I have news to share and I wrote to Diane before posting to make sure it's okay. I don't want to scare any newbies. Sometimes foaling goes well and sometimes nature has other ideas and plans in store. Long story short, baby Flurry is blind.
I'd been worried about Paradigm going so long before foaling and just call it a gut instinct but I knew something was wrong. When I saw Flurry, I was so overjoyed because there she was alive and breathing and beautiful. Later that day, I noticed her eyes were still teary but I went back and looked at photos of my other foals when they were born and I wasn't concerned because newborn foals do have rather wet eyes.
Day 2, I went to turn out Flurry and Mom and I noticed Flurry didn't really move around much but stuck to the same spot. Her eyes were watery as well but I thought perhaps it was because her long eyelashes were bothering her. Needless to say eyes are something you don't mess around with so I called the vet. And I had thoughts her vision might be limited because she was tearing but that was as far as my suspicions went.
The vet examined her and she is totally blind. Basically a congenital condition that probably will never, ever happen again if I were to breed Paradigm. Just a fluke of nature.
The vet says she has a good prognosis and that blind horses can and do live fulfilling lives. She will need a structured environment where she feels secure and knows her way around and I'm going to put bells on Paradigm so Flurry can find her easily. She's having no trouble finding her in the stall to nurse and her weight is healthy and she's thriving in every other way. Because she's been blind since birth this will be her "normal" and hopefully she'll adjust easily to her world.
I'm already reading all I can find on blind horses and I'm going to make sure Flurry has a happy productive life.
This isn't meant to scare any newbies to foaling. I had 4 healthy, happy foals born last year. Sometimes things do happen though and I hope by sharing my experience it will help others.