Friday, February 26, 2016

The Man, The Myth, The Legend....The Retired

I have a very important announcement to make!!!

Baby Maxwell has officially been retired from racing for ONE WHOLE YEAR!

Okay, let me admit something really quick. His actual retirement anniversary is tomorrow. I'm writing this today, Friday February 26th because I don't intend to be on the computer for an extended length of time over the weekend and I wanted to get this important post done today for all to share in the joy :-D I'll be busy spending time with Max!

Baby Maxwell ran his last ever race on February 27, 2015 at Tampa Bay Downs in Race 5, A Claiming race for 4 year olds and up who have never won 3 races. Baby Maxwell ran 9th out of 9 the entire length of the race. Race notes state he was "outrun" which probably wasn't a surprise, considering his odds were something like 59-9. His heart just wasn't in it any more. Various notes from his last few races clearly paint the picture that Maxwell was ready for a new career. I got to watch a few of his races, including the last one he ran, online, and if I'm being completely honest, I thought it would be a little comical, to see the horse I've come to know so well run around the track and flat out lose. But it actually was quite emotional and my heart broke for my Baby Maxwell. He's number one in my heart, so to not see him being celebrated as #1 those days really tore at me. But his race career, while not the best, did yield two winning runs. Let's celebrate those two moments in time that Max was toted as top Horse for his race. Those are the two runs I want to always remember. Because he truly is a winning horse, in many ways other than racing, and that's how he should be celebrated!

I probably shouldn't post these, because I didn't buy them and they have a watermark on them....but I'm totally linking them to their proper owner. I do want to buy them, but just haven't gotten around to spending $22 per print. At some point I will! And I'm sure they'll be shared again!

© Coady Photography
© Coady Photography










This win photo was taken May 4, 2013 at Calder in Race #4. It warms my heart a bit to see Maxwell in the winners circle making owners and trainers very happy, just as he makes me very happy every day now!
















This win photo was taken August 3, 2013 at Calder in Race #10. I absolutely LOVE his finish photo, you can see he was ready to give even more to get his jockey across that line in the lead. I also love to see the winning photos with him covered in mud. If you know Maxwell, you know he thoroughly enjoys splashing around in mud puddles. Perhaps he should have run on a sloppy track more often, and could have yielded some extra wins ;-)












I feel making a big deal about the first year of retirement from racing is important. You see this athletic beast go through so many changes, peaks, valleys, and eventually perfection if you're careful and lucky. I'll have another bigger brag post on April 4th, when I celebrate a year of ownership with Maxwell. But for right now, I really just want to celebrate the horse he's always been. A dedicated athlete; bred, born and raised to be a winner. To always try his best. To put his heart behind everything 100% even when his heart might tell him no. Maxwell always tries. When he says no to something, there's usually a DAMN good reason why he's said no. His can-do attitude may not have won him as many races as his owners and trainers had hoped, but it sure does speak for the horse that he is. I've never had such joy in my typically monotonous rides throughout the time. He's always a pleasure. Always a joy. He's the horse I'd pick over and over to cart me around. I'm so proud to be Maxwell's biggest cheer leader, his #1 fan, his biggest supporter, his advocate and friend. There's nothing like the heart of a Thoroughbred.

Maxwell spends his time in a roomy 12X12 stall during the day, munching on hay in front of his 3 speed fan, casually swatting flies. By night he grazes the grass of a paddock that he shares with an evenly tempered mare who keeps his silly tendencies in line. I see him between 4 and 6 times a week and he's ridden between 2 and 4 times a week, always making progress and moving forward in his new career. Maxwell picked one of the TOP places in Florida to retire, the Bradenton-Sarasota area. He's a Florida retiree now!

Here are two photos from Summer, the wonderful woman who connected me to this wonderful gelding. These were taken while Maxwell was still residing at Tampa Bay Downs, and below that, two recent photos of Maxwell being Maxwell. More photos of this beast will be included in our 1 year ownership post ;-) 


© Summer Thurber

© Summer Thurber

Recent Photo of the sweetest boy ever!

With a HUGE personality <3

Thursday, February 25, 2016

A day with the girls

While I try to plan out some more 'interesting' posts outlining products, things I've found to be helpful, or whatever else I end up blabbing on and on about....I thought I'd leave another post about "what's been going on lately" with some photos as well!!!!

