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Well, the deed is done...little Equinox has been gelded. It was a brief and rather graphically low-tech operation, but the vet was skillful and 2 days later, the poor little guy is a bit swollen, but healing on schedule. Gentle readers of the male persuasion in particular, you may wish never to witness this procedure.
Incidentally, I guess my colt training doesn't completely suck this time 'round, at least by comparison to some. I thought I was in 'remedial fix-your-screw-up' land when I taught him to wear a halter, lead and tie only as a wild and crazy 6 month old (and I still do, but hey, I more or less fixed it). When I made the appointment, the receptionist asked me if "the colt was broke." After I blinked confusedly at the telephone and responded with something like, 'uh, he's not broke to ride since he's only a yearling, but he does tie, lead and stand still,' she decided that she only needed to send the one vet. He called half an hour later with the same question.
Eqx's behavior as I led him to the place where the vet wanted to operate was not what I'd call exemplary control of one's colt, but I thought he was pretty decent. Still, the vet told me he'd been really good and that "most yearlings are assholes." Go me, I may at least have semi-competently trained my horse.
Weirdly, the vet also told me to longue him (horse moves in circles around trainer on end of long lead) at day 4+ because moving helps the swelling go down. I don't plan to train Eqx to longue until he's 2 and I'm sure his knees are fused; I guess the QH/TB people who start colts so young must begin groundwork before 2? That just seems so risky. Anyway, vet said that leading him around the pasture is an acceptable alternative, so I'm doing that.
Incidentally, I guess my colt training doesn't completely suck this time 'round, at least by comparison to some. I thought I was in 'remedial fix-your-screw-up' land when I taught him to wear a halter, lead and tie only as a wild and crazy 6 month old (and I still do, but hey, I more or less fixed it). When I made the appointment, the receptionist asked me if "the colt was broke." After I blinked confusedly at the telephone and responded with something like, 'uh, he's not broke to ride since he's only a yearling, but he does tie, lead and stand still,' she decided that she only needed to send the one vet. He called half an hour later with the same question.
Eqx's behavior as I led him to the place where the vet wanted to operate was not what I'd call exemplary control of one's colt, but I thought he was pretty decent. Still, the vet told me he'd been really good and that "most yearlings are assholes." Go me, I may at least have semi-competently trained my horse.
Weirdly, the vet also told me to longue him (horse moves in circles around trainer on end of long lead) at day 4+ because moving helps the swelling go down. I don't plan to train Eqx to longue until he's 2 and I'm sure his knees are fused; I guess the QH/TB people who start colts so young must begin groundwork before 2? That just seems so risky. Anyway, vet said that leading him around the pasture is an acceptable alternative, so I'm doing that.
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Date: 2010-06-27 03:06 am (UTC)Trainers that start their young horses too early really make me upset... I haven't ridden in a LONG time, but the last place I rode at regularly had a young Belgian Warmblood colt (maybe 8-10 mos old?). Beautiful mover in the field, great natural stride - and then they started doing some kind of crazy training with him before his yearling appearance at the keuring, to get him to put more muscle on and look like he had better sport-horse potential. I don't think they were longing him, but they led and jogged him all over the place all weekend when I was there, and it sounded like he was being 'worked out' during the week the same. That's about the time I stopped riding there, although it was for other reasons than overdoing it with the colt.