T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
907.1 | Udder Balm | SEQUEL::GREGG | | Tue Jun 28 1988 17:32 | 12 |
| Hi Jan,
I have never heard of Grease Heel but my horse likes to rub her
neck a lot and I use a product by the name of UTER BLAM. I find
it to work very well and this product numes a bit so the horse is
not so hard to keep still after I get a touch of it onto her. It
is not harmful. I have used it on myself. (Iron burns)
It is greasey so rub it in as much as you can to avoid dirt build
up. This can be found at most Tack Shops or your local Drug Store.
-D-
|
907.2 | Confused | CHEFS::GOUGH | | Wed Jun 29 1988 06:02 | 5 |
| Is Grease Heel what we call Mud Fever in the UK? (A sort of eczema
like condition which some horses get from having wet muddy legs
- the mud gets into the skin, and an infection sets up.) If it
is, I believe the horse is always susceptible to it - you have to
be careful not to brush their legs when wet, etc.
|
907.3 | How about Furasin? | PERFCT::GCOOK | Murphy was right | Wed Jun 29 1988 10:46 | 8 |
| I'm not sure, but I would think that applying a wet or oily
medication would just draw the dirt to the area that needs to
get cleaned up and simply magnify the problem. Have you thought
of using Furasin spray? My vet recommends that for places that
have to get dried up to heal.
Gwen
|
907.4 | | MEIS::SCRAGGS | | Wed Jun 29 1988 10:52 | 10 |
|
Perhaps Vit E would help? I started using it on all the trouble
spots after a student used it on her ponys saddle sore. It was in
such a place that it wouldn't heal for anything. Two weeks of Vitamin
E daily, it was gone. There is no trace of it anywhere. The barn
that the pony was at before let it go for months, it just kept getting
re-opened and raw.
Marianne
|
907.5 | | CSC32::SACHS | | Wed Jun 29 1988 11:42 | 32 |
|
re: .2
it does sound very similar. the vet described it very like
athletes foot but with an infection. i believe the fulvasin
is an anti-fungal drying agent with a slight pain killer (it
makes my finger tips numb when i apply it and it has calmed
the horse down considerable over the weeks of treatment).
i've moved him out of the pasture and into a pen and that
helped considerably. however, its still lingering and there
are a few scabs left. someone here suggested wrapping the
area, but the vet insisted that it would get better faster
if i didnt close up the area. he said the object is to
dry it up hence the desitin.
one thing i wondering is if i should alternate something to
loosen the scabs with something to dry the area (desitin), but
never having treated this type of thing before (i've only owned
this horse 1 month and its my first horse) i'm a little paranoid.
also, i keep hearing rumors of a miracle cure and was hoping
that someone out there had heard it also. i think it was something
like bacon grease.........
as for the vitamin E, since it works so well for me i dont
see why it wont work on the horse. maybe i'll give that a try.
thanks,
jan
|
907.6 | Aloe Plant? | PIXEL::DANI | | Wed Jun 29 1988 11:58 | 9 |
|
I have no idea if this will help but the Aloe plant is supposed to
have excellent healing powers. I happen to have one growing in my
kitchen for use as ahealing product. I've never tried it on the horse.
Basically you cut a leaf and spread the inner goo on the area.
Dani
|
907.7 | Another idea | CHGV04::LEECH | DTN:474-2338 Chicago, Ill. ACI | Thu Jun 30 1988 11:34 | 22 |
|
I don't think that the bacon grease would be a good idea as the
salt in it would cause the horse a lot of pain. I think the best
thing to do is to keep him where the footing is dry and use the
fulsolvin and desitin. The only reason to bandage his foot is if
he has a problem with getting to much dirt in that area. The aloe
is a good idea as well. Some of the off the shelf products that
I have been seeing have started to include aloe in them for healing.
The only other thing I can think of is getting an iodine based surgical
scrub and use that on him. These types of scrubs are good for most
kinds of bacterial and fungus type skin problems as they kill all
of those nasty bugs. They can be harsh and sting so you have to
watch what you get. The one I have says that it is non-irritating
and non-staining. I haven't had a pain reation from my mare when
I use it. I got it from the Rockford Vet Wholesale catalog and
it wasn't very expensive. If you want to try this and can't find
any there let me know and I will get you some and mail it.