Not this past weekend, but the one prior, I had the amazing pleasure of riding Bella (yes, the wonder pony, the dappled buckskin queen) AND a beautiful baby filly fresh off the track. It was an amazing day. It's been several months since the last time I rode Bella, and even then I just took her on a quick spin around the arena. This time I actually spent some time riding her and while some of the same antics were present (she IS the queen after all, and has to make sure her rider knows....) I was SO very happy, almost crying on the inside, to see the amazing work Summer has done with her at the trot. Gone is that snappy pony that is always in a hurry to trot everywhere. I love that little pony so very much. It just made me feel so complete to get back on her yet again. She's quite special.




I mean seriously, stop it. Are we not the cutest? Not to mention I squished myself into a 15 or 16" pony saddle. Gosh I miss her. I'll be out again soon to take her for another spin. That special pony has quite the magnetic pull...


As for the fresh off the track filly...Summer lunged her for maybe, MAYBE 3 minutes before getting on her for the first ever time, post track life. The filly couldn't even throw up a buck or play on the line. She was all business and cool, calm and collected from the get-go. This little girl quickly stole my heart with her photos, and meeting her made it VERY hard not to bring her home. She's going to make someone a phenomenal mount, and I don't see them having a very difficult time bringing her along with her can-do, relaxed attitude about it all. At the very tender age of barely 4! It would be really fun to see her go to a RRP situation. I think she could do it! Anyways, I need to stop gushing about her, because I'm sure if I get to hang out with her again before she does sell, It's going to be a sad day when it happens!!!!


She's seriously beautiful. Her name is Royal Lady. And she sure looks like Royalty to me! If anyone in Florida is reading this blog (or elsewhere and willing to ship) this filly is available to an outstanding home, and again, she's RRP eligible! Someone snatch her up so I don't get any more temptations to do so myself!!!!!


It's days like the one I'm writing about that really make me realize what is most important to me. A great friend, great mares, and of course my Maxwell. I had ridden him first thing in the morning before heading over to spend some time with Summer and these two lovely ladies. I can't wait to get over there and do it again.


And, to add on to the last post with the video of Maxwell working his hiny off, I've got a couple of still shots from the video (so excuse the quality). I just love to admire the horse that Maxwell is becoming, one ride at a time.









Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Starman

Okay, I promise I'm not going to start singing Starman (...there's a star maaaaaaan waiting in the sky...) but I decided to use that song title as the title to this blog post because it got Maxwell into such a stretchy big trot that I assume he must have enjoyed the song.


Over the weekend Maxwell upgraded back to the large arena. The last couple of rides have been in the front paddock which is much smaller, as we'd been working on upward and downward transitions, staying straight, staying responsive, etc. This weekend I wanted to work on some trot poles so we moved back to the big ring.

On Saturday I had my phone on my hip while I rode alone, and decided why not play some music? Just as we got done with our warm up and started to tackle the trot poles for the first time in several months for Max, Starman by David Bowie came on, and you would have thought Maxwell was the biggest Bowie fan in the world, because his stride got big, his trot floaty, his ears forward. I only wish I had video from that day of trot work, because it was really quite entertaining to see him move while that song was on! But Sunday, day two of trot pole work, I set up the Go Pro for the first time and caught some clips of his trot poles. (I'm angry at the gopro. What a pain in the ass, and after all the work I did with the clips, it still wouldn't upload in 1080. I think I need a new computer!) The horse has come far in his trot and trotting poles in general. I've focused a large portion of our riding this winter on trotting. He used to hop over trot poles, not really sure exactly where his 4 feet were supposed to land, but he finally has that forward moving swinging trot, versus the short choppy racehorse prance trot of times past.

The video is nothing spectacular, but I thought I would share it, as I am very proud of the progress (slow but steady) that my horse is making, and I love admiring him as a spectator, which is something I never get to do, so video is my only measure of our progress from a different view. I'm so excited for the horse he is becoming. I am still trying to figure out what bit would be best to try and transition him back into, but so far I've got nothing, so we've been cruising around in the hackamore still. Which he loves, and doesn't complain about. And yes, it absolutely IS possible for a horse to properly carry themselves in a hack. They aren't "on the bit" but they can use themselves and round their back just the same with the right encouragement. Love this big goofy bay. The video is kind of boring, just trot poles and more trot poles. I truly cherish every mini hurdle with this horse.

Stay tuned, I know I've been lax on this blog yet again. I'll have another post shortly, I'm sure!


Friday, February 12, 2016

Frugal Friday: Mastitis Schmastitis...

Today's Frugal Friday is part a way to save money, but also part good tip for chronic thrush sufferers.

