This writing is from September 18th 2014
Gentlemen and Ladies, I have a story to tell. While everything is still fresh, still painful.
This is Sweety's story.
About
two years ago my Husband began to hear from one of the Consultants he
works with that this man had two Throughbred mares. That this man was
growing older, and he and his wife decided to send them to a new home
together. The Older mare was Mama to the younger, and they wanted the
mares to go together.
I wish we had gotten them then. Maybe we could have saved Sweety.
Now
this couple came from old money, racing big time horses on the
racetrack. In doing so they never KNEW horses, they had people for that.
Well they had a star racer, and paid an astronomical amount of stud
free (About three times the stud fee mentioned below), to have their
mare artificially inseminated by an American racer, a household name. Unfortunately for
them, that expensive baby came out a slight cripple, with a twisted leg.
One in which corrective work could only go so far, and they could never
race her. The wife decided she wanted this baby anyways. They left the
racing world, and took this baby, and she became a pasture pet.
When
that little filly turned two years old they thought they might have
another chance. Her leg was twisting, but she could handle one breeding.
They paid $450,000 to artificially inseminate her to another American
racing stud.
The product of that was Sweety. Apparently named by a niece of the couple.
Now
you need a little background for all you non-horsey people. "Farrier"
is a loose term. It's basically applied to anyone who can trim the
hooves of a horse, but SHOULD only be applied to anyone certified who
can also shoe a horse. My Husband is certified and properly taught to do
barefoot and barefoot corrective. Certified. But he does not use the
term farrier as he does not shoe. We needed my Husband's certification
and my Certification in Equine Injury Care for this one.
The
person this couple hired as their "Farrier" after leaving the track knew
nothing. He was neglectful and abusive. They didn't even know enough of
horses to know what to look for.
Oh they had this "Farrier" come
out every eight weeks! Just as those on track do. That's proper of
course, right? Well not if your "Farrier" hasn't done their job to begin
with.
So firstly, Mama. Her leg was twisting more and more.
Anyone certified for barefoot could work with that, help to keep it from
getting worse. It requires special trimming each and every time, and
consistently. This "Farrier" Did not stop her leg from getting worse.
Sweety
didn't have a normal horses life. Her mama being crippled didn't move
much, and thus Sweety didn't move much. But she did become an amazing,
sweet, gentle horse. The kind who would call when she saw you coming,
make her way to the fence to say hello, no matter how much pain she was
in. This Farrier not once in her life did her feet properly. Not Once.
Because of her lack of movement and the owning couples lack of knowledge
they never noticed what was happening to her, what this "Farrier's"
neglect had done to her.
Until finally, two months ago. We got
the call to go and get her. It had come to the point that Mama's leg had
gotten so bad it was arthritic, she was now suffering badly. At the age
of 11 years old Mama needed to be put down, and they couldn't bring
themselves to do it. So they called the vet and my Husband, who assisted
the vet. Then my Husband loaded up Sweety, and brought her home. A
horse who had never left that pasture, never seen another horse beyond
her Mama, never seen the inside of a trailer...
... and Obviously needed serious care.
When
she stepped out of the horse trailer into our pen I was all smiles, for
about five minutes. She was the most beautiful thoroughbred I had ever
seen. She stood tall, a little fat for her breed, a beautiful chocolate
sheen to her. She was nervous, any horse would be, but even nervous she
stood so still, so friendly. Lowering her head to my chest for a 'hug'.
And then we saw her feet.
Her
back feet weren't near as bad, within two treatments they where perfect
again. But her front feet... the hooves where grown out, deformed,
misshaped and misaligned. Turning her feet the wrong way. They where
causing her so much pain that she couldn't hold them beneath her, she
had to hold them out front, and put her weight on the back of her heel
and not the sole.
And then my Husband picked up her front right
foot. The entire sole was blood, puss. Abscesses. Now if you know horses
you know that one abscess is a serious thing, a bugger, but it can be
dealt with. This wasn't one, this was her whole foot, riddled in them,
one on top of another and speckled all around.
That "Farrier"
had never picked up her feet! She held her feet up amazingly well, but
if it had been from actually having her feet done he was not then
neglectful but abusive. Her soles where abscess, grown out far to large,
never cut down and looked as though they had grown out and folded over
on itself! Her laminae (What holds the hoof wall to the sole and is
usually a very thin line between the two) was ground out and visible for
an inch and a half under the hoof! Both feet where like this.