Pat
|
907.8 | grease heel finally gone | CSC32::SACHS | | Tue Jul 19 1988 19:53 | 22 |
|
just thought i'd check in and let you guys know the results of
treating the grease heel/scratches.
after using the DESITIN, the scabs really softened up. now
the area is doing well and the vet says i shouldnt have a
recurring problem. The important thing in this treatment is
to keep the area dry and use a drying/anti-fungal medication.
one of the other ladies in my barn treated this ailment and suggested
sugar-dine (mixture of sugar and betadine scrub) works wonders.
i didnt try this because i learned of it after the problem was almost
cleared up. however, she swears by it and claims there is no
need to scrub the area there-by upsetting the animal.
hope no-one else has to treat this problem since it was a
real pain in the posterior portion.
thanks again for all the suggestions.
jan
|
907.9 | Scratches | MRMARS::ALESSANDRINI | | Thu Nov 29 1990 13:05 | 26 |
| Every year during the spring and winter months, my horse gets
scratches (a mild form of grease heel). Despite repeated treatments
this stuff hangs on for weeks. Right now I am washing his pasturns
every other night with Equitain Shampoo (an antifungal, antibacterial
shampoo that you get through your vet). After washing I pour some on
straight and leave it. The shampoo formula will shield the skin for a
day or so. On the off days, I medicate the crusty scabs with a special
ointment. The pasturns are sore, and the horse is understandable
reluctant to hand me his feet on a nightly basis. He squirms and
wiggles and is generally unhappy. I counteract this by giving him a
supply of carrots after each night, the result- he is a cooperative, but
unenthusiastic patient.
Does anyone else suffer from this scourage. My horse is the only one
who suffers from this in the whole barn. He is an arabian (the only
one at the barn). Only his white legs get this, the black leg is
always clear. I hate this stuff, and frankly it makes him a high
maintenance horse, I can't miss a single day. When it clears up, I
have to make sure his legs are clean and dry every night. If I miss a
few days, blammo, it comes back.
Anyone have any preventative potion that they use, or am I doomed to
spend my nights with my hands in soapy water ;-)
stephanie
|
907.10 | what's scratches | WJOUSM::GARROW | | Thu Nov 29 1990 13:12 | 8 |
| Can you describe what "scratches" is. My mare get something strange on
her rear, above her tail and I'm always washing etc. I've tried
several vets, but it's not a parasite, or a fungus and I can't figure
out what it is. She doesn't get sores but her hair gets very stiff and
she ends up losing large patches of skin and hair. It's not "rain rot"
and I suspected. Maybe it's scratches!!!!
Caryl
|
907.11 | | MRMARS::ALESSANDRINI | | Thu Nov 29 1990 16:05 | 20 |
| Cayrl,
Scratches occurs behind the pastern. They are crusty, greyish patches.
When you peel off the scabs they can sometimes bleed a little, it is
also known as mud fever. I would try the Equitain Shampoo. It is
advertised in Equus. I called the company and asked them about the
product, and they sent me a whole bottle free. It really worked well.
Kiirja,
Ellen Singer from Mass Equine gave me an ointment that I think has
coritsone in it. I just found it last weekend. I have been using that
too, instead of the Navasone (sp?) and it appears to be working very
well. The patches are smaller and less sore. I will recheck the
label.
It appears that every spring and winter I will be washing feet.
stephanie
|
907.12 | Micatin works well | CSOA1::HUNT_L | | Thu Nov 29 1990 16:06 | 6 |
| Here is another good solution. Try using an athelete's foot
anti-fungal. I use both the spray and the ointment. (Micatin) The key
to treating
this fungus is to keep the foot area dry and not wash it. I even go so
far as to use Noxema cream rather than an antifungal soap and water.
|
907.13 | Such a miserable problem.. | PFSVAX::PETH | Critter kids | Fri Nov 30 1990 09:05 | 11 |
| My understanding of this ailment, is that it is caused by something in
the soil. Once a pasture has the organisim, any horse that has a skin
type to get it will. One boarding barn in my area that has a big
problem with this, has had some success fighting it by clipping all the
horses from the hoof to the knee. They look pretty funny, but it keeps
them drier and they dry out faster. Dry paddocks are the best
preventative, though bulldoser costs can add up. For your horse I would
see if there is a drier turnout you can use, trading with another horse
that might have tougher skin than an Arab.
