English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

My pasture is thick grass, and in the summer it has some clover. My horse has a history of laminitis, and has had a small "laminitic episode" withing the last year. He is boarded right now, but if I wanted to, how could I move him to my pasture safely with his laminitis?

2007-01-28 00:36:32 · 7 answers · asked by kristin 1 in Pets Other - Pets

7 answers

Your vet should be a good source of information to start with - never ignore their advice.Having said that, a friend of mine is an equine herbalist, nurse, horse trainer etc.and has cured many problems, including laminitis.
As everyone else has suggested, be very careful on fresh pastures, especially if they're nutrient rich - what sort of grass do you have, how good is the soil?
Then jump on the 'net (or if your vet is open minded - they usually are.... - ask them) and look up all the natural horse care specialists, herbalists, etc.. You'll be amazed how many of them have gained recognition by vets, and how many vets are actually practising the techniques. It's not witchcraft, and could just save you a small fortune or a whole lot of heartache. I have a stud and currently combine all methods - vetinary and complimentary. My horses have never been healthier.
And ever stop learning and asking questions. After ?? years, I only have more and more questions. Horses are great teachers!
:o)

2007-01-29 20:33:32 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Grazing muzzle would help limit how much he eats.

Also, consider corralling off a smaller section of the pasture with portable wire fencing so he'll 'eat down' the grass and it'll be kept down since he'll be in a smaller confined area. You also might consider mowing the grass down in this smaller area before turning your horse out.

Limit t/o on the grass area to an hour a day or so if you can't contain the area or he takes his grazng muzzle off.

Consult your vet on his other diet restrictions; test your horse for insulin resistence, it could be a contributing factor to the laminitis. If he's sound, keep him in regular exercise (minimum 4x a week for 25 minutes each) to reduce his weight and burn any calories.

2007-01-28 03:37:08 · answer #2 · answered by . 7 · 0 0

I save my horse in a 15 acre pasture with a goat, and steer(neutered male 'cow') No complications. i ought to under no circumstances save my horse in a pasture with longhorns regardless of the actuality that. i ought to under no circumstances take that threat. My steer had small horns and they get crammed down each and every time my horse receives his hooves achieved through my farrier. they're acquaintances, they save on with one yet another everywhere. My steer is lacking somewhat of his ear the position my horse bit it off, yet no longer some thing serious. EDIT:: after interpreting my answer, i believe the go with to grant you more desirable preparation. My pasture has a organic water source, and six computerized waterers. It became an previous hay field that I took over from my dad to save my horse and on, so the grass is sweet. I nonetheless ought to feed grain regardless of the actuality that, no count number number how good a grass can seem, it received't provide the foodstuff a horse desires, it is complicated to save my steer & goat kind eating my horse's grain, I even ought to face there and save scaring off the steer and goat, so it is a mild soreness interior the 'booty'. also go with a run in preserve of a few type. I have one and my steer likes to dam the front to it to save my horse out, extraordinarily even as it is raining. farm animals are also complicated on the land, so that you're going to ought to verify and connect any holes, ditches, etc. that your horse can fall in.

2016-10-16 05:19:22 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

In complete moderation. Laminitis is a nasty condition to deal with if it gets out of hand. Only let him out there for an hour at a time and see how he does. You may be able to increase the time, but be careful. Watch out for founder as well!

2007-01-28 00:46:55 · answer #4 · answered by Horsetrainer89 4 · 0 0

It needs to be limited and never on spring grass. The sugar level in the spring grass can rapidly bring on another bout of it. A grazing halter can be helpful allowing you to turn him out and not have to worry about how much he is consuming.

2007-01-28 01:04:42 · answer #5 · answered by Born2Bloom 4 · 0 0

it scares the crap out of me when people ask questions on here that are medical in nature. CALL THE VET!! YOU'RE PLAYING WITH FIRE WHEN YOU ASK THESE KINDS OF QUESTIONS ON LINE!

2007-01-31 14:28:55 · answer #6 · answered by yellow_indya 2 · 0 0

As long as you watch him very very closely.

2007-01-28 02:39:29 · answer #7 · answered by v.k_chick 2 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers