T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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703.1 | POSSIBLY??? | MILVAX::NICKERSON | | Tue Sep 06 1988 17:09 | 15 |
| We have such a critter and we keep a small, jowl sweat on him at
all times and that has stopped his cribbing/windsucking. He really
does both without it.
As far as the others go I can't really say if they picked it up
from him (we have one other). Now that I come to think of it she
only does it in the pasture on one board and she did it before she
came to us as she wasn't allowed outside for the first three year
of her life and out of bordum she started to chew. She chews but
doesn't windsuck.
Have you noticed your other horse doing it as well?
GOOD LUCK
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703.2 | I don't think it's catching | NOETIC::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Tue Sep 06 1988 19:18 | 8 |
|
My mare was stabled for 6 months next to an atrocious cribber. I
was worried she'd pick it up but she never did. She did hurt the
wall however as she would kick it whenever he leaned over and
started cribbing on the wall between them. She disliked it as
much as I did. He had a cribing collor and while it didn't stop
him totally it really slowed him down. liesl
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703.3 | Don't think so | ATLAST::KELLY | Esse quam videri | Wed Sep 07 1988 09:30 | 5 |
| I've got two horses that have been constant companions for two years.
One is terrible about cribbing. The other has never shown an interest.
I don't think your horse will pick it up.
/ed
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703.6 | | MEIS::SCRAGGS | | Wed Sep 07 1988 10:13 | 22 |
|
It seems I"ve had a barn full of cribbers forever. The gelding that
I have now is a cribber and a windsucker. With the collar on, he's
fine. He won't touch anything. The minute you take it off he goes
straight to a fence to crib or a bucket to windsuck off of. He
just moved to a farm in Boxboro where he's in quite a bit of the
day, they took the collar off the second day and he hasn't worn
it since. He hasn't cribbed or windsucked at all. My old gelding
did teach my colt how to crib, but I think mostly that was out of
boredom. He soon stopped.
Tufts vet school is doing a study of chronic cribbers now. During
the early part of the summer they came out and tried to study my
gelding. As soon as he realized he was being watched he stopped.
They were there for four days, he didn't do anything the whole time,
the minute they left he went at it like a madman. The school is
experimenting with a non addictive drug that will help cure a
windsucker. Where cribbing is mainly a bad habit, windsucking releases
a chemical into the horses system, where they actually become addicted.
Marianne
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703.7 | More cribbers | DELNI::L_MCCORMACK | | Wed Sep 07 1988 14:15 | 13 |
|
My gelding has always cribbed but never windsucked. The two
3 years olds learned it from him. My stallion and pony, stabled
in another spot, never picked it up. I tend to think the young
ones learned it from my gelding. The three of them chew anything
in sight which means almost every tree in the pasture. Creosote
helped for a while but now it doesn't seem to help at all.
Perhaps an older horse might not pick it up but a younger one
could assume this is normal horse behavior. Kind of like cigarette
smoking....
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703.9 | To crib or not to crib...that is the ? | MARKER::REED | | Tue Sep 13 1988 15:10 | 29 |
| I too, have been lucky. In the nine years that I've owned Cheyenne,
we've been at three barns that had cribbers/windsuckers and he's
never showed any interest in picking up the habit. I do know that
when he was at one place where all he had was a 3 sided walk-in
shed, and a medium sized corral, he did chew on tree bark. But
I think that was more due to lack of something in his diet becuase
it only happened in the winter.
We use to deter the horses from doing this two ways. 1) We used
to use red pepper/creosote on the damaged areas and 2) we used to
scatter about 1-2 qts. of grain on the ground at night for the ones
in paddocks with walk-ins. They spent most of the night hunting
for the grain and not fighting, or cribbing. We had pretty good
luck. (I tend to think that cribbing starts out of boredom then
becomes habit.)
I have a copy of Horse & Rider Magazine's "Horse Women #10" (I think
it is from summer of '87) and it has an article called "The Cribbing
'Junkie'" by Brenda A. Fisher with Dr. A. Simon Turner, BVSc, MS.
The article goes into some of the why's and cures including the
"modified Forssell's procedure" which includes surgically cutting
the throatlatch nerves and muscles.
If anyone would like a xerox copy, please send me E-mail on INK::REED
and I'll send it through interoffice mail.
Roslyn
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703.10 | | CSMADM::NICKERSON | Bob Nickerson DTN 282-1663 :^) | Thu Sep 15 1988 13:47 | 15 |
| I would be very careful about spreading grain out on the ground
for horses to pick through. Although it is not frequent, horses
do sometimes swallow small stones and other hard debris. In most
of those cases, it will quickly pass through their digestive system.
Sometimes however, it stays lodged in the intestine. The horses
body detects the intruder and begins to make it benign by buiding
a calcification around it. This process continues until there is
finally an obstruction and subsequent colic. If anyone has the
opportunity or disadvantage to have to visit the Rochester Vet Clinic,
look at the far wall from the office entrance and you will see a
showcase of some of the calcified objects removed during colic surgery.
An ounce of prevention...
Bob
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703.11 | | PBA::KEIRAN | | Thu Sep 15 1988 13:47 | 10 |
| Another problem with horses eating grain off the ground is
sand colic. The sand will just sit in the bottom of the
stomach, until there is too much, and the horse will colic.
For this reason I try to put hay in a haynet if the horse
is going to be outside where there is gravel and sand. Bob
I've seen those calcified "objects" up at Rochester, its
really amazing to think they came out of some poor horse's
belly!
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703.12 | Dare I Ask... | PBA::SILVA | I finally got a PONY of my OWNY | Thu Sep 15 1988 14:05 | 3 |
| I can't stand the suspense!
What "things" did they find?
Do most of these animals survive? (I Hope).
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703.13 | They're horse pearls! | PBA::NICKERSON | Bob Nickerson DTN 282-1663 :^) | Mon Sep 26 1988 00:09 | 9 |
| The things in the showcase are objects which were swallowed and
calcified over time. Some of them look like rocks the size of a
large grapefruit. It is a process very similar to that of a pearl
in an oyster where a tiny piece of sand turns into a large pearl.
I don't know if all of them were survivers but I'd be willing to
bet that some of them didn't make it.
Bob
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