Sandy
|
907.14 | | MRMARS::ALESSANDRINI | | Fri Nov 30 1990 10:13 | 20 |
| Yes, it is something in the soil. The barn where I am does not
practice the best manure management. The pile tends to leach down to
where the gate is, so it is mushy. I can get around some of this by
turining him out via an alternate gate in the morning. The problem is,
is that I am not around at night to do the reverse, so in he goes thru
the mud and mire. This is the only paddock he has access to. I am
moving him, and hopefully, this will allivate the problem.
Kiirja, the Gold Bond Powder is great stuff 8-)!! It might work on
the mare's tail problem in .1
I suppose I should try to clip in back of his pasterns, but I was
afraide that taking his socks off would give him a chill, and with no
hair to keep him dry I was afraide of his getting chapped and cracked
heels.
If only life were simple, I could get so much done.
stephanie
|
907.15 | Vaseline | CSCMA::SMITH | | Fri Nov 30 1990 11:44 | 13 |
| I had a mare with this problem though not as reoccuring as yours.
She only had one white sock and that was the only one she got it
on. I used plain vaseline and put it on every night. It softens
the scabs so they don't continue the cycle of cracking and rescabbing
and seems to be a barrier between the dirt and the skin. It seemed to
work well for me but this mare only got it one year.
After reading a medical article in which testing proofed that anything
which kills bacteria also kills the newly growing skin I stopped
globbing on medicines like I used to. I only use them on a new cut
and then use vaseline after that.
I hope this helps,
Sharon
|
907.16 | Possible hint? | CGOO01::LMILLER | hasten slowly | Fri Nov 30 1990 12:01 | 23 |
| I'll put in my two cents worth. Trust me when I say that clipping
legs will not give a horse a chill. My horses have white stockings,
and clipped legs,(for various reasons), and they stand in snow or bare
ground in -20F and suffer no ill effects - (I do!). Provided the rest of
them is warm! In fact, while they are not thrilled at standing in snow,
it can do their legs good. Any colder than this they still go out provided
there is no excessive wind - we have to watch their ears. Some - not mine
- stay out all winter, usually these are not clipped.
While this climate is not really damp, I have lived in areas where it
is. I found that clipping legs or leaving them, if they are VERY
hairy, is easist. On clean clipped legs, if it was very wet or muddy, I
would either use Vaseline or real lanolin to keep the moisture away from the
skin. It was very messy - but I could live with it - as the heels very
rarely cracked or got scratches. On the very hairy legs, such as some
ponies, we had a fell/welsh and a couple of very Thewell hairy types,
I never clipped, as the mud etc could not get near the heels or legs.
BTW - we had our first big dump of snow last week (1 foot) and it went
down to -2F (-22C) - I'm seriously thinking about hibernating already -
whoever told me many years ago that it cannot snow much below freezing
or when the humidity was only 60% - was not speaking the truth!
|
907.17 | More rot to go | VCSESU::D_SMITH | | Fri Nov 30 1990 14:18 | 16 |
|
We have two white Appys who have never had the problem in the three
years we had them...and this is the muddiest of fall yet. I might ad
the grow a very thick winter coat.
Now on the other side of that, I just aquired an Arab who has led a
very isolated and babied life up till now. Not any more though.
She 1: came down with rain rot and had to be washed four times with
an iodine solution.
No biggy...but 2:her rear right had a nasty crack from you guessed it...
mud. I have been hosing it down just before I ride each day, and
upon turnout, hit it with furizon. It has healed up nicely dispite
the fact it's still muddy as hell. By the way, she is a bay with no
white socks... anyways, time for some dozer work!
Dave'
|
907.18 | Me too, or should I say my horse, too? | BOOVX2::MANDILE | | Fri Nov 30 1990 14:37 | 9 |
| My Bay QH gelding gets what sounds like this on all four
legs (black front, white coronets back) from right
below the knees to the pasterns. It's from moisture,
the vet said. I scrub his legs with betadine and a
clean cloth, rinse thouroughly, and dry with a towell.
Tiny patches come off with hair. It goes away
after treatment, but comes back again often.
Lynne
|
907.19 | My mare too... | MERLAN::KJROY | | Mon Dec 03 1990 12:07 | 12 |
| My mare got scratches last summer too. She had been going out in
a pasture that had a swampy area in it. I had to do the betadine
scrub and a topical ointment with cortisone in it ( I can't remember
the name of it) and I had to give her bute she was so sore.
My farrier told me his horses get it and he uses Desitin. He claims
it works great.
I put her in another turn out area and I haven't had a problem since.
She was the only one out of 30 some odd horses who has gotten it.
Karen
|
907.20 | | SSVAX::DALEY | | Mon Dec 03 1990 15:46 | 8 |
| My Arabian got it for the second time this year and this is the
only year he had it- he's 16 years old. I just wash it and put Novasone
w/cortisone on it, and put him in a drier pasture. My farrier also
mentioned that he thinks Desitin is the best remedy (maybe I use the
same farrier as note .11 or .12 - Don Jaroz??)
Pat
|
907.21 | another vote for desitin | BSS::OBOX::SACHS | | Tue Dec 04 1990 11:48 | 24 |
| when i had my old quarterhorse, Rail, my vet used to call me the
'queen of scratches'. Rail would get it really bad each spring and it
continued even after i moved him away from the boggy pasture. A damp stall
seemed to be enough to bring it back.
I, too, used the betadine scrub with a Novason/Fulvason chaser. However,
it still didnt seem to diminish the scabs. Rail wasnt exactly pleasant
to deal with when fooling with them either. The vet suggested, that
after the initial 5 days of treatment with just Novason, alternate each
day with Novason and Desitin. Eventually, I went with just Desitin and
it cleared up completly.
Also, I remember a lady at the barn with the boggy pasture that had the
same problem. She swore by a home remedy that was a packed mixture
of sugar and betadine. She'd mix it so that it made a sticky, doughy
glop and paste it to the scabs. My vet screamed in disbelief when
he heard this, but Mamie swore by it. I did note that both Kahn and
Rojo were free of the pesky problem long before Rail was........I just
never had the guts to try it.
Also, has anyone that's ever had this been totally free of it re-occuring?
I was never able to totally get rid of it.
Jan
|
907.22 | Sugar and Betadine is useful for thrush | MRMARS::ALESSANDRINI | | Tue Dec 04 1990 13:25 | 21 |
| I am surprised at that vet. Sugar and betadine mixture is probably the
only thing to use on really bad cases of thrush compounded with
contracted heels. My vet, Lori Tempouski has a horse on this treatment
at our barn. Every day this mixture is packed into his frogs with
cotton balls. The sugar is a drawing agent. I can see where this
would apply to healing the scratches. I have used the Novason for a
while to as well, but I will say that it is not as effective as the
Equitain shampoo washings alturnated with the ointment that Ellen
Singer (a previous Mass Equine vet) gave me to use. I have also used
this stuff from Bear-Cat called Heel-it. It is a clay mixture with
medication in it. This works well to.
When I am late in the mornings, and it is squishy outside, I have in
desperation applied thick globs of bag balm onto his heels to keep the
moisture off of his skin. This also softens the scabs, although it
makes a gooey mess.
I think I will try the sugar and betadine. Now why didn't I think of
that before 8-| Hmmmmmm.
stephanie
|
907.23 | | DELNI::KEIRAN | | Tue Dec 04 1990 14:27 | 3 |
| If you can get a hold of straight formaldahide, it works great
on thrush, usually takes only a couple of applications to get
rid of a bad case!
|
907.24 | Keep those pasterns DRY | SMAUG::MORENZ | | Wed Dec 12 1990 16:47 | 33 |
| I have a Thoroughbred with four white stockings.
We have had years with scratches and without.
I have found that the winters that I allow his feathers
grow, he has no problems.
Scratches are agravated by moisture. Especially in real cold
weather. Part of the problem is chapping. It's like the sores
that you develop when your lips get severely chapped.
If you are going to wash the legs nightly, use a blow dryer
or SOMETHING to make sure that the legs are dry, right down
to the skin. Just toweling will not do it.
