T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1740.1 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | depraved soul | Fri May 14 1993 16:24 | 11 |
| Sinces he's on complete feed, you can try soaking it to a "pellet
mash," which will further reduce the grinding. Can he still eat grass?
I would check with a horse dentist or two. Maybe they can do very
small floats frequently (say every month for a year) to bring down the
outsides of his teeth and give the insides a chance to catch up.
Did this happen in one year? It seems strange that it wasn't noticed and
mentioned to you sooner.
mary
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1740.2 | never made aware that it was a problem | SMAUG::MORENZ | JoAnne Morenz IBM I /C Eng. 226-5870 | Tue May 18 1993 18:51 | 10 |
|
No one has ever ppointed it out until now. The fact that he is having such
problems eating his hay now makes me think that it really developed this year.
The vet asked me if he eats dirt. I haven't ever seen him do it, but I am not
home most of the day to watch.
I will try soaking his feed and see if I can find a dentist that will drive out
to East OshKosh Egypt to look at one horse.....(sigh).
Thanks for your suggestion!
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1740.3 | | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Wed Jun 02 1993 09:42 | 8 |
| I was at one of the Tuft's equine lecture series this past winter and
one of the lectures touched upon this type of wear pattern in the
older horses mouth. I don't recall exactly what he said, but he did
show some neat text book pictures. His name, that I can't remember
either, but he is a young French man (late 30's), so possibly a call
to the equine hospital will help out.
M
|