T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
254.1 | OTHER TOXINS | MERIDN::IZZO | | Fri Apr 18 1986 10:14 | 17 |
| PLANTS ARE NOT THE ONLY TOXIN THAT HORSES CAN ACCIDENTLY BE EXPOSED
TO. CAUTION SHOULD BE USED WHEN PURCHASING BEDDING THAT IT IS NOT
DERIVED FROM THESE POISONOUS PLANTS. WE RECENTLY HAD A TRAGIC INCIDENT
AT THE BARN WHERE I BOARD. THE OWNER HAD A DELIVERY OF SHAVINGS
DELIVERED THAT WERE MADE FROM CHERRY WOOD. NOT KNOWING THAT THE
SHAVINGS WERE SHAVINGS DEALER HAD MADE THE CHANGE, THE OWNER PUT
THE BEDDING INTO SOME STALLS. FOUR HORSES CAME DOWN WITH FOUNDER
WITHIN AN HOUR OF BEING PLACED IN THEIR STALLS. FORTUNATELY ALL
ARE OK NOW DUE TO THE QUICK ACTION OF SOME CARING BOARDERS.
ANOTHER THING THAT OTEN CAUSES PROBLEMS IS LAUNDRY DETERGENT. I'VE
SEEN MANY HORSES HAVE ALLERGIC REACTIONS TO DETERGENT. IF YOU SUDDENLY
SEE A RASH OR HIVES ON YOUR HORSE, AND HAVE JUST LAUNDERED HIS BLANKET,
SADDLE PAD, HALTER FUZZIES, ETC., LEAVE THEM OFF FOR A FEW DAYS
AND REWASH IT IN MILD SOAP.
ANN
|
254.2 | cedar??? | HYSTER::BROWNE | | Wed Jan 04 1989 18:38 | 2 |
| What about cedar shavings? What effect if any does that have on
horses both externallly and internally if eaten?
|
254.3 | shavings | CGOO01::LMILLER | Now try it once more ...... | Thu Jan 12 1989 12:46 | 9 |
|
We (out western Canada) use cedar shavings all the time, unless
your horse is allergic to the cedar oil (very few are) in the shavings,
it makes a very satisfactory bedding material, especially as it
its relatively cheap out here. Other types of wood shavings are
also used. Most horses won't touch cedar (or any other wood) voluntarily
and the amount ingested when "snuffling" around is minimal,
but .... put it this way my horses have colicked more on straw than
shavings.
|
254.4 | Poisonous Plant | REGENT::GARROW | | Mon Jun 01 1992 10:24 | 24 |
| If there is already a note, please point me in the right direction...
I'm putting up another corrall and the area is wooded, therefore I need
to know if a flower growing there is poisonous. I know lily of the
valley are, but this is a small plant, with two leave and the flower
stem is single, with a grouping of little (tiny)star shapped flowers.
Like X|X
X|X
X|X
X|X
| X
| XXX Leaves
XXXX|XXXXX
xxx|
I would say this flower does not grow much higher than 4".
I have a book that list poisonous plants, but don't know what this
plant is!! Any help will be appreciated.
Thanks,
Caryl
|
254.5 | Possible pointers | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | May the horse be with you! | Mon Jun 01 1992 14:14 | 12 |
| Your best bet at determining what the plant is (and therefore, whether
or not it's toxic) is to go to your local library(bookstore) and
borrow(buy) a book on your regions wildflowers. Such books usually have
photographs or paintings of the plants and should be able to help you
identify it easily.
Other than that, you can try taking one of the plants to somebody who's
good at such things(like a county agent, botany teacher, amateur
botanist, somebody's old country granny, or ecologist) and have them
identify it for you.
Good luck
|
254.6 | | CSLALL::AJOHNSON | | Wed Jun 03 1992 12:14 | 2 |
| or dig one of them up and take it to the nearest nursery and ask them...
|
254.7 | BOOK ON POISONOUS PLANTS | ASABET::NICKERSON | KATHIE NICKERSON 223-2025 | Tue Jun 09 1992 09:07 | 7 |
| There is a book that Gordon DeWolf wrote on plants poisonous to horses.
It should be in the library. It might be worth reading.
Good luck.
Kathie
|
254.8 | | MVDS02::MCCLURE | | Wed Jun 10 1992 13:33 | 4 |
| I suspect they're the same wild flowers we have all over our area in
Merrimack - Mom calls them Quaker Ladies, but I'm not sure she's got
it right. The neighborhood horses aren't affected by them at all.
|
254.9 | UK RAGWORT ALERT | COMICS::PEWTER | | Thu Jul 16 1992 13:12 | 22 |
|
If you live in or around the Basingstoke and Reading areas and graze
horses there you may have noticed the incredible amount of ragwort
that is growing everywhere, especially on roundabouts and sides of
roads, completely unchecked. The Town and Country Planning Act states
that it is illegal to allow poisonous weeds to grow in or around
agricultural grazing land. Land that has horses grazing on it is no
longer considered agricultural, unless you graze sheep on it now and
again. (hint hint!) I have contacted Basingstoke Council and Hampshire
County Council and no one will accept responsibility. However, the
Ministry of Agriculture says it is down to the Country Council. You are
entitled to complain if you feel the law is being flouted in this case
and you can make a formal complaint by contacting Jackie Barratt on
0734 581222. She will advise you of your next step. The Ministry can
then take action. I will be complaining, I have already seen fields
full of the stuff and it will be seeding at any time, posing a real
threat to horses and it could end up costing a lot of money to clear it
from your paddock next year!
|
254.10 | | MAJORS::QUICK | Yorkshire 1, Suffolk nil. | Fri Jul 17 1992 06:57 | 11 |
|
Ragwort, I *hate* the stuff... I live next to a large equestrian centre in
a region that is totally overgrown with ragwort. Each year I spend days
pulling the damn stuff up, more grows the next year. The local district
coucil who own the surrounding heathland won't do anything about it growing
on the heath, understandably perhaps, as it would be an impossible task to
clear many hundreds of acres. The ministry won't take any action unless they
can actually see some growing *on* grazing land. I've heard rumours of a
spray that affects ragwort and ragwort alone, anyone else heard of this?
JJ.
|
254.11 | Maple Leaf Poisoning? | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Wed Oct 21 1992 09:38 | 12 |
| ANyone out there know the facts about red maple being poisonous to
horses. I've always heard that Red Maple and Crimson Maple (i.e.
maples that have red leaves instead of green) were the only toxic
varieties of maple trees, and that casual ingestion of a few leaves
would not cause a reaction. But yeaterdayd, when I was buying horse
feed, a woman who was also buying feed told me that one of her friends
just lost a pony to poising from eating leaves of swamp maple, and that
the vet told her that every type of maple is poisonous, to the extent
that one leaf can kill a horse. I'm guessing the truth is somewhat
less extreme.... Anyone know?
-ellie
|
254.12 | | KAHALA::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Wed Oct 21 1992 09:57 | 7 |
| I find it hard to believe that one maple leaf would kill a horse. Our
horses eat all kinds of leaves - right off the tree.
I have heard that you can't give them the leaves off the ground. I am
not sure why, though.
Ed..
|
254.13 | Ugh! | CSLALL::LCOBURN | Plan B Farm | Wed Oct 21 1992 11:15 | 4 |
| Just curious....how does one *avoid* giving turned-out horses leaves
off the ground this time of year? Cant quite picture myself raking my
whole field several times a day! :-)
|
254.14 | Skeptisism called for? | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Wed Oct 21 1992 11:24 | 8 |
| Yes, this is why I take this woman's report with some skepticism. The
clerk at the store asked these same questions, though, and the woman
with the story said that she had heard that other horses in the area
who had been in their pastures for years were suddenly eating maple
leaves and dying. My skepticism increased a bit at this. I think
there's something in it, but less than what met the ear...
-ellie
|
254.15 | my own experience... fwiw | ELMAGO::HBUTTERMAN | | Wed Oct 21 1992 12:45 | 54 |
|
From my own personal experience (when I lived in Maine, and we had all
kinds of maple trees and wild cherry - also consider potentially
toxic).... I had a wonderful young mare who had grown up on our farm
and eaten whatever was around (including leaves). In the fall of her
3rd year she contracted "Something" (here's the hard part - no final
diagnosis w/assurity)... she acted as tho her neurological system had
been tranquilized, she could hardly walk, was a bit colicy, had an
extremely LOW body temperature. We got her to the clinic where they
did extensive testing, including fluid which was building up under her
belly (I don't know why).. blood, urine, hair, skin etc... she was
treated with antihystimenes (sp) and given lots of fluids.. she was
dehydrating and glassy eyed for the first 24 hours there. The kept her
in the intensive unit, watched her constantly.. she finally started to
come out of it, and ended up being fine.
