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20/07/2024

The 2024 Nutrena AQHA and Adequan Select World Championship Shows are November 1-20 in Oklahoma City.

16/07/2024

Products Archive | Toltrazuril Shop

14/07/2024
14/07/2024

"New Home Syndrome"🤓

I am coining this term to bring recognition, respect, and understanding to what happens to horses when they move homes. This situation involves removing them from an environment and set of routines they have become familiar with, and placing them somewhere completely different with new people and different ways of doing things.

Why call it a syndrome?

Well, really it is! A syndrome is a term used to describe a set of symptoms that consistently occur together and can be tied to certain factors such as infections, genetic predispositions, conditions, or environmental influences. