulled my mare over sideways in an attempt to stay on and when I did fall, the mare was still staggering sideways and ended up stepping on my leg. It was an accident that could have caused serious injury as the mare passed over the top of me, but I walked away.
There are lots of ways to get hurt around horses that stumble or rear or buck or spook. I just want to remind everyone to be careful.
I find it hard to believe that a normal, healthy horse who is past 6 weeks of trim will go down going over a pole on the ground, or even two or three.
Like I said, lunge the horse, put some poles out there, and put it through its paces going both ways and see what happens. If it continues to stumble and/or fall, there's something going on. It's not a matter of long toes. If a horse reacts that strongly to long toes, it's not safe on the trail at any rate.
If you have the option, and many don't, and you can put it out to pasture on steep rocky hills where it has to learn to keep its feet under it, do it for a few months, then try it again. Riderless, lunge, with poles. See what happens.
That's the ideal, not realistic for most, but if it's an option, I'd go for it.