Prior to noticing her not eating and acting strange (@ 3:pm) she had
gone out to pasture in the morning, been brought in, clipped, washed
for a show, dried, blanketed and given a hay bag in her stall.... when
we realized she was not ok she was shaking/shivering/cold to touch and
could harldy walk on her own....
The vets determined that she must have had an alergic/toxic reaction,
and the
ONLY thing she could have ingested were maple leaves from the pasture.
The kicker here is that we had a HARD frost the night before.. and they
felt (And I read later... there is some kind of enzyme change that
happens once the leaves are frosted (on the tree or off - I believe
that fallen/frozen are the worst offenders)
I dont' know if this is any help.. since it was not a totally validated
case.. but she came very close to dying.. the fact that we were in the
barn getting another horse ready and were right with her and caught
her early probably made a difference.. (And we just put her on the
trailer and got her to the clinic - about 45 minutes away). But the
best sence was that it was from the leaves. I had a friend loan me a
book that had a great deal to say about toxcidity from frozen maple
leaves.. and most of her symptoms indicated that was it. The test
results did not .... (but who knows how good the tests were?)
Anyway - that's for what it is worth...
And... I don't know what you can do especially when your pastures are
right against a tree line (like mine were) or have the trees right in
them... I tried to make sure my horses had enoough other stuff to eat
that they didn't feel like they had to go scrounging around the corners
of the pasture.. in the fall that's hard cuz the grass is going and
they get bored.
anyway.... maple trees wont be a problem
here in New Mexico (but there's probably
something else!)
smiles - holly
|
254.16 | Many kinds of trees are toxic to horses | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Never burp when you're bent over! | Wed Oct 21 1992 14:40 | 18 |
| Yes, red maple leaves are poisonous. BTW, swamp maple is just another name
for red maple. The symptoms that Holly described in .15 are very like those
that a friend's horse had. She was positively diagnosed as having had a
toxic reaction and she had actually been seen eating red maple leaves
off a downed tree. These folks didn't make too much of the incident
because their vet told them that it took quite a lot of maple leaves to
cause a problem. They said that this mare was pretty greedy and
probably just "pigged out" on the leaves....
So there you have it.. somewhere between 1 and "A whole lot" of maple
leaves can make your horse pretty sick :-(
The wild cherry trees so common in New England are also toxic. Both the
bark and the leaves. Again the amount is variable depending on the
horse and the condition of the bark/leaves.
Yew trees and shrubs are also toxic but not too many people have them
in their pastures!
|
254.17 | Hemolytic Anemia | AIMHI::DANIELS | | Fri Oct 23 1992 10:40 | 9 |
| Red Maple causes hemolytic anemia in horses, which is usually fatal.
Equus magazine, one of the first ones they ever put
out (1978?) did a whole article on this. A horse stabled with Red
Maple died after a large branch came down and it ate all the leaves
off. The urine turns a funny color, brown I think, but I can't
be sure. Anyway, the trees are posionous to horses. I imagine that up
to a certain point when all the leaves are poisonous to all horses,
that horses in the gray zone exhibit greater or lesser tolerances to
different amounts of these leaves.
|
254.18 | What defines a "red" maple? | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Fri Oct 23 1992 10:48 | 7 |
| re .-1
Thanks. I will check my old issues of Equus to see if I have this one.
The question still remains as to what defines a "red" maple. Maybe the
answer will be in there....
-ellie
|
254.19 | Red maple = Swamp maple! | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Never burp when you're bent over! | Fri Oct 23 1992 14:27 | 23 |
| ellie,
Are you thinking that the "red" maple are those ornamental varieties
that have red leaves all season? You know , the ones people use in
landscaping. Those are NOT red maples. In fact, I think some of those
trees aren't even maples. I forget all the formal Latin names but I can
look them up if anybody cares.
The red maple is so-called because it's twigs and leaves have a reddish
tinge in early stages of growth and the leaves turn red or reddish
orange in the Fall. It is a close relative of the sugar maple which has
leaves that turn yellow/gold in the Fall.
The red maple is also known as the swamp maple because it likes/tolerates
wet ground. The red maple grows quickly but is used mostly for firewood
because it's core frequently rots on the stump before the tree is large
enough to cut for timber.
I learned a lot about red maple when Jan's brother was doing his
graduate work in forest products. He wrote papers on ways to use the
red maple commercially in chipboard products, etc...
John
|
254.20 | Acer Something or Other | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Fri Oct 23 1992 16:26 | 9 |
| Yes, I was thinking of the Maples that stay red all year. I have two
of them, each about 30' from a horse paddock. These are maples trees
(acer something-or-other) and I always thought that these were the
"dangerous" ones. I don't have any swamp maples near the paddocks.
Gee, I never realized that *those* were the ones referred to as "red
maples". Yes, there is good reason for gardeners to use botanical
names to avoid just this sort of confusion!
-ellie
|
254.21 | Acer Rubrum and friends | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Never burp when you're bent over! | Mon Oct 26 1992 15:08 | 30 |
| I did a little rummaging over the weekend to see if I could find the
EQUUS article that Tina(I think it was Tina) mentioned. I too vaguely
remembered the article and wanted to see if they gave the Latin name of
what they meant by Red Maple. I couldn't find it through their annual
index or by reading the table of contents in the first 24 issues...It's
probably there somewhere but I haven't found it yet.
I did however find the Latin name for Red Maple(Acer Rubrum) which is
also known as Swamp Maple, Water Maple and Scarlet Maple.
When I was a kid, my parents had some of those red leaved trees that
we always referred to as Japanese Red Maples. I tried to find such a
critter in my tree and gardening books. There were 2 possibilities Acer
Japonicum(aka Full Moon Maple) and Acer Palmatum(Japanese Maple)...Don't
ask me why the common name Japanese Maple doesn't go with the Latin name
Acer Japonicum! But that's what the book said....
The trees my parents had were probably Acer Palmatum because the leaves
and shape matched my memory more closely than the other. The book also
said that the Acer Palmatum has been bred for a variety of leave colors
even though the basic original color was green leaves turning red in fall
under just the right conditions.
I also found a nursery catalog which sold maple trees with year-round
red leaves but they didn't give a Latin name. The tree did not look
like the Acer Rubrum and it's size and shape did not match those of the
Acer Rubrum. It didn't match the Acer Palmatum or Acer Japonicum
either! Unfortunately, the catalog DID call it a Red Maple. The tree looked
like a young Sugar Maple with a Henna Rinse! So who knows what that one
is...Without calling the nursery I mean.
|
254.22 | | MPO::ROBINSON | you have HOW MANY cats??? | Mon Oct 26 1992 15:54 | 8 |
|
According to Dr. Lori Tumpowski at Tufts, they
are seeing a lot of colics lately due to horses
eating a lot of oak and maple leaves, but no
poisoning (altho she did agree that it can happen).
Sherry
|
254.23 | Wilted leaves are the worst | MSBCS::A_HARRIS | | Tue Oct 27 1992 07:44 | 10 |
| I have Red Maples (the bad kind) all over my property. I asked the vet
how much of a danger they were when I moved my horses home. She said
they are most dangerous after a storm when the green leaves have blown
off and are wilted. Wilted leaves are *most* toxic. I know of a horse
who died from Red Maple poisoning in Acton because a neighbor had left
a trimmed Red Maple branch within reach of the horse. It was the only
interesting, accessible thing for the horse to chew on... The wilted
leaves did the horse in.
-Andrea-
|
254.24 | | EDWIN::STUMPF | | Tue Oct 27 1992 21:12 | 31 |
| I lost a horse this way, some seventeen years ago. back then i don't think
they knew for sure about red maple leaf poisoning, or at least the vets
we used didn't. Back then they weren't sure what it was. Harry Gill
suggested RMLP many years later, from the symptoms i described.
anyway, to reiterate/reinforce what others have said: wilted leaves are the
culprit. a red maple branch that is cut down or broken off by a storm is
potentially lethal in very small amounts. although this is my own speculation
only, i wonder if a hard frost with a still-living tree might produce the same
effect by bringing down still-living leaves or branch parts. these might be
able to wilt. my own experience happened just after the first hard frost of
the season.
symptoms: urine will be dark brown from all the dead RBCs being excreted in
the urine. the horse will initally appear a little lethargic and uncomfortable,
looking a darn sight like a mild colic. they lose interest in food and drink.
the destruction of the red blood cells eventually overloads the liver and
kidneys. you see kidney failure, liver failure, soon after comes brain
damage of course.
two horses in my area died of this at the same time. my horse was in very
good shape at the time. she lived for a week after first diagnosis. (we
called the vet as soon as we suspected something wrong). the second horse
was thin and not fit (had been on pasture for several years), although young
(i think 4), but she was dead in just over a day.
this was just after a hard frost.
hope this helps someone.
