I am reactivating this thread. One week ago Sat., I took two of my horses to the vets office for coggins. Monday (two days later) one of the colts had a temp of 104.00 a dry unproductive cough and was off his feed. Then the other one I took started coughing the next day. By Wed five of them were effected including one bred mare due to foal who was over 350 feet from the other sickies. They go off their feed, some severe and some not, have temps that banamine brings down and usually keeps down with one dose. The coughing is the worst part, mostly dry and then later some are getting snotty noses without the fever, the ones with the lose coughs have the snotty noses, and no temps. Various combos of symptoms at different times. I am writing it all down. I have seven in one paddock, all but two are starting their coughs. Others in close proximity to the majority of the sickness are showing no signs as yet and have been exposed for over one week.
I believe this to be an airborn disease as it travels too quickly and incubation time seems to be 1-3 + days?
The mare that was bred had a red bag on Sat., morning. We could not save the filly although we were there at the onsought of labor. She was the most effected with the cough and had temp of 103.8 the night before. She was treated with banamine. No ventupulim to be found in any vets office here, only some allergy type meds, Tri Hist.
They do eat, some are picky and they seem to like the sweet feed, alfalfa rather than pellets and coastal. The first colt that got sick seems to be okay now, I hear no cough from him now, he is eating good and prancing around his stall.
How did others of you fair from the Fort Worth sickness that was going around? Do you think this is the same thing? Finally moved to South Texas?
Beth
** meant to say that prior to taking horses to vets for coggins, my horses have been nowhere since well before Thanksgiving. No new ones in either.