Pferd auf Eisplatte ausgerutscht, Folgen?

Hallo, ich wollte heute mit meinem Pferd eine Runde laufen gehen, wir haben so viel schönen Schnee aber mir war trotzdem auch bewusst, dass ich aufpassen muss, da es auch viele Eisplatten gibt, eine direkt vor unserem Hof, eine sehr große. Das war auch nur die einzigste Eisplatte die wir überqueren mussten, sonst waren alle Wege frei. Ich wollte mit meiner Stute schön an der Seite entlang und nicht direkt drüber, aber sie war schon ganz schön aufgedreht und guckig, weil auf dem Nachbarhof ein Pferd verladen wurde. Sie ist ausgerutscht auf allen 4 Beinen, sie ist zwar wieder von selber hochgekommen und ich hab sie dann auch wieder zurück in ihren Offenstall gebracht, auf dem Weg dahin hat sie nichts gezeigt, dass sie was gebrochen hat oder sonstiges, aber ich mach mir einfach trotzdem große Vorwürfe und hab Angst, dass sie sich doch verletzt hat. Können auch in den nächsten Tagen erst Anzeichen kommen oder denkt ihr wenn sie normal gelaufen ist, ist nichts groß passiert? Ich mach mir einfach grad zu große Sorgen und hoffe, dass nichts großes ist…Wär lieb wenn ihr vielleicht auch schon so Erfahrungen gemacht habt oder Sonstiges und mir evtl. Weiterhelfen könntet, Danke schon Mal im vorraus!!

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Pauliwauly
7 years ago

Veterinary/good chiropractors come and stop looking for experience reports on the Internet 🙂 Such falls can take place in such a way that the more you are looking for experiences on the Internet, you will also find horror stories that do not have to be found on you now. You can’t change it anyway, happened. Instead of letting you be insecure or frightened by stories of similar incidents that are badly out of date, I would naturally observe the horse and, if necessary, let a chiropractor/osteopath come in the short term, let the horse control and then learn from history and be more careful in the future.

Pauliwauly
7 years ago
Reply to  Linxaaa

So practically the internet is, but in such things you should really ignore it. The stories with a positive outcome can make a reckless (“unless nothing happens, I don’t need a person skilled in the art”) and spread the negative only panic when you read what can be possible for consequences.

Better trust the expert and the investigation on site.

Hjalti
7 years ago

You’re sure that you’ve had a big luck that apparently didn’t happen to your horse, you’re sure she’ll watch the next days when she continues to run normal, no joint gets fat, the back is okay, then it’s pretty sure nothing happened.

However, no opinion from the network replaces the TA visit – to go to No safe…

Knowing someone who had just slipped out the horse on the ice plate, it was assumed that nix was worse – the next day a shoulder break turned out. Unfortunately nothing more to do…

GrayWolf
7 years ago

Make sure your horse runs differently than usual and see if joints become thick. Usually, horses do not hurt so fast and so digest a slight fall quite well.

However, if you notice any vulnerabilities, for example, that it can get up badly or paralyze, then you should be a veterinarian.

Anemone95
7 years ago

Let someone look at it, who knows well with horses.

Just because no bone projects out of the leg and it does not paralyze, it is ned that is nix.

See her again a day and call a veterinarian.

Can also call for security. But as you have noticed. You see some things only after a while.

Wish you all the best 🙂

FelixFoxx
7 years ago

In such actions, there can be easily large hematomas, which show themselves not immediately, but mostly the next day. We once had such a case at the stable, it’s been a long time since the horse was only allowed to be guided because of an injury, has got excited and has slipped away on the smooth ground. It then had a hematom in the thigh that had to be cut open.

Heklamari
7 years ago

The likelihood is very great that it has broken a bit and also hematome do so only after hours,

Get a vet or physiotherapists to the stable.

In addition: sprinkle the ice plate properly well with a lot of sand & d a little salt

Use another exit! I’m sure he’ll have to take part.

I hope nothing bad happened.

Urlewas
7 years ago

Just like a human. Directly after an accident, the pain sensation can be reduced by the adrenaline rush.

Also, bruises or similar things often spread only in a few days so that they make themselves uncomfortable noticeable.

I would take care of the next days for loose movement, observe the horse well and, of course, consult the doctor with the slightest concerns (even days later).

pony
7 years ago

watch her move tomorrow.

I hope that after this experience you have scattered the ice plate with sand or split so that no more horses slip out.

ZennixTV
7 years ago

Let veterinarian look over it, more can’t do it. Horses are also not made of glass

Hjalti
7 years ago
Reply to  ZennixTV

Never seen how fast a horse’s leg is off, right? Hope you’re saved!

Baroque
7 years ago

Just look very carefully tomorrow. At the first moment, they are so under adrenaline that it covers everything, because a fleeing animal only rises in a tidular manner when it pulls his legs away – it is not quite favorable for the escape to go to the ground.

There it is, horse into his flock, let it eat, let it come to rest – some of the flocks, after such an experience, look after all the other horses, whether really everything is good, others need something urgently to eat …

And if the experience is digested, just check his horse for a walk: normal? Joint mobility normal? Something thick or hot? Even if it fpr the horse is a really saudummes experience, it is not the first horse that once crashed. There are also such specimens that seem somehow never to understand that the winter also has its mosquitoes and you can simply not scatter the whole world – and even then it is sometimes so in the case of unfavorable weather conditions that the effect is puffed after 5 min, e.g. in the case of ice rain. For example, if you need half an hour to scatter the entire open-stall area, you don’t have a chance and the horses have to be mindful too, because then it’s not even because you got them out like you did. So you don’t always have a chance, and so is a possible thought, you would have left it better in the stable, now not appropriate.

What is worth considering if the mare doesn’t run anyway is to convert it to the future risk minimization. If the barhuf stops, I don’t normally stop at my feet. We’ve had it more often that I let my horse lead me. I’ve been riding with ours since they went barely, and I’ve never dared to get over with the beaten horses. But if the horse goes too far next to its center of gravity in excitement, the best barhuf doesn’t help any more … but think about it when it looked tomorrow. That she’s in the herd now is top. Grade bruises – and without it may not have gone off, feel nasty if they are not in motion and they calm down even better when they are with their flock colleagues.