If you've been around horses for any extended amount of time, you've learned a thing or two about their needs, their ailments, and how downright expensive these animals can really be sometimes. One thing that almost everyone familiar with horses has either experienced or at least heard of before is thrush. But did you know that sometimes thrush isn't as obvious as you think it is? It's not all about a rotten frog and rotten craters besides the frog in the collateral grove....It's not ALL about that distinct rotting flesh smell. Sometimes it can be really severe but really subtle at the same time. And extremely painful.

Maxwell has had his fair share of foot whoas...I've not even owned the horse a year and we're on our third (and hopefully last!) farrier. But overall his feet aren't the worst, that's for sure, and now that they're on track, it's much easier to keep them healthy. But he HAS struggled with deep sulcus thrush for several months now. We live in Florida. It's almost inevitable that at some point or another, you're going to be dealing with some infected thrushy feet. The severe dry-wet cycle that gulf coast of Florida weather brings us in the Summer will surly keep you on your feet when it comes to horse foot and leg care. Anyhow, in Maxwell's case, he developed this nasty deep sulcus thrush because his right hoof was wrapped for about a month's time in the deep humid moist summer we had this past year. He was battling a monster of a summer sore right at the coronet band (look way back on my posts for some lovely photos of that) which required constant sanitizing and wrapping to prevent a reinfection (thanks, fly larvae!). The easiest and most functional way for me to keep a wound on his coronet band covered was to wrap his entire hoof. I tried to leave at least part of the sole of his foot exposed for some ventilation, but his heel bulbs were completely covered by the vet wrap.






To the left is what a healthy foot and frog look like. The central sulcus of the frog is that little thumb print indentation that the line points to.






To the right, we see a foot battling severe deep central sulcus thrush. On the surface you don't see anything that screams thrush, or severe. But that crack shouldn't be there. Look above, see, no crack. The bacteria and fungus runs rampant in the frog undetected and then one day you wonder, HMM why is my horse so tender to hoof picking? His feet look okay....until you realize that crack isn't supposed to be there...and boy is it deep. The first time I stuck something in there during the course of treatment for Maxwell, I cringed. So did he.


My horse's cause of the thrush was due to the constant wrapping and exposure to moisture. It was kind of inevitable because it wasn't something I could change until wrapping was no longer required. Little did I know that the months I spent treating it conventionally could have been cut down to weeks if I had gone the cheaper, alternative route from the beginning.



My farrier at the time swore by Thrush Buster. I went through 3 bottles from August to Christmas. He had me putting it on every little blemish in Max's hoof wall and white line to help keep all the crud that can turn into anything, from getting through. It's been said that the Gentian Violet in the Thrush Buster has some medicinal effects on all things hoof microbial. I didn't discount his claims, and I applied the stuff religiously to both the clefts around the frog, any off looking spot of his hoof both sole and wall, and deep into that sulcus to try and eradicate the infection within. This stuff just wasn't cutting it. Not to mention, it's purple and purple sucks to get out of anything. 


The only reason I even tried No Thrush was because my local Tractor Supply doesn't carry Thrush Buster and I was out of any and all thrush treatments. The idea of a "dry" thrush treatment sounds great. It's one of the fundamentals of getting rid of thrush in the first place, removing all moisture. The idea is there, and I think even the formula is good, too, however, application is a little dodgy.  Powder doesn't sit well where you need it to on a dry surface. The moment Max put his foot down at least half of what I had just applied came flying out with it onto the concrete. 


I'm going to go out on a limb here and be truthful (seriously, I'm always truthful, I just used that line because it sounded good)....I had known about a potential "cure" for quite some time at this point, but I just wasn't buying what was being sold to me...The idea was there, the first-hand testimonials (my favorite reference on a product!) were there, but yet, I hadn't purchased the miracle cure...Why? Because my Tractor Supply only sold the HUGE quantity at $40 a box. Clearly that's not a frugal and effective way to treat thrush.......



HUH????? What the heck is this stuff???? Dry Cow Mastitis treatment???? If you've only ever delved in Horses, this might be foreign to you. Mastitis in cows is an inflammation of the udders often caused by an infection from various organisms. This nifty little tube (with a flexible long delivery tube on the end!) contains Cephaperin Benzathine which is a bactericidal that helps eradicate gram-positive and gram-negative organisms, giving it a broad range of working ability. Some genius realized that some of the organisms that cause thrush were also affected by this bactericidal and started squirting it on their horse's severe thrush. 


