I think Solo's feeling a little bummed out. You would think he'd appreciate hitting the horse jackpot; his life consists of grazing in his favourite pasture with his buddy, Danny, like they are Siamese twins. A couple times a week, he is subjected to short, light ride to stretch and move his muscles. Otherwise, he is stuffed with treats and rubbed with his favourite brushes.
He reckons it sucks.
Well, I don't think he minds the grazing part terribly, but that's not a new thing. What he minds is the part where he lost his job.
We trot up the hill to the arena, passing through our jump field. By the first jump, Solo leans hard towards it, begging pleasepleaseplease can I jump it??! My heart hurts as I have to say, sorry, buddy, not today. With a sigh, he continues on past the second jump. He leans again. How about this one??! Again, I have to deny his request. Each jump merits the same pleading from him and the same sad rebuttal from me. It kills me.
Stretchy trot work in the arena garners only resigned acceptance from Solo, so I give him some canter figure eights with flying changes in the corners and a hand gallop down the long side. He is ok as long as we keep a soft, long contact. That seems to perk him up a little bit, so I feel slightly better.
So now I must formulate plans including "things that make Solo happy" and I must make sure those things do not include any "things that make Solo more sore." It's a fine line. Hopefully, the weather will cooperate and we can do a trail ride later in the week, that always perks up some red ears.
I am waiting and watching, as instructed, but I am not seeing huge improvements. The vet that did Encore's PPE suggested a bone scan to isolate problem areas, since we cannot see into his back sufficiently with other imaging technologies. It could very well be telling, but last I checked, bone scan prices hovered around $1200. He said he could "work out a deal" with me, but unless that included a discount of, say, $1199.... I am researching the details anyway and keeping it in mind. If it could pinpoint something we have not yet identified, then perhaps that information could lead us to a fix. That would be worth twice that price.
He reckons it sucks.
Well, I don't think he minds the grazing part terribly, but that's not a new thing. What he minds is the part where he lost his job.
We trot up the hill to the arena, passing through our jump field. By the first jump, Solo leans hard towards it, begging pleasepleaseplease can I jump it??! My heart hurts as I have to say, sorry, buddy, not today. With a sigh, he continues on past the second jump. He leans again. How about this one??! Again, I have to deny his request. Each jump merits the same pleading from him and the same sad rebuttal from me. It kills me.
Stretchy trot work in the arena garners only resigned acceptance from Solo, so I give him some canter figure eights with flying changes in the corners and a hand gallop down the long side. He is ok as long as we keep a soft, long contact. That seems to perk him up a little bit, so I feel slightly better.
So now I must formulate plans including "things that make Solo happy" and I must make sure those things do not include any "things that make Solo more sore." It's a fine line. Hopefully, the weather will cooperate and we can do a trail ride later in the week, that always perks up some red ears.
I am waiting and watching, as instructed, but I am not seeing huge improvements. The vet that did Encore's PPE suggested a bone scan to isolate problem areas, since we cannot see into his back sufficiently with other imaging technologies. It could very well be telling, but last I checked, bone scan prices hovered around $1200. He said he could "work out a deal" with me, but unless that included a discount of, say, $1199.... I am researching the details anyway and keeping it in mind. If it could pinpoint something we have not yet identified, then perhaps that information could lead us to a fix. That would be worth twice that price.