#navaho

LIVE

Days 31 and 34. It’s not really bad to look at anymore but I’ll still put it under a cut.

Day 31, exactly one month later. The scab fell away and the skin underneath was looking pretty good!

Day 34. I put some more lavender balm on it and called it a day because it’s doing so well now.

Clinic day!

Warm summer days are here at last ☀️

Giving me the side eye during his appointment with the farrier yesterday.

It went fairly well, with some…news. This was the first farrier appointment I got to be present for since we moved here, because I had classes on Tuesdays when he would come out. But I’m on break now, so I got to be my nosy self while he worked on his feet. Farrier said he’s got pretty good feet, and no thrush or abscesses, his toe crack is steadily going away, etc. He got rasped and cleaned up, as he didn’t grow enough foot for any to be clipped off (again), and got his shoes reset with much less fussing than before. Then I asked how his white lines were looking, referring to the toe crack and his previous propensity for developing them, and he said, “Well, they’re still pretty separated from the laminitis, but it’s getting better.”

Wait, wait. What? Laminitis??

If y’all remember, before we moved he developed some serious issues with foot-soreness and was very uncomfortable and lame for a time, until I finally ignored my barn owner and decided to have the vet and farrier out together to evaluate him. A set of x-rays and a pair of shoes with pads later, Nav was pretty quickly on the mend, and we moved. Apparently…it was a bout of laminitis. My horse was laminitic. Which is why he seemed so “fussy” at his first few appointments that I missed, it explains all the awful bruising in his soles that trimmed out last time, it explains how he got so bad so fast back then. Thankfully, it was a very mild case, especially considering that the x-rays showed no changes or anatomical issues of any sort, and the newer growth is healthy. In fact, he’s the soundest he’s ever been. But six months ago, he was the lamest I’d seen him. And I feel guilty for not knowing better, or preventing it somehow, and for taking so long to find out that that’s what it was.

But I’m also pretty aggravated with my old BO, who told me I should keep riding him like that, or that if I rode him better he wouldn’t look lame because it would disguise it, or that he didn’t really need x-rays or shoes and I was overreacting. When in reality, her barn and shitty turnout led to him becoming laminitic. I’m glad I didn’t listen to her about those things she said. I’m glad he’s doing better now.

Day 25 update on the bum:

It’s scabbed, it’s smaller, and it’s filling in. This has been a much, much longer process than I thought it’d be, but I’m pretty happy with how it’s looking now.

He’s a little tired, but that smokey eye is still on point

First ride outside! He was pretty happy about it.

Finally getting to really test the new saddle fit

Bliss is being nose-deep in dandelions

To celebrate the Healing of the Butt, and also to make some positive changes as we prepare for an upcoming show season, I’ve updated several bridle parts.

First, he got a new bit (old bit above, new bit below). He’s always been in a loose ring and seems comfortable with the flexibility of it, and he’s very content with the copper lozenge style. But the ends can be a little pinchy on the corners of his mouth, so when a fellow boarder recommended this style with corner guards by the rings, it seemed perfect. And he loves it!

I also bought a set of stübben rubber reins from that same boarder, upgrading from my flimsy webbed reins. What. A. Difference. My hands seem to be less obnoxious overall and the feel is so much better!

Finally, just for fun I got a new browband, because the rhinestones are falling out of the old one en masse. It’s a snap-on which is…literally BRILLIANT, and utterly adorable on him. Less is more, with his face. Big blingy gem bands don’t show up very well on all his white.

Here’s everything all put together after I cleaned and readjusted my bridle. Snazzy!

@ whoever reblogged my post to say he has big nostrils…you’re right but you shouldn’t say it

A couple updates from before and after the vet did a recheck.

Day 13, the day before the vet came for the recheck. After the improvement and fresh blood on day 10, I gave it a couple days to fill in and close over, but it didn’t quite do that. On one hand, the drainage and leaking was significantly less, resulting in a much cleaner leg on that hip and pointing to progress in his healing, yet the wound still looked gooey. It didn’t fully close and what was present seemed more yellow-y and bleh again. Underneath the scab looked worse, and I was very disappointed to see that, feeling as though we weren’t much further than where we started. Even though we pretty much lost the entire month of April to this situation, it’s still not over when it shouldn’t have happened at all. So, a bit of a horse-mom panic/frustration-induced down spiral for a day.

Day 14, when the vet came for a recheck. He palpated the hip and didn’t find any remaining swelling, inflammation, pockets of infection, etc. He applied some pressure around the wound, and nothing oozed out aside from a drop of blood or two. He said it was doing better and looking pretty good, then flushed the wound 3-4 times with a fat syringe full of saline solution. Some small bits and yellow liquid rinsed out, but mostly blood, and then it was clean. He mentioned the deeper portion of it has started to heal and close up because he couldn’t get the syringe in very deeply, and the bumpy-looking stuff was proud flesh forming in the middle. Further instruction involves keeping it clean, letting it finish closing, and bringing him back into some work to rebuild the condition/muscle he’s lost. He was even allowed to roll for the first time in several weeks! Which he did, gleefully, followed by a quick hosing to keep the dirt out. All in all, it’s fairly good news. It can just be tricky to remember what overall progress looks like when you’re dealing with something daily for an extended period.

Oh yeah, since it’s been a while:

Day 52!

Six happy butts

Very excited to return to the herd after our lesson

He’s just cute

Some canter.

Bonus: uphill transition much?

Some trots from our lunge outside, because he much prefers outdoor sessions

Fluffy cloud kinda day

Rode bareback because I took all my saddle pads home to power wash them (which is very satisfying)

The laaaziest ride ever

Trying to get that butt back

I got him a pair of fly wraps, and I realized I could get them in a matching pattern to the flymask I got him last summer!

Mowing the lawn, leisurely.

He was fussing about flies so I had to bust out the bonnet

Some more clinic shenanigans

A very steady boy in our clinic lesson

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