tagalong
Well-Known Member
Sooooo - she IS a vet.She just finished vet school and is doing an internship currently.
And is she going to be doing large animal practice out in the field? Methinks she will be seeing sick and needy horses every day then - surely all of them cannot be inbred misfits!
She does realize that 95% of all Thoroughbreds go back to one horse, right?
But on a serious note - in over 20 years of working on farms and caring for horses both big and small... the only thing minis have had more severe issues with than the big horses is foaling. When something goes wrong there is less room to fix it - and thus less chance of a happy outcome. And even then - big horses have issues foaling as well.
The usual basic vet stuff has been the same for all the horses I have worked for - the odd colic. Dental. Check-ups. Vaccinations.
The you have the injuries - big and small - that you cannot predict or always prevent. No matter what size or breed of horse is involved.
Let's see... I have worked with Thorougbreds, Warmbloods, Standardbreds, Arabians, QHs... and minis. And over the past 20 years...
Recently we had a lovely mini colt get kicked in the head (maybe even by his mom) in the pasture - the end result of which was that he lost an eye. Did that happen because he was a mini? Nope.
Another mini mare dislocated her hip overnight - in her stall. She did not get cast or anything - no shavings were on her - and yet somehow it happened. She was just standing there calmly in the morning - on three legs. It was not because she was a mini - just one of those horses who could find a way to hurt themsleves if you put them in a padded velvet room.
Years before that.... a Warmblood yearling did the exact same thing - only he was in his turnout paddock.
The Standardbred stallion who died of a massive heart attack.
The Trakehner stallion - one of the great horse loves of my life - whose front feet were slowly coming apart due to poor management /being nerved for non-existant navicular issues when he was younger. Long story. Far too long for here. Treating him and watching my dear friend struggle - and fail - was one of the worst horse experiences I have ever faced.
That ^^^ farm had over 120 horses.... so there was bound to be something going awry with that many horses in the mix. And none of them were minis.
A pinto Saddlebred/Arab yearling fell down a hillside when he was goofing around and carved up his back legs. He was fine after months of treatment. And only had two tiny scars!
Then there was the grey Arabian mare who shattered her femur just trotting in her level, grassy paddock.
Not long after that ^^^ heartbreaking episode, Maria, a black Arabian mare, developed cancer in her jaw. She was operated on and needed months of treatment. She was happy and content for the next two years - and then one morning I knew It was Back.
Some dystocias - including one Arabian mare whose foal was on his back and coming front feet first with his head back - that was a tight fit and a bit scary... the vet was over an hour away and as usual- I was by myself - but I got him turned and out of there. Would I have been able to free a mini baby stuck as firmly as that colt was? Without damage to the mare? Maybe - maybe not.
Let's look at the genetic issues in QHs as another example... everyone loved Impressive - and crossed back to him many times. Only now all his descendants are at risk for HYPP... and need to be tested for it. Two of our boarders have HYPP positive horses... and if you have never seen an HYPP attack (that is how we found out that the one mare was a Positive - she had not been tested) - you cannot imagine the terror in a horse's eyes as they lose all control of their bodies...
Then there is HERDA. HERDA traces back through cutting horse lines - specifically to Poco Bueno. HERDA horses have fragile skin - the layers tear apart and rupture easily and peel away... like peeling an orange. A saddle can trigger the first episode. Rubbing up against a post. Rolling. Anything.
Genetic issues exist in many breeds - not just minis.
IMO no vet should be going into practice with a closed mind and a potential chip on their shoulder that may affect how they view a patient. Hey - if minis are all that sickly then she should be able to make some money treating them...
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