I wouldn't break out the Tomorrow at every sign of thrush, that's only going to decrease it's effectiveness over time, but for a stubborn case or a more severe infection in the case of deep central sulcus thrush, this medication is paramount. I kick myself for waiting so long to try it. My local Tractor Supply only sells this in a box, full of them. We all hope to never need a full box of this stuff to treat thrush, especially on a single horse. So I kept putting it off, until I took a quick stroll through the Cow aisle at my local non-tractor supply feed store and saw that they sold it by the tube! $2.99 later, and Maxwell's deep sulcus thrush is healing beautifully. I've actually gone back and bought two more tubes, because the problem isn't completely gone, but we're getting there and this stuff is showing MAD improvements over thrush remedies past. It's important to realize there is a similar product called "Today"....This is for the cow that is lactating and contains a different set of medications, if I had to guess, to keep the milk from being tainted with antibiotic type contaminants (speculating here, I'm not a dairy farmer nor do I play one on tv). I can't comment on it's effectiveness, and research online hasn't given me any result with it, so just stick with getting the "Tomorrow" medication, labeled for a DRY cow (a cow not producing milk). 


Moral of the story is....check the cow aisle before turning your back on a treatment. I didn't want to spend $40 on a box of this stuff when many traditional treatments are under $20. Turns out, at $2.99 I could have possibly completely eliminated this problem before it got to the point it did, had I done a wee bit more research and found that I could buy it by the tube somewhere else!  You live and learn! But the point here is, even if it were in fact $40, the amount of money I spent between 3 bottles of thrush buster and a bottle of No Thrush would have bought me that $40 box of Tomorrow anyway. 

I've still got my No Thrush and Thrush Buster in my groom bag. No thrush goes on after I've applied Tomorrow deeply into the crack. It does a nice job of holding the liquid in. I also poof it around Max's frog and over top of it to help keep everything dry, healthy and happy. Thrush Buster still gets applied to some funky looking spots as they come up, and all is right in the world of hooves around here. Seriously, save the $16 and go buy a tube of this stuff if you're battling something rank in the hoof. Save the traditional medications for maintenance treatments and  mild cases. Bring in the big guns like this when you're having trouble or have a bad case going on. You'll thank me. I promise!







Thursday, February 11, 2016

Messy Mooses

Is mooses a word? 

Life hacks!

We all love them. Some are stupid and don't really work, but others actually save us a lot of time, money, and energy in the process. Today I want to talk about something that SO many horse owners struggle with, but only those who actually do the dirty work probably relate to. Messy Stalls. Messy Horses. Disaster Zones. 

Maxwell isn't a particularly messy creature, but he DOES consume 15 gallons of water and roughly 20 pounds of hay, and 14 pounds of alfalfa pellets for the 12 hours that he is in his stall during the day. All that hay and all that water gotta go somewhere, right?! The sheer volume of manure makes his stall a bit difficult. He drinks a healthy 15 gallons of water per day, thanks to his alfalfa diet. This also causes an excess amount of urine, due to the extra protein he gets from the alfalfa. Pee city!!! I'm lucky because he does have a dedicated pee zone, and he's not much of a stall walker, so he doesn't do the toss and serve that many other geldings do in their stall. I clean stalls twice a week at Maxwell's barn, and clean his stall every single day I go out there. (yes, all the stalls are done every day, I'm just on the hook for it twice a week)... I'm a bit of a perfectionist with the stalls, and therefore it takes me a little bit longer to get them done than the average person. However I've implemented a couple of techniques which really help me breeze through stalls, and save a bit of money (shavings) in the process. 

The first piece of advice I have for a messy horse is to get to know their pattern. Figure out where they go (most have a preference and go in the same places each day). I can tell you where every horse in the barn enjoys peeing. It's important to identify the pee location prior to clean up, so that you don't accidentally scoop a pile of pee and mix it with clean shavings. Maxwell's stall can be a bit overwhelming sometimes, so I usually start by picking up all the obvious piles of manure. Max doesn't poop perfect poop balls (never has) but he has a well formed "pile" for each manure movement he makes. Sometimes they get rolled up underneath some fresh looking shavings and it requires some extra attention (more on that below). I remove all the big obvious piles I can find in the stall, while taking care to remove hay remnants that might be left-overs or mixed in with the shavings. 

Once we've removed as many obvious piles of crap that we can, I go to the pee spot. For most stalls (including Max's) I rake back the top layer of "fresh" shavings on top of the pee, since it soaks down and seemingly disappears (if you're bedded deep enough with an absorbent bedding). I take my time carefully removing all the urine before I perform the next steps. 

There is one particular horse at my barn who is a poop shuffling monster. He DOES poop perfect balls, so he really has no excuse, but we just can't seem to figure out what in the world he does to create such a mess in his stall. He doesn't stall walk, but it sure looks like he might based on the way his stall looks at the end of the day. For these difficult stalls where everything is mixed in, or once you've removed obvious piles and urine, this is the best thing I've done....BANKING. If you've ever taken up professional stall cleaning ( I don't recommend it), you've probably learned this neat little task before. I drag all the bedding away from a back wall of the stall to start. Then? Simply take a pitch fork full of shavings and kind of fling it against the wall. It's awkward at first, but once you have the flick of your wrist down, it's amazing. The shavings form a nice little mountain, and the poop rolls down the mountain to be collected at the base. It's one of the most gratifying things I do with my time, building those shaving mountains and watching poop roll down them and separate from the shavings so nicely for me. I continue until I've banked the entire stall. Sometimes you have to move down the wall, or pick another wall, depending on how deeply bedded the stall is. But it's SO worth it, especially if your horse poops everywhere, or you have a hard time leaving a stall with all those little specs of poop that somehow separate themselves from the rest of the pile. PLUS this gives you the opportunity to do a 'fluff and refresh' of the bedding. All the bedding gets turned over, and some fresh, unused bedding that built up along the sides of the stall is mixed into the tired bedding, prolonging it's overall life. 

The real life hack, though, is HOW you bed the stall. Every person has their way. I've tried to under bed, over bed, and tried different materials to bed with. Your preference might be different than that of mine or my barn owner's, but honestly, I think it comes down to the individual horse and it's specific bathroom habits (and health needs in some cases). 

Probably the 4 most notable types of bedding for a horse's stall include Fine Flake Shavings, Flake Shavings, Pelletized Bedding, and Straw.


Small flake shavings are my top pick. Easier to sort through than the larger flakes, they make stall cleaning go a little bit quicker. I have a love-hate relationship with Tractor Supply's brand, as the consistency of the flakes varies by batch, as does the weight of the bag. Sometimes Max only requires two bags in a 12x12 to achieve sufficient bedding coverage, and sometimes it takes 4 bags. It's very inconsistent. The reason I choose to stick with this brand, is that they've done nothing to offend me to the point of NOT using them, especially when they're averaging $1.00-1.50 less than any other brand of fine flake shavings in the area. 


Flake, or "Large Flake" shavings are my pet peeve. I've actually been recommended them by more than one vet and farrier, but I just can't bring myself to bed my horse's stall with them. Much harder to sort between flake and poop, these suckers get my blood pressure up every time I clean a stall bedded with them. The vet makes a great point, however, that the larger flake bedding provides the least amount of dust. If your horse has respiratory issues, or you worry about the dustiness of your bedding, larger flake bedding might be an option for you. Two past farriers also recommended large flake shavings, especially on top of mats, because there is more absorption flake per flake verses that of fine flake or 'sawdust' type shavings. I totally get that. It's super important to not allow your horse to stand in his urine all day, and if bigger flakes help that, by all means, use them. I just cannot stand them, and go through them MUCH MUCH quicker than I otherwise would. They have their place, but their place is NOT in Max's stall!


Pelletized bedding is my second favorite choice. It used to be my first, but there are two reasons why it makes second on my list. The first reason is just the ease of use. To use this bedding *properly*, it requires a wheel barrow (or dumping in the stall if you fancy all that) and water. I put one bag in at a time, soak the appropriate amount of water with said bag, dump into stall, spread, and repeat. 4 times. It takes at LEAST 15 minutes for me to bed each stall using 4 bags of pelletized bedding. That being said, I actually really LOVE this bedding when it has been put down properly. It does a phenomenal job of absorbing moisture while maintaining its integrity a lot longer than that of traditional flake shavings. The kicker, though, is making sure you turn the bedding every day. Some people don't do this, and I will never understand why, but if you don't turn this bedding and actually MIX the messier portions with the clean, it won't work out for you very well. It's designed to hold a little bit of 'yuck' and when you mix it into the clean stuff, it's like magic. The reason this gets another mark off, though, is again thanks to my farrier. Because this stuff does such a phenomenal job of absorbing moisture, it also holds that moisture for a lot longer before becoming unusable. This means, that while the bedding may not look actively wet, it's got a lot of 'wet' inside, and a horse standing in it for an extended period of time could suffer an adverse reaction via the hoof. I found this to be true with my own horse, and once I removed the pelleted bedding from his stall and swapped back to fine flake, his feet held up a LOT more, and a LOT less moisture damage was seen in his feet at each visit. 


Straw is probably the oldest type of bedding. I've actually never used it myself, because I loathe it, but it does have its place, and is still commonly used in places like race tracks. While it absorbs quite a bit, I can't even imagine trying to sift through all that to get those magical poop balls out. Not to mention, how do you identify soiled straw (urine soaked) from not? It's all yellow is it not? I dunno. I hate it. And it drives me insane when Maxwell is a bit low on shavings, and makes it a point to drag his hay to his urine spot to achieve the same goal as straw bedding would serve...Icky. Straw is also a great choice for a low dust option, however, for horses who require special attention to that. It's also SO nice to take a nap in.



The most exciting part about this post is coming now. We've explored that magical banking maneuver to breeze through stall cleaning....but what about those messy misters (and some misses, too believe it or not!) that mix it all together into a chopped salad for you to pick through? This is something my barn owner started doing with her two draft horses, and I've adopted the idea, modified it a bit, and implemented it in my own horse's stall last week. Take two of the bests, and make the magnificent, no? In my barn owner's situation, she takes two bags of pelletized bedding and spreads it (unsoaked) around her horses' stalls as a base. Then she'll take 4 bags of fine flake shavings and place that on top. It works really well for those two horses, and seems to keep her super messy (that poop shuffling monster I spoke of earlier) horse's stall fresh for ALMOST a week. This works well for her guys because they're huge, with dinner plate sized feet. The little pelletized bedding pieces (look like pelleted feed, maybe a bit thicker) gets crushed under their feet, and becomes a wonderful absorbing base layer for the stall. I bed Maxwell's stall a little bit differently, and it's something you guys should consider as well:

For Max, in a 12x12 stall on mats, I lightly soaked the pelletized bedding in the wheel barrow first. The reason I soak my pellets instead of just tossing them in like my barn owner does for her big guys, is because I have a Thoroughbred. A Thoroughbred with sensitive soles. I don't want to make him walk around on pokey pellets all the time. I also do it because I think the pellets last a bit longer when they've been expanded (believe it or not). I spread ONE bag of pelletized bedding as the base layer on the mats, taking extra care to ensure that a sufficient amount covers the areas where Maxwell is known to pee. Then I take 2-4 bags of fine flake shavings and place them on top. 2-4 because it depends on the "volume" of the bags. This past Sunday I did 1 bag of pellets and 2 bags of fine flake shavings. By Tuesday, the stall still had that "fresh shavings" look to it, and smelled great too. I still do my banking movements to sort through the shavings, allowing the pelleted (which looks more like saw dust once it's expanded, or crushed in the case of the draft horses) bedding and fine flake shavings to mix. When I redistributed the shavings around the stall (every stall needs the shavings flipped and fluffed, c'mon!) it STILL had that wonderful fresh shavings look. Today is Thursday, and I'll be interested to see how the stall cleans up tonight. Usually I can get away with 2-4 bags of shavings a week, the stall needing to be re-bedded by Saturday or Sunday most weeks. We're already ahead of the curve as of Tuesday, so I'm hopeful we might get a week and a half out of these suckers....I'll be sure to clue you all in later on. But seriously, this technique really does help absorb excess urine that otherwise ruins countless shavings, and leaves many horses standing in urine.

What are your stall bedding habits? What's your favorite technique to cleaning a stall?







Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Take it Easy

The scary struggles and triumphs of an amateur...

An amateur doing it on their own is a whole lot scarier.....but here I am! I'm not really doing it all alone. I have some special people supporting me and helping me along the way. Anyhow, things have been going just wonderful for me and Maxwell lately.

I recently saw one of those Facebook meme type things....it was a photo of a horse and the quote said "Wining on a 'made' horse will never be as satisfying as winning on one you made yourself"..... that quote has been my mantra since the day Maxwell came home to me. I finally had my shot at a horse built for me that had a blank slate and was ready to learn a new career. I was going to make this horse. I am making this horse.

I don't have a big name trainer. Right now all I have is the support of some pretty amazing people, no practicing trainer at all. But for some reason, we're going better than ever before. Over the summer we had a trainer and we weren't going nearly as well as we are now. I'm so excited to see the horse I "make" of Maxwell.