The cure for my horses scratches was mentioned in an
earlier reply, and recommended by my vet. Zinc oxide
(the ingredient found in DESITIN ointment) will
protect the area from moisture, wind, etc.., DRY OUT
the scratches (which is your key), and it is fairly
difficult to rub off, so it lasts for several days.
I would avoid wetting the legs as much as possible
because though you are keeping the area clean, which
is great, you may be inadvertently leaving moisture
behind that will make it worse.
It took me about a week to clear up the scratches
with just the application of the zinc-oxide (no washing!).
One more thing, my horse got scratches in an immaculate
barn, so I don't know about the manure factor.
Good Luck
|
907.25 | Better results w/Betadine and Sugar | MRMARS::ALESSANDRINI | | Fri Dec 14 1990 09:32 | 11 |
| To update, I have used the Betadine and sugar solution. The result
after one application was dramatic. The scabby, open sores are gone,
and clean pink skin has grown. I only used one application of this
solution last Sunday. Since that time I did not touch his feet. Today
I applied Desitin ointment to protect the skin and keep the problem
from reoccuring. It is also important to note that we have been
blessed with unusually dry ground for the paddock he is in, so his feet
have been dry.
stephanie
|
907.26 | do tell | XCUSME::CSILVA | I finally got a PONY of my OWNY | Tue Dec 18 1990 12:27 | 4 |
| What is the ratio of Betadine & sugar? This is an interesting
combination ... where did you learn of it? Great that it works!
Thanks!
|
907.27 | | GIGI::ALESSANDRINI | | Tue Dec 18 1990 14:29 | 28 |
| I used a small amount of sugar, roughly 3 tablespoons (or one small
sized lump). I poured Povadine/Betadine solution on this, enough to
make the sugar suspended in liquid form - ie. the consistancy of
granulated sugar liquid.
I don't think that there is any wrong way to make this. Neither
substance used externally is going to harm the horse. The resulting
solution I simply blopped on to his pasterns with a wad of sterile
cotton. He did sniff his feet, but left them alone. I'm sure it would
taste awful. (this is the same horse that will drink the Vitrolin water
if your not looking...how good can that taste?)
Reducine might work just as well. Desitin definately has helped this
stuff from reoccuring.
The Betadine/Sugar solution is not new. Lori Tempowski the vet I use
from Tufts uses it. Plenty of "old" horsepeople have used it for a
variety of things.
By the by, a seasoned horse friend told me that the ergots on the
pasterns readily act like rainspouts. Wicking away water that would
otherwise puddle on the pasterns. Leaving them alone will help protect
against water from creating scratches.
regards,
stephanie
|
907.28 | Hes got it as well!!! | PEKING::GILLOTTW | | Thu Dec 20 1990 09:09 | 26 |
| I have been reading this conference on "Scratches" or as we know it
as "Mud Feaver" here in the UK for a couple of weeks and it has been
interesting to learn about other peoples experiences with this
unpleasant thing.
Last night I went to put my horse away for the night and to my horror I
noticed a bit of scabbing on one of his heals! (He has NEVER had this
before in the 5 years I have had him) I thaught how on earth
could he have got this? He is a dark dappled grey with black skin, and
I make sure that his legs are clean and dry before putting his stable
bandages on. I inspected it even further, even though it was dark and
it seemed rather sore, and was bleeding a little, so I went to my vets
and he gave me a bottle of Betadine and he told me that this should do
the trick. So tonight I am going to apply this as per his instructions
and hope that this does not repeat.
The interesting thing is the other 2 horses in my yard who I also look
after have not got Mud Feaver or Scratches, and the only thing I can
think of, is my horse over-reached slightly last week whilst playing in
the field and he could have contracted this through the slight wound he
inflected on himself.
If this is the case then how can I stop this from re-accoring?
Wendy
|
907.29 | Another Mud-fever case | CMOTEC::HARWOODJ | Judy Harwood RDL 899-5879 | Fri Dec 21 1990 11:31 | 16 |
| For the first two winters that I had my mare, she suffered badly
from Mud fever. We resorted to treating the affected area with
Demobion (a product available from the vet) until the scabs were
gone. Once in this state her legs were thoroughly cleaned and dried.
A generous layer quantity of liquid paraffin was rubbed into her legs.
Every morning a thick layer of Zinc & Castor Oil ointment was smeared
on and the worst carefully scraped off at night.
We cleaned and re-applied the paraffin once a week and this way managed
to keep the Mud-fever away.
Fortunately for us, these are things of the past. I refered her to
a Hoemeopathic vet, who prescribed various pillets that she has to
take during the grass growing season. Since taking these, shes had
no more attacks (touch wood).
|
907.30 | What can I do to prevent another outbreak? | DUCK::GILLOTTW | | Wed Aug 14 1991 04:35 | 17 |
| Well its the summer now and has anyone heard of their horse getting
mud feaver/scratches in the summer? Well my horse has got it, and his
back leg swelled up. I think it is caused by going through some mud
when we are out hacking and that gets behing his boots and starts to
rub. This is the first year it has happend, but i have recently moved
him to a place that has got about 250 acres of private woodland to
ride in and I think he is not used to going through the mud as where
I kept him before I had to do mostly road work. Has anyone got any
suggestions as to how I can possibly avoid this re-occurance of mud
feave? I know the most obvious one and thats not to ride through the
mud. I had thaught about riding him without his boots on but because
he is such a big horse he is prone to knock his legs when he is having
one of his spooks!.
Thanks in advance,
Wendy
|
907.31 | | FORTY2::QUICK | Bliss is ignorance | Thu Aug 15 1991 07:01 | 13 |
|
Well Skipper's got it too, the vet says "there's a lot of it about"
due to the hot wet summer. Any horse that's turned out could get it,
I don't think there's any way of preventing it if your horse is
susceptible to that sort of thing. Skipper's now had a course of
antibiotics and is having Demobium (sp?) on the infected areas twice
a day, and it seems to be clearing up now, but his legs were puffy
and very sensitive a week or so ago. I'm not sure if the vet was
pulling my leg, but apparently white legs are more likely to get it
than darker ones, and sure enough Skipper has it on two of his three
white socks...
Jonathan.
|
907.32 | | DELNI::KEIRAN | | Thu Aug 15 1991 08:35 | 5 |
| Horses with white feet are more apt to get scratches, along with
a few other things. I have used zinc oxide for scratches and that
has worked well, but the best treatment seems to be keeping the area
dry and clean. Using a betadine soap and then making sure the area
is towel dried works well.
|
907.33 | | FORTY2::QUICK | Bliss is ignorance | Thu Aug 15 1991 09:30 | 5 |
|
Is there a known reason for white feet being more prone to
this sort of thing? Something to do with pigmentation maybe?
Jonathan.
|
907.34 | | DELNI::KEIRAN | | Thu Aug 15 1991 11:21 | 4 |
| I believe that is what it is, pigmentation. Also, horses with say
one white foot on front will tend to go lame in that one instead
of the other because white hoofs are softer. My mare came down with
gravel and absesses always in her white foot.
|
907.35 | Not true..... | BOOVX2::MANDILE | But ma, it followed me home,honest! | Thu Aug 15 1991 15:06 | 10 |
| There is no proof that white hooves are softer, harder to
keep shod, etc. etc. It's an old wives tale....
One white foot, buy em,
two white feet, try em,
three white feet, be on the sly,
four white feet, pass em by.
L
|
907.36 | True Grit recollections | GRANMA::JWOOD | | Thu Aug 15 1991 15:53 | 12 |
| John Wayne said, "... three white feet, shy'em
four white feet, 'hang their hide from a fence post'
=================================
or some other inglorious last line in "True Grit"
referring to Little Blackie. Little Blackie ultimately was the one to
showed true grit by giving up her life to save Baby Sister. So....
nobody's perfect... ;)
Back to real life, we have a Little Blackie named Sheeba with one white
front hoof. She has recently recovered from a stone bruise in her
white hoof. Anybody else care to comment about wive's tales? :}
|
907.37 | Ask your blacksmith? | TFOR2::GOODNOW | | Thu Aug 15 1991 15:55 | 8 |
|
RE: .29:
You're probably right, but I've had a couple of different blacksmiths
who agreed with the white-feet-aren't-as-strong theory....
