Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Keep Looking Up

For those of you who know me, you know I can be really negative. It takes a lot of work for me to look on the bright side or think positively, and when a lot of negative things happen to me, I tend to walk around with a thundercloud over my head.

So when I went out to the barn Sunday to trot my horse for the first time after his hock injections, and he came up lame, I did the only thing a pre-professional 23 year old woman wouldn't do. I cried like a baby.

The vet had warned me that if hock injections didn't work, Candy would probably never be working sound again. When Candy was lame, I was frustrated; my gut was telling me Candy wasn't done, and by the way Candy was trotting, he was telling me he wasn't done- just a little stiff and achey.

I've spent a couple hours trolling through veterinary websites looking for research on hock arthritis, scoured through COTH forums, and consulted a couple of friends. And now I'm going "balls-to-the-wall" with solutions hoping one will work:

  • Consulting Dr. Ruggles at Rood and Riddle for alternative therapies/joint approaches
  • Back on Track hock boots
  • Hind shoes (he's got twinkly feet now, the fancy pants)
  • Adding Cosequin ASU
  • Changing our warm-up and flatting routine
Being proactive and positive ("One of these has to work!") is all I can do right now; doing things helps me from going crazy when the going gets tough. It means if it all goes south, I will have tried every option offered to me (within financial reason), and that's enough to comfort me.

This first year in Alabama has been a rough one: ulcers, 2 bouts of colic, and now joint disease, but through it all, I keep telling myself Candy and I will get back into the show ring, and doing what we love. It's an uphill battle right now, and sometimes (a lot of the time) I would love to hitch a ton of balloons to my apartment and float away to Kentucky. 



I just need to keep thinking positive and everything will turn out fine.

-K&C

2 comments :

  1. I have a pair of large hock boots (BOT) if you are interested. I want to get another pair bc I heard the newer ones are larger. Not sure what I would sell them for but better than new :)

    The hock boots have been magical for Houston. I actually need to start using them regularly again. Hope you find something that helps.

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    1. I will definitely keep that in mind- I bought a size medium because I heard they run large, but Candy is a big-boned boy, so we might actually need a large.

      The BoT saddle pack and polos have really worked for him, so I'm hoping more voodoo magic boots will help push him back to working sound. :)

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