But
the right foot was even worse. The laminitis (A disease when the
laminae is affected, weakening it so it can't hold properly) had already
progressed to such a level she was beginning to founder. (Not flounder
which is food related, founder). This means the bone that goes from her
ankle into her hoof (I'm over simplifying I know) was turning. That can
be a death sentence to a horse. Thankfully that hadn't gotten there yet.
But one abscess had already gotten up to her corronett band (Where the
hoof meets flesh) and blown out in the transport. She was bleeding out
of it pretty bad, so we had to wash, ointment and wrap that foot while
we decided what to do with her.
Now normally, all of this could have been the time to make a call, and say is "Is this battle going to be worth it?"
After
talking with our vet, and the Dean of the Farrier course at the Old's
College (My Husband's go to reference), we decided we where going to
fight for Sweety. That she could make a full recovery. Not only a full
recovery, she could go on to become a solid member of our herd, with no
lasting side effects!
Her first treatment worked miracles alone,
you could see the relief in her when my Husband removed her 'toes',
cutting back the hoof and laminai to the sole, and shaving down the sole
and some of the absceses. Now a normal horse hates an abscess cut out,
they'll jerk their foot away. Not Sweety. Taking out multiple she stood
here, on three other painful feet, and held each foot for him to work
with. The back two only needed two hard treatments, then just normal
maintenance. With a bit of Bute (Pain killer) She was already moving
better.
Two days later we went out again, and she couldn't get up.
Her
front feet where hurting her so badly my Husband spent two hours
working on them so that she got enough relief to put weight on them and
stand up.
But even in her pain and treatments, she'd call to us. Snuggle us. And stole our hearts.
So
the treatments went on regularly, often having to stop not because we
wanted to but because her sole would cut down to a point where it got
soft! Because it had been covered by so much else it hadn't hardened the
way that it should. She got Bute every few days to once a week
depending on how she was doing. (It can cause ulcers so you don't want
to do to much) But through it all, between her pain to move and her
depression at the new home and loss of her Mama she was loosing weight.
Two
weeks ago we saw the light at the end of the tunnel. My Husband cut out
the last of the abscesses! Her feet where properly shaped! She was
standing with them under her straight! She was healing! We where
optimistic and thrilled, telling everyone it was all up hill from here.
My Husband could then start on correcting her right foot to turn the
cannon bone back into proper place.
Four days ago disaster struck Sweety again. Infection.
Her
right leg was swelling up to the knee. Badly. So we started her on Bute
again and Penicillin injections. Except what really scared us was we
saw something start in the hoof wall. At the coronett band, it was
opening. And there was some brown liquid. We refused to see it for what
it was, wanting to keep fighting. We said we'd see what the penicillin
did, and I cleaned the open part. What was happening was the swelling
was pushing the hoof away on the outside, because the cannon bone was
twisted the swelling away from it was shoving against the hoof which had
no flex.
The penicillin did nothing.
Last night we had no
choice, that opening had widened and spread. It had taken over a solid
one third of her hoof now, and opening it you could see the bone. We
even did some double checking if it fully separated what where our odds,
and it couldn't be done. We had to accept that this infection had
destroyed her. She couldn't heal from this. She would always suffer even
if she did manage to close it and walk again after it finished.
And
so, last night we had to put down our dear Sweety. Sometimes on the
ranch it feels matter of fact when something happens, it sucks always
but it doesn't always break our hearts the way Sweety did.
I
hope to hell her story can help another horse. People, please, check
your horses. Know that they are healthy, and well, and uninjured. Run
your hands over them regularly, check their feet, their motion, and even
their pulse! (Two fingers under the jaw you'll find a pretty thick
vein, a beat a second is about normal). And if you don't know enough
about horses, please don't own one. Or leave it with people who do know
and can ensure that what you are doing for it is right. What happened to
Sweety never should have happened at all. It could have easily been
prevented. She didn't have to die.
Sweety, we will always
remember you. The little Heart shaped star on your forehead, the
chocolate color in your coat, and how you'd stick your tongue out when
you where feeling 'lazy'. Your knicker when you saw someone, and your
way of hugging. Good-bye.