who knows
Amy
|
907.38 | | CSLALL::LCOBURN | Lead me not to temptation, I can find it myself | Thu Aug 15 1991 16:23 | 4 |
| My mare has one white (well, actually it's striped) hoof, and sure
enough it's always the first one to throw a shoe......kinda makes
ya wonder about those old wives', huh?
|
907.39 | One white stocking ... | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Thu Aug 15 1991 16:34 | 22 |
| re .29, .30
I guess there's lots of variations of this little verse. I've heard
One white stocking buy him,
Two white stockings try him,
Three white stockings give him to your wife,
Four white stockings ride him for your life.
and also
One white stocking buy him,
Two white stockings try him,
Four white stockings and a white nose,
Take off his hide and feed him to the crows.
By the way I have a mare with no white feet, and she gets stone bruises
all the time. And a gelding with no white feet who gets gravel in his
right front EVERY summer. Go figure.
-ellie
|
907.40 | | FORTY2::QUICK | Bliss is ignorance | Thu Aug 15 1991 17:34 | 7 |
|
Well like I said my vet told me white sock'ed legs are more
prone to damage... mind you I was a bit taken aback by the
way he was hopping in and out of a chalk circle holding a
birch twig and a newt's tail and chanting latin at the time...
Jonathan.
|
907.41 | now that's funny!!! | GRANMA::JWOOD | | Thu Aug 15 1991 17:46 | 2 |
| thanks to .34 I'll be driving home with a grin on my face... :)
|
907.42 | Thanks... | CRISPY::GILLOTTW | | Fri Aug 16 1991 05:20 | 12 |
| Thanks for all the replies, some of which I thaught very funny!
William my horse is a dappled grey and has not go compleatly white
legs, the hair on them is black or darl grey. I will have to take
a trip to my vets to get some demobion, which from what I have heard is
supposed to be very good.
When Williams legs were swollen I used an animalintex poultice and that
seemd to take the swelling down a little, but he seems to be ok now.
Touch wood and fingers crossed!!
Wendy
|
907.43 | And shoes come off of the fronts, too! | BOOVX1::MANDILE | But ma, it followed me home,honest! | Fri Aug 16 1991 09:31 | 8 |
| Re .34
That was good! Ha ha ha...
My gelding has two white hinds, and two black front
hooves.....he stone bruised the right front a few weeks ago.
HRH
|
907.44 | personally i like two or 4 stockings | ABACUS::MATTHEWS | SALT LAKE Sidney | Fri Aug 16 1991 10:19 | 16 |
|
ok, just for the record, my old palomino mare had three stockings
(all the way up to the hock and knees)
White feet might be a little softer , I think it depends on the
type of soil the horse is on... new england rocks just tore my mares
feet part (including the dark hoof)
the stone bruise she once got was on the dark hoof.. and the arthritis
also set into the dark legged knee :*)
wendy o'
|
907.45 | | DELNI::KEIRAN | | Thu Jun 24 1993 14:24 | 6 |
| I was wondering if anyone has a source for any of the anti fungal
products listed in this note. I have tried a few of the vet supply
800 numbers looking for Fulvasin or Equitain shampoo and none of them
have heard of either product. Any help would be greatly appreciated!
Linda
|
907.46 | | MIMS::SACHS_J | For you are the magnet and I am steel | Wed Jul 07 1993 16:51 | 10 |
| Hi Linda,
I've used the Fulvasin before and I got it from my vet. As I recall, it
had a Farnum label on it. Maybe someone in the Springs could call
Dr. Wallace and find out where they get it and let us know in the
notes file............
Did the sugar and betadine do any good?
Jan
|
907.47 | | DELNI::KEIRAN | | Thu Jul 08 1993 15:16 | 13 |
| Hi Jan,
I used the sugar and betadine twice, 12 hours on and 12 off, after
that I started using Desatin. Thing seemed fine, then she popped
a quarter crack, it's always something! The blacksmith patched it,
and I've only been jogging her lightly 1 or 2 miles a day to let that
heal. So far so good on the heels, but that could be because her
work has been reduced. I ended up getting Equitain shampoo from the
manufacturer and have been using that in her heels when I give her a
bath and putting desatin on when I put her away at night. Hopefully
this is a cure!
Linda
|