Have you seen this photo advert for a pool cover? |
Or perhaps this one? |
They are very impressive advertisements for the mesh type of
pool cover and look indestructible, don’t they?
So when my horse showed an interest in it and raised a front
hoof to walk on it, I wasn’t too concerned.
He’ll be a bit
surprised, I thought, and he won’t
like the feel of the cover sagging underneath him, but at least he’ll be able
to get off it without going through the material into the water.
Boy, was I wrong!
The Irony
During 2015 I had worked very hard with Cruz to get him to trust
me when I asked him to walk on ‘strange’ surfaces.
Following his adventurous pasture buddy, Gabe, the 18 hand
Clydesdale/Thoroughbred cross who belongs to my friend, Christina Dale, he had
become very brave.
By the end of the year he was walking fearlessly across
bridges, through streams and into water with the waves lapping around him. He
finally believed he wouldn’t die if he trod on pallets with rubber on them for
the trail class at our OPRC rally.
I was so proud of him!
But I paid for all that hard work on Tuesday, 16th
December last year, when a gate blew open and the three horses wandered into
the back yard.
Setting the Scene
Dusk was descending when I happened to look out of the back
window and see equine forms drifting past the bushes around the pool. I did a
double take: they weren’t supposed to be there!
The dogs were
outside and had given me no indication that anything was amiss.
But sure enough, Cruz, Gabe and CD were happily grazing on the
much nicer grass of our four acre lawn. Mercifully, the dogs came when called
and I walked outside.
The horses were close to the pool at that point, which has
happened before without mishap. Normally they
give it a wide berth.
Cruz raised his head as I came out of the back door and I
said “Hi, there. What are you doing, buddy?”
He took a few steps forward onto the brick area by the pool, and for some bizarre reason, was fascinated by the cover. He stretched out his neck to smell the edge, then inched forwards.
Amazed at his boldness, I decided he was close enough and
should back away.
“No, Cruz!” I shouted.
Elephants and Cars
But I could only watch helplessly as he strode confidently
onto the pool cover.
Of all the times for him to show such bravery!
At first I wasn’t too concerned, for the reasons I stated above.
If this cover could hold a baby elephant or a large car, surely it could hold a
horse? The worst that could happen was that Cruz would be frightened and would
never again walk onto a pool cover.
Not so. His front hooves went straight through the mesh and
the rest of him followed.
He immediately started thrashing about, and turned around to
get out.
This is the photo of the hole I posted on Facebook the next morning!! |
To Exit Or Not to Exit?
People often ask me how I pulled him out.
Here are my answers:
1) It never occurred to me that my athletic horse couldn’t get himself out.
and
2) Anyway, how could I get a horse out of a pool with his legs
flailing in all directions?
He got his front hooves onto the pavement and
almost heaved himself out.
Then sparks flew off his metal shoes as they scraped on
the cement and he came crashing down on his knees and slid back into the water.
Now I started to panic. Supposing he couldn’t get out by himself? What then?
But he gave a huge lunge and sprang out of the water before
I had to put a plan together to assist him.
A Blasé Fellow
This is where the change in his feed and our work during the year had some
benefit.
Cruz shook the water off his body then put his head down to graze as
though nothing had happened!
By now it was dark, so I couldn’t see how badly hurt he was.
In the light from the house he looked sound in walk, but that was no guarantee
of anything. I wanted to check him for injuries.
He was very easy to catch (what a star!) although it took
some clever thinking to get the other two to abandon their new-found lush
grass.
The left knee had a much deeper gash than the left one |
There was some concern about serious stifle injury |
Battle Scars
His front knees were pretty scuffed up, and he
had a small gash on his left stifle, as well as a long cannon bone graze on the
left hind and a few fetlock grazes.
I cleaned the wounds with iodine in warm water and spread
triple ant-biotic ointment on them. I also gave him 15 SMZs and prayed he’d be
sound in the morning.
On Wednesday I gave him 15 more SMZs. I washed the wounds
again and reapplied the triple antibiotic cream. Nothing had swollen overnight, which was a good sign.
The question then became: should I, or should I not, call
the vet?
The injuries seemed superficial, with the possible exception
of the one on his left knee. Better to be safe than sorry, I thought, and rang
for a veterinarian’s opinion.
The Prognosis
The main vet was busy, so a new lady came who was possibly not long out of vet school. She was very nice, but unfortunately began with the worst
case scenario.
Being: broken left stifle bone and knees that would remain
swollen and become arthritic.
On top of that, Cruz was to go on stable rest.
I explained that Cruz – in the immortal words of this vet's boss –
‘is not a candidate for stable rest.’
He appeared a little stiff in trot, unwilling to
completely bend that left stifle joint. But that was to be expected, since it
had taken a bit of a bruising.
I then asked for the best possible scenario?
This was: a bit of bruising round the stifle joint and no riding to let the wounds heal. I assured her that I had no intention of
riding him until he was fully recovered!
So she shaved around the wounds and cleaned them off, before
applying generous dollops of antiseptic cream.
I was to do this every day for five days, and give him 13
SMZs twice a day, as well as 2 bute for five days, and one daily for the next
five days. She would check him in a week.
What I Actually Did
I explained that I would hope for the best and not change his daily routine. He would continue to wander in and out of
his stall at will with the others.
The vet was fine with this when I explained that Cruz would
go ballistic inside his stall and do more damage to himself than good. I am a
great believer in allowing a horse to maintain his habits, if at all possible, to
prevent inhibiting his recovery through becoming stressed.
If in seven days he appeared lame, I would reconsider his
treatment.
The thought of his being on bute for 10 days bothered me a
lot, so I consulted another vet. He said that I should give my horse UlcerGuard
or the equivalent if I really wanted him on bute for that length of time.
But 5 days would be better.
So I gave him 2 bute for two days, and 1 a day for the next
three days.
I cleaned is wounds daily and plastered on the goop until
Saturday, when I had to drive down to Florida. Gabe’s owner, Christina, then
had to take over.
She did a wonderful job, and switched to Equaide a fantastic cream that prevents proud flesh (another concern I had) and
brought down the swelling around the wounds – a big worry especially for that left knee.
She sent me photo updates to reassure me that he was healing
well.
Last Call
A week later two other friends, Kelli and Joan, were kind
enough to be there for the vet when she finally arrived at 6:30 p.m. in the
pouring rain. Joan had to trot Cruz up and down my barn aisle with most of the
lights not working!
Cruz was pronounced sound.
The winter weather is hampering my efforts, but I am now
working him again in walk. He is trotting and cantering just fine in his field.
In Conclusion...
When something like this happens to your horse, you think: This will make a good story if, and only if,
it has a happy ending.
Thankfully, it has.
And now I’ve tied rope around the gates which lead into the
pool area for added security. Not that I expect Cruz to wander over the pool
cover again. Actually, it’s currently being repaired and the pool has turned
into one huge ice block.
But I don’t want him walking on that, either!
|