Monday, 30 June 2025

Field Trip

My knee has been slowly getting better. It still isn't so much the knee that is the problem but the calf muscle. It's been very achy from below my knee to my ankle, with the aches changing through the day. I am, of course, probably putting too many miles on it, but I promise I am trying to take it easy whenever I can.

Cows showed up the day before the horses were moved into the new pasture. I made sure Stitch remembered that he had previously lived with cows and knew that they weren't going to eat him so that he behaved when someone else led him past them to the pasture.

I am hoping to be back in the saddle during my next week off in mid-July, even if it's just for a few minutes at a walk for the first bit. I'm not too worried about getting on - it will be the getting off that's tricky. I'm not very good at lining myself up with the mounting block when getting off, and always seem to only get part of my foot on the step and end up stumbling to the ground.

Moo cows.

Stitch has been enjoying his time off. His group moved to a summer pasture with grass to graze. It's a further trek out from the barn, which has kinda sucked with an achy leg at the end of the day, but I've been lucky so far in that I've only once had to traipse across the field to catch him. Every other time the horses have been up by the gate when I arrived.

He's back to walking up to me - I may have been showing up with treats for the last few weeks. He is now sporting the circus tent fly sheet, partly because of bugs in the grass, but mostly so that I can spot him easier in the group of bay horses.  

We haven't really done much of value (except getting used to the wash rack - he got his tail washed for the first time today). But we did get away for our first field trip - a visit to the vet clinic for teeth floating.

What's going on?

Stitch loaded up pretty nicely - he stalled at the end of the ramp and I had to pick up the whip, but it just took a couple of taps and he was on. It was about an hours drive to the clinic. When we arrived he was worried and a little bit sweaty, but stood quietly while I sat in the doorway waiting for our turn. The clinic prefers that the horses stay loaded until they are ready for them. 

He unloaded very nicely, led into the clinic with his eyes bugging, and was good to sedate and put into the stock. He is way more of a lightweight than Phantom ever was, so it only took the initial dose of sedative, and a few minutes later he was done! No need to walk the sedation off in the parking lot for an hour before trailering home! Amazing! (I also got to watch a bit of surgery on a horse that looked like it was getting something done on its fetlock. Sadly, Stitch was too well behaved and I didn't get to see much more than the first few cuts and a lot of blood before he was ready to go outside.)

Eyes not quite all the way open.

So sleepy.

Stitch loaded up even better for the trip home (the drugs might have helped). We arrived home and unloaded and he was very happy to realize that he was going back out to the pasture with his friends. I suspect that the last few times he's been trailered were times that he moved to new homes, so it was good for him to leave and come home on the same day.

He had a few sharp points so he should be looked at again in another 6 months. No other concerns were noted - his adult teeth in the back have all erupted, his lower canines are just below the surface, and he still has his little baby teefs in the front - all normal for his age. The vet said that at his age his teeth are changing so much that needing to be done every 6 months is pretty common. 

I was super happy with him, he was very easy to handle away from home. I wasn't anticipating problems based on how he stepped off the trailer when I got him and when we moved earlier this year, but you never know how it will go as they get bigger and stronger. 

 

No comments:

Post a Comment