One at a time we check things off his long list of annoyances, complaints, or things that just don't work for him. One at a time things just start to come together better and better. Widen the saddle, and suddenly my horse moves off of my leg strides better than previous. Remove the bit from the equation (at least temporarily) and I have a horse that works quietly, without tension and stress in his mouth and jaw. Better nutritional options leave him feeling more comfortable overall. Always always take an extra moment to really listen to your horse. They don't lie, they're actually quite clear when they have something to say. You just need to listen.
                             
 I'm really falling in love with my horse all over again. He's still a green bean. He still has green horse moments, but he's becoming such a wonderful, willing partner to me. This week we started back to 4-times-a-week rides. The early darkness gave him a well deserved Winter Vacation, where he only worked 2 times a week (if he was lucky!), but I was able to show up, throw tack on, and get a productive 35 minute ride in yesterday after work. Tomorrow we'll try again. It's only going to get lighter and lighter as we get closer to daylight savings time. I am so very excited to get this big geek back into shape. He's working more correctly than ever, so I'm interested to see what a big muscular animal I can build this summer.

And then there are horse shows. Maybe Max and I will make a debut in the ring at some point this year. I'll let him decide. Many OTTB's that have been retired from racing for a year are further ahead than he is in training, already showing and competing. I chose to take things extremely slow with Max. There's no deadline. There's no rush. He's a sensible, hard working animal, but he deserves to move slowly into his new career. He comes to me with 6 years of racing wear and tear. The least I can do is allow his body a break, and to slowly build it up for the type of work expected of him now. So please, don't feel "bad" for us because we haven't made it to a show yet. This is all apart of our master plan. Slow and steady wins us the race....obviously that mantra doesn't work for a race horse, but surly it can work for a retired racehorse. He is never asked to do more than he is capable of (even if he says otherwise). I want to spend my time perfecting my horse in the ring, on the trails, and in every situation I can think to put him in. I've ridden him in a downpour, in 100 degree heat, in 30mph winds, in the frigid Florida cold (hehehe) and many questionable 'spook' opportunities in between including slamming gates, screaming children, falling palm fronds, gunshots, motorbikes, etc. I'm creating a solid citizen. We'll walk into the ring for the green division, but nowhere in our performance will you actually see 'green'. This is my vision for this horse. To be completely prepared for anything he's ever asked to do. No surprises. Honesty is huge to me, so of course I am always honest with my horse, as well. I'm 100% dedicated to this beast!




Thursday, February 4, 2016

Guts

Sorry about the lack of blog posts last week, and the first half of this week. I've been dealing with some medical things that have taken me away from this blog! But here I am! I have caught up and found some time to put some effort into an important post today. Gut health!

I was going to break into song, you know, that song by Stevie Wonder..."Cause I've got an upset stomach..." but it's about a broken heart, not due to gut issues, so I refrained, mostly for your sake!

Okay, so Maxwell has been on his Abprazole (omeprazole) stomach ulcer treatment for 6 days now. Obviously we're hardly a week into treatment, but I've decided to get a jump start on better supporting his stomach once the treatment is complete, to hopefully eliminate the risk of developing the ulcers once again. I realize some horses are just more susceptible, regardless of dietary support, but before I label my horse a lost cause on ulcers, I want to ensure I'm doing all I can to help his stomach out. His diet is already extremely compatible with an ulcer horse's needs, so we're good to go on that front.

Maxwell came to me on a great acid buffer called U-Gard. It is an extremely cost effective supplement to create a neutral PH in the horse's stomach, not to mention how highly rated and highly spoken of, it is. I haven't changed my views on this supplement; if you're looking for something that will buffer acid in the stomach, this is an amazing product. Increased magnesium and calcium are also beneficial. However, Maxwell recently underwent a diet overhaul and his diet is now extremely high in calcium. It's partly the calcium in this product (and in things like Alfalfa) that cause the buffering effect on the stomach, so because Maxwell is consuming 13 pounds of alfalfa per day, I needed to re-evaluate my stomach ulcer support medications and eliminate any extra calcium.

