You can make all sorts of excuses, but the bottom line is money. Because it isnt worth the expense or the time. Unless of course the horse in question is a multi million pound 'breeder'.
2006-12-21 09:57:32
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answer #1
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answered by pageys 5
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No Foot, No Horse as the saying goes!
That really depends which of the many bones in the foot are affected. I successfully evented a horse with Navicular disease for many years after my farrier re-balanced his feet and put his front shoes on back to front! He died aged 32!
There is a really good book called "No foot, No Horse" - Foot Balance - the key to soundness and performance, which covers a multitude of foot problems. The thing is, a racehorse for instance that damages its foot badly becomes a poor investment unless it has good bloodlines can be bred from. Feet take months to heal and at a cost of approximately £500 a week to keep a horse in a racing yard, its not financially viable if the prognosis is not guaranteed.
2006-12-21 09:36:09
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answer #2
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answered by puffy 6
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Their bones heal just like yours and mine. The issue with horses is that they have sensitive structures within their hoof wall and foot that can cause major issues if their weight bearing or biomechanics is thrown off by injury. Also, without the issue of their feet, they are too large to easily immobilize for proper healing. If they do have a fracture that heals without major complications, they are often lame or un-ridable which makes them "useless" to most people. Barbaro is a well bred racehorse who can have a career as a stud breeding more well bred race horses. If an injured horse is not of that caliber, they are often humanely euthanized as they are seen to serve no purpose to humans anymore. The horses that often suffer such fates are seen as tools or "objects" to their owners, not animals and are often not given the chance to just be a pet. Others are realistic in knowing that their chance of healing comfortably and without major issues is rare. Still others cannot afford the high cost of care that is required to keep a horse healthy while healing after a major fracture.
2006-12-21 16:10:21
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answer #3
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answered by skachicah35 4
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Their bones do heal, but its a long and difficult business and they will probably never race again. That being the case, and the likelihood of them being a gelding (i.e. no good for stud) then in comes the money factor and out goes the horse.
Mares with a good bloodline would potentially be a different case.
2006-12-25 01:49:11
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answer #4
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answered by Billybean 7
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because horses can not lay down for long peroids of time to allow their bones to heal. Any hoof or leg injury is almost always fatal to a horse. Although the Derby winner is doing great and expected to leave the hospital w/i the next few weeks to spend a lifetime breeding.
2006-12-21 09:36:25
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answer #5
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answered by GI 5
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this may be a super question! particular, horses ought to unfold their weight over all 4 legs. because they walk around on hooves vs. ft, this basically complexes the undertaking. whilst one leg is injured (permit's use the left front to illustrate), then the the suitable option front ought to capture up on all the burden interior the front end of the horse. this may be the equivalent of people walking on their tip-ft. Horse's hooves are the equivalent of our fingernails. whilst one front limb (or hind limb) ought to hold all the burden, then you relatively've a huge gamble to have what's noted as laminitis interior the healthful hoof. Laminitis is whilst the hoof wall will become separated from something of the hoof, through upward push in rigidity and weight that the leg is bearing. this may be the equivalent of our fingernail pulling from our finger and having to stroll around on it. This condition is fairly painful and extremely confusing to maintain and manage. Many horses might have laminitis with no need yet another leg injured and it continues to be confusing to triumph over. to date as a sling, through a horse's severe weight, they might't be in a sling for a protracted volume of time through rigidity positioned on inner organs. they might't additionally be made to place on one area for too long through fact they might finally end up doing injury to organs. many circumstances horses will relatively sleep status up - it relatively is amazingly established! they don't seem to be like canines that lay down ever possibility they get! As you will see that, horses are particularly fragile and function very complicated problems! it quite is not lots as a undertaking with their bones no longer therapeutic. they actually heal very rapidly! it quite is greater of a undertaking with the horse frequently. by way of evolution they are made the way they are for survival, yet that has made their anatomy and structures greater complicated, subsequently making it much greater sturdy to handle with human intervention.
2016-10-15 09:47:25
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Horses bones are the same us ours,but when i comes to healing its hard,as with us we can have a cast applied and rest,but with horses they cant really rest for wks or to be put in a cast etc,thats why alot off horses are put down so they dont suffer.
2006-12-22 01:53:41
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answer #7
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answered by Sexy Red 4
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they do but the process is long and drawn out for the horse...it means putting them in a fixed body harnace for weeks they are unable to walk ,its cruel to the horse
2006-12-21 09:35:05
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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their bones heal just like ours. the problem is keeping them inactive in order to let them heal well. it is not in a horses nature.
2006-12-21 09:34:34
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answer #9
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answered by Cheryl E 4
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Being shot tends to get in the way of the healing process...
2006-12-21 09:45:24
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answer #10
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answered by ammie 4
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