I’ll add that other people have far more working experience with back radiographs.
Of the likely 1000 horses I’ve ridden, only 2 to my knowledge have had back radiographs. One was the coldest backed MF’er I’ve ever sat on. His were pristine. The other refused to pick up his right lead, but would change onto it. Vet looked at the back and said oh, here’s the problem, KS in four places. But then we kept going and the front leg (I don’t remember which one) had more hardware than bone holding it together that no one knew was there. Which was the problem? No idea, unless it was my right hip, which tends to also cause right lead issues .
Also, horses as well as people present pain differently. As horse people, I generally assume most of us are accustomed to working through pain. Getting a doctor to take you seriously is sometimes (or sadly, for women, often) a whole different thing.
I have cared for horses that presented like this:
-
Nick on ankle. 3 legged lame. Nothing else the vet could find. Perfectly fine 2 days later.
-
Grumpy at a minimum, occasionally dangerous multiple national champion AA+ hunter. Never took an unsound step. Took him to get his teeth done, needed sedation. Vet said “watch this” while horse was sedated and ran his hands along the horse’s spine. Horse almost collapsed. FWIW, vet never said anything else about it - which was pretty powerful in itself.
a. Taught me a lesson about who I was working for and a LOT about that horse, who perked up every time he saw a jump and never refused in his life to my knowledge. Older folks would know his name. Had a bad rep for being ‘mean’.
b. Pain can change a personality
c. Since this is COTH and you all will want to know, I will say that he later got a new home, a long break, and came back to high-level competition with some joy in his life - and much joy for me to know that it happened. He stole my heart even when he was trying to take pieces out of me
All so very true. Many recommended euthanasia after seeing him blow and seeing his radiographs. I probably should have cut my losses then. Will I keep a pasture ornament for the next 20+ years, I don’t know, probably not.
I can’t let anyone else get on him. The woman currently training me has offered, assuming his rehab and ground work goes accordingly. But, I couldn’t live with it if he hurt someone else. If anyone gets on him, it will be me. Will I ever feel comfortable, tough question. On one hand, I desperately want to give him a shot, but as the mother of two young children that’s a tough pill. Prior to my hiatus, I would have had no reservations if rehab went well. This “mom” title is a game-changer.
Taking it one day at a time for now. We’re post-op, almost healed from dehiscence and post-op infection, heading to rehab/aquatred next weekend. I suppose we’ll see what the next steps after that bring. I’m cautiously optimistic, well aware that there is about a 10% possibility of a happy ending and that a happy ending means temporary soundness. KS surgery is not a cure. KS is degenerative and progressive as is all osteoarthritis, so surgery is at best a temporary stay.
I’m so sorry to hear of your experience, but I thank you so much for sharing it. Unfortunately, I will probably find myself sharing the same story someday. But for now, I remain hopeful, I keep the groceries coming and he is a happy horse. That said, I do know there are more tough decisions in our not so distant future.
(Side note…Is there an easy way to post pics and videos on this forum that I am missing? I am willing to share as a point of education. If so, message me and I will. I tried to post pics before, but it came up as downloadable links that I’m not sure even worked so I deleted.)
I respectfully disagree.
You are glancing over what percent of that 60 are grade 1, grade 2, grade 3, grade 4?
They are not all created equal.
A 6-yr old horse, G4 with 7 DSPs worth of surgery is never sound whereas a 16-yr old horse with G1 might be an incidental finding, might never be symptomatic.
Very different scenarios.
KS is a form of osteoarthritis, degenerative and progressive. It’s not that amorphous.
The etiology, that is tougher. Genetics, training, injury, a combination of nature and nurture…unclear.
You cannot start actively working with a horse trainer until you have a horse. You can know them, have spoken to them, have the prospect horse accepted into the program, but there are no dollars exchanged until the horse starts in the program. Hence you are not actively working with them.
From the exact email I sent Ms Redman:
“Thanks for getting back to me. In my younger days, I’d feel confident in my abilities to take this on myself. At this point I would enlist the help of a trainer. I’ve spoken with XXXXX, a dressage trainer in my area, and she does have availability for training board. She would also be up for speaking with you to ease any reservations you might have. I’ve also been in touch with an eventing barn in my area, XXXX, to assist in starting him over fences.”
I’ve “spoken” with a dressage trainer in my area. Never did I say I was actively training with her already.
This story that’s being put out there that I lied in any way about the program the horse was going into is pure nonsense. He went to the exact dressage trainer I referenced in my email to Ms. Redman.
Posting photos is one of the positive things on this format. You can simply copy and paste them into the body of your post, depending on the format.
If that does not work, you can upload them using the upload button at the top of the reply box.
I know this thread is kind of buried in the technical help section, it has lots of good instructions in the original post.
Here is the section on posting a photo.
If you’re on an Android phone, using Chrome, the upload button may be in the lower right corner…
Just seems a bit hard to believe someone cares about where the horse lands and about matching the right horse to rider when one won’t even return the client’s call. JMHO.
I’m glad that you are doing right by this horse. He’s very lucky to have landed with you.
Forgive me if you mentioned this elsewhere…I’m curious if you were present at the PPE and if you or your trainer were able to ride the horse before purchasing? I ask because, at least in my experience, being physically present or not can change the vet/client communication.
I read where you wrote that the vet said multiple complimentary things about the horse, so this is in no way blaming you for taking the vet at his word and trusting his guidance. The way you described it made me wonder if you weren’t there and the vet didn’t have the best understanding of what you needed out of the exam. There are people who are comfortable buying horses sight unseen without PPEs, and he may have mistakenly thought you were the type of client who wanted an inexpensive exam? Maybe I’m paranoid about PPEs (I definitely am!!).
That said, in the end, it probably wouldn’t have made a difference if you and the vet did not know that you needed xrays. I would hope that G4 KS would have been obvious to the PPE vet if he had seen them.
Either way, I appreciate how disappointing this must be. It’s so hard to see a horse you love in pain.
I am a vet in the area and before retirement, I did some vetting at Benchmark. Jess is usually not present at the vettings, but has filled out a sellers statement for us. There is no discussion about other horses, or who bought what, or other vettings. The buyer (hopefully) is present, or if they aren’t, we call to discuss findings after the clinical exam and then determine how to go from there. Some people X-ray everything, some people nothing. Some vettings are expensive, some are minimal. If you want it all xrayed, no problem. If you don’t, that is your decision. We make recommendations based on what we see, but if a buyer wants more, I don’t think anyone will argue against it…
I’ve read this entire thread but stayed quiet until now when I read Amos saying she won’t let anyone else sit on the horse besides herself. Herself, who has been on hiatus for 10 years. This makes no sense. Send him to someone who has experience rehabbing horses. For your sake and his.
And now we’re splitting hairs about whether “spoken with” = “existing professional relationship” where clearly Jess should have known from an email that the horse was not a match for an amateur who did claim to have been a confident rider at some point who said she would work with a trainer. To my understanding, said amateur DID work with the same trainer.
So sorry again to Amos that the horse did not work out as expected. This is all terribly disappointing. But I can’t put all the blame on Jess or pretend that this wouldn’t have happened if you had purchased a horse from another seller.
Amos is riding with this trainer right now so no longer can be described as someone who has not ridden recently.
I read that paragraph as Amos saying that she does not want to risk anyone getting hurt, so no one is getting on the horse, a horse that is currently doing rehab ground work.
Amos did say, except me, and then went on to say that they are not sure they will be brave enough to get on either.
I personally appreciate the fact that Amos has stepped up and admitted they made a whole bunch of mistakes here.
The seller, not so much.
All fair points! I am not commenting on the overall situation - who has stepped up, who is right, who is wrong. I am only commenting on the mindset that the owner is the only person who should assume the risk and responsibility of sitting on this horse.
Just to have the direct quote from Amos included:
I can’t let anyone else get on him. The woman currently training me has offered, assuming his rehab and ground work goes accordingly. But, I couldn’t live with it if he hurt someone else. If anyone gets on him, it will be me. Will I ever feel comfortable, tough question.
For the sake of safety and stacking the odds for the best potential outcome, I genuinely believe enlisting the help of a professional who specializes in bringing rehabbed horses back into work is the logical choice (if the decision to bring the horse back into US work is made) vs. an amateur who has been back in the saddle for less than a year after a 10-year hiatus.
Amos may be a great rider, but it’s probably fair and accurate to say that her skillset is not equivalent to the professional I described above. I truly empathize with the fear of someone else getting hurt. It’s the reason I chose to retire one of mine. I wish Amos and her horse the best of luck.
I thought I read somewhere that Amos’ experienced professional got hurt by this horse. Am I thinking of a different situation?
That may explain Amos’ take.
@Amos I agree with the above. I know of a trainer who specializes in rehabbing horses with serious problems such as bucking/rearing/etc. Trust me, she knows how to handle a horse like yours and would not get on your horse until she felt comfortable doing so. Personally, I’ve seen her handle a pretty athletic buck and not be fazed by it at all (I would have popped off from that buck in a heartbeat). Not all trainers can do this, but those who can, are a good resource for your situation. Please consider finding someone like this when you get to that point.
I have found that to be very interesting as well. I am assuming it is because the seller is concerned about litigation and fears that admitting anything could be her fault to used against her. At the very least the seller should learn that ignoring a buyer isnt going to turn out well.
Nope, that’s exactly what she said happened. You’re remembering correctly.
Yes, he hurt Amos’ trainer.
Yes he hurt Amos’s trainer, however it was 7 months after the sale. We all know that a horse in somone else’s hands after 7 months is different to the horse that was sold.