Before I go any further, I want to also mention the hind gut. I've posted about it before, and I'm sure I'll do it again after this post, but the hind gut is so very often overlooked. Those who have done their research on gastric ulcers realize that if their horse wasn't already suffering from colonic ulcers in addition to the gastric ulcers that they were most concerned about, almost certainly after treatment with omeprazole you can expect at the very least some colonic distress. Maxwell has been on SmartDigest Ultra pellets for several months now, following a 2 month course of Succeed paste. His hind gut has greatly improved from the time before Succeed until now, as has his weight. I'm a little nervous to see how his hind gut responds to 30 days of omeprazole followed by a wean-off period, but I'm confident that SmartDigest Ultra will support better than nothing at all.

The logical thing to do in my situation, needing a stomach support supplement that works well with my hind gut support supplement, would be to put Maxwell on (a great but expensive) product from Smartpak called SmartGI Ultra pellets which essentially combines Smartpak's stomach ulcer support supplement SmartGut Ultra with their hind gut support supplement SmartDigest Ultra. At a whopping $95 a month, I dived into trying to find a more cost effective alternative. I needed to find something that had a more supportive ingredients list than the U-Gard, at a cost effective price, that complimented the SmartDigest Ultra that is currently being fed. So research I did, and this is what I've come up with as something to try: G.U.T by Uckele

G.U.T has a lot of the supportive ingredients that we read about over and over again on various ulcer-based websites. It doesn't have them in the same quantity per dose as say, SmartGut Ultra, but it's also less than half the cost. I would consider upgrading to SmartGI Ultra to simplify my supplement feeding, IF and ONLY if a stronger concentration of these ingredients seems warranted, after a fair trial on the G.U.T.

I'm not here to explain the reasons why these ingredients are important to gut health, that's something I think every person interested benefits from researching on their own. Smartpak does offer a basic oversight of many popular ingredients in their offered supplements, found HERE, however I do still recommend further researching to better educate yourself before you make any decision on the supplement you are choosing.

I have taken the liberty of regenerating the comparison chart on Smartpak so that it can be posted here for my readers to see. Please note all nutritional facts listed here are courtesy of Smartpak.

This chart reflects the similarities and differences between my current choice for stomach support, and my NEW choice for stomach support. Remember, I have nothing against U-Gard being a very cost effective way to buffer acid, but in my horse's current dietary case, more calcium is NOT warranted, and I was looking for further support. Literally the only downside I can see as an outsider who hasn't yet tried this product, is that G.U.T is only offered in powder form from Smartpak. I have learned they do in fact make a pellet, at a higher cost, direct from Uckele. I'll consider that version only if Max decides this powder is no good.

As you can see, G.U.T offers a much more powerful punch in the fight against stomach ulceration, than does that of U-Gard. Remember, I don't necessarily want an antacid in my horse's everyday diet. The purpose of antacids and proton pump inhibitors are to decrease (or eliminate) the acid in a stomach. Acid is important for proper digestion in a health horse with a healthy gut. Once the treatment period with omeprazole is complete, I don't want to inhibit all acid production in Maxwell's stomach. The calcium and magnesium in U-Gard are what create the buffer in a horse's stomach, so in Maxwell's case, the large quantity of Calcium he consumes daily via Alfalfa would far surpass that of a supplement containing the same. I cannot yet comment on it's efficacy, as I've just added it to my SmartPak's and won't receive the first month's supply until February 15th, but I will be sure to report back both on how it's working, and how Abler's Abprazole has done for Maxwell's treatment.

My second chart is a just for funsies one. I placed G.U.T side by side with SmartDigest Ultra. While SmartDigest Ultra is marketed as a digestive and colon aid (hind gut), some people might get confused and assume they are supporting their horse's stomach as well. This isn't the case unless you're feeding that combo supplement I mentioned earlier on, or some other combination of supplements. I placed these supplements side by side to ensure I wasn't missing something or repeating ingredients and wasting money.

It's the little things in life that get me most excited. This happens to be one. Look at how beautifully these two products compliment one another. What one lacks, the other makes up for. All for $2.40 a day, or roughly $70 a month. That's a great savings compared to SmartGI Ultra, which is currently $95 a month. Again, I realize there are more potent quantities of some of these beneficial ingredients in that product, however not every horse requires such a large dose, and obviously not everyone can handle a $95 a month supplement. $70 is way more reasonable, and leaves me the $25 a month I need to support my horse's joints with a product not offered by Smartpak.

Of course, I've not put this supplement into use, but I wanted to share some of it's information and I hope if you're as curious as I, that you stop back here to see my thoughts on it in a month or two, once Omeprazole treatment is over, and these products alone are working on my horse's digestive system.

What are your thoughts? What do you use to support your horse's gastrointestinal system?