-cjs-
|
254.25 | now I'm worried... | TRACTR::BLAKE | MTS Technical Support @MKO | Fri Oct 30 1992 15:09 | 15 |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
My Morgan not only eats the red and yellow leaves that blow in...
he actually PREFERS the yellow ones!
There aren't any trees directly in or next to the corral but they do
blow in from the rest of the yard...
Maybe (I'm lucky!?) and these leaves that turned red due to the change
in the season wern't red maples? Or those yellow ones were something
else too?
He's as FAT as a pig (we nick named him the "pigga pony").
Our quarter horse also eats them...
they *must* be another type of leaf???
|
254.26 | | EDWIN::STUMPF | | Wed Nov 04 1992 19:51 | 4 |
| the standard "fallen leaves" that are part of a trees normal cycle are fine.
it is only leaves on branches "stuck down in the prime of life" that can
be a problem - this is what is meant by "wilted". don't worry about fallen
autumn leaves.
|
254.27 | | DELNI::KEIRAN | | Thu Nov 05 1992 07:41 | 4 |
| I heard that a friend of mine lost a pony she had had for years
just last week because of red maple leaf poisioning. Everyone
makes fun of me because I rake my paddock every year, now I'm
glad I do!!
|
254.28 | EQUUS article on red maple poisoning | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Seattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31 | Wed Oct 27 1993 17:43 | 34 |
| In looking for info on acorns being poisonous, I stumbled across the
EQUUS article on red maples being poisonous. The tree they were
talking about is in fact the common tree native to the eastern US
called the red maple, swamp maple, or scarlet maple. The Latin name is
Acer Rubrum, Linnaeus. This is *NOT* the decorative yard tree called
Japanese Red Maple....
If anybody knows how to get in touch with Ellie Roberts who got laid
off 2 purges ago, please pass this information along to her. I've lost
her address.
EQUUS 44(June 1981) page 64 says:
"...red maple poisoning poses a hazard to horses in many parts of the
country. Native to the easter United States, the tree(Acer rubrum L.)
is one of the most common and generally distributed trees in North
America, found as far north as Nova Scotia and as far west as Texas.
The tree's leaves harbor a poison that can kill a horse in as few as 15
hours; however, as the Georgia researchers point out, the toxin is elusive
and unpredictable.
The leaves can be deadliest when they are wilted or dried, the
researchers found in both laboratory-induced and field cases of red
maple poisoning. Freshly harvested leaves administered immediatley
after collection did not produce the disease in laboratory ponies, but
when they were dried, the leaves became toxic and remained so for at
least 30 days. Overnight freezing did not destroy the leaves toxicity.
...Because the specific cause of red maple poisoning has yet to be
pinpointed, there is no sure antidote. Treatment with oxygen,
intravenous fluids, blood transfusions and corticosteroids does not
appear to decrease the mortality rate or lessen the severity of the
clinical signs. ..."
That was written over 12 years ago so there may be an antidote now. I
don't know.
|
254.29 | Red Maple = Red Leaves? | TRACTR::BLAKE | Theory decides what can be observed | Thu Oct 28 1993 08:27 | 14 |
| Sorry if this seems like it should be obvious... but it just
dosen't make sense to me since we had a tree in the corral that
I *thought* was a red maple and I know at least one of our two
horses ate the leaves for about two years before we cut the tree down
in order to complete the dressage arena...
Is the red maple tree the ones that turn scarlet red in the fall
here in New Hampshire?
Thanks,
Cheryl
|
254.30 | red buds, not leaves | GRANMA::JWOOD | | Thu Oct 28 1993 09:39 | 3 |
| Red maples are the ones with red buds after the leaves drop. I don't
believe that their leaves are necessarily red in the fall, but they
may be red, yellow, or gold.
|
254.31 | Red Maple vs Sugar Maple ? | TRACTR::BLAKE | Theory decides what can be observed | Thu Oct 28 1993 13:07 | 4 |
| Hmmm, ok that helps. These tress were not the kind that have
the red buds in the spring - just red leave in the fall.
Probably sugar maples...(?)
|
254.32 | Their colors are *VERY* different | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Seattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31 | Thu Oct 28 1993 14:20 | 6 |
| Probably not sugar maples. Sugar maples turn yellow to light orange.
Red maples turn red, scarlet or dark orange in the fall. Their leaves
are substantially redder in the fall than sugar maples. I knew one
forester in NH who defined the extent of swamps by flying over an area
in the fall...the colors are that distinct between red and sugar
maples.
|