One would think that a horse would prefer drinking out of a clean water trough rather than out of a muddy puddle if it had the choice. But, you are wrong. After a rain, horses seem to enjoy the taste of the fresh water that accumulates in shallow puddles better than the large amount of stale H2O sitting in their regular troughs. In the wild, horses create their own mudholes by pawing at[...]
Frankfurt International Airport Animal Lounge Wouldn't you like a transatlantic flight which included good food, your own cubicle for rest and even medical care? You might also include a drive to the airport and boarding privately. Each year Frankfurt Airport handles 110 million (80 million of those being ornamental fish) animals in its [...]
Kentucky Equine Research tells us that when horses are eating hay they produce saliva. This causes more intake of water. If this fluid in the gut is prior to the feeding of grain than the grain will pass through the stomach rapidly and into the gut. Fermentation of grain in the hind gut can lead to such problems as colic. Therefore if hay is offered several hours after grain [...]
Scratches, mud fever, pastern dermatitis on pink pigment What do you call it in your part of the country? It is also called dew poisoning, grease heel or greasy heel. But it is the same condition which is caused by a mixture of bacteria and in some cases fungal organisms. The eastern US has had an unusually wet summer giving this disease the conditions to thrive on the [...]
Lawsuit Filed to Stop Sale of Wild Horses at Slaughter Auction on Saturday Posted on August 16, 2013 at 12:16 PM on www.wildhorsepreservation.org Wild Horse & Conservation Groups Allege Feds Failed to Protect Wild Horses in Tribal Roundup; 467 Horses Await Fate at Slaughter Auction "Reno, Nevada (August 16, 2013) . . . A coalition of wild horse advocacy and [...]
Botulism Beware By Jess Hallas-Kilcoyne Commonly found in soil, decaying animal carcasses, and, sometimes, decaying plant material, Clostridium botulinum is the bacterium responsible for producing the toxins that cause botulism. These powerful toxins prevent the release of neurotransmitters that [...]
ARE THE WILD HORSES A HERITAGE It is an interesting question. Should the wild horses be declared a heritage specie as opposed to an invasive specie? It was originally thought that perhaps they were brought by settlers or armies. But if they are reintroduced native then they can be considered to be heritage species and should not be slaughtered. This is the premise of the Canadian [...]
"Screens for barns," a word that most people are telling Horse Fly Net they use when doing a Google search for their stable or run-in-sheds. Why not? Screening is the same technique we use to protect our own homes from the multitude of flying insects which follow the light at night and enter our homes. But, Horse Fly Nets are more than just a barrier against the aggravation of flying insects. [...]
Sweet Itch photo from Lingfield Equine Vets "Sweet itch in horses, ponies and donkeys is an allergic response to the saliva in the bite of the Culicoides midge (gnat, no-see-um, punky) and to a lesser degree the black fly(Simulium Equinum), horn fly and stable fly which gives rise to intense itching" says Stephen Ashdown. Gnat Recently, one of our customers [...]
An unknown author once said, and I am quoting, "One can get in a car and see what man has made. One must get on a horse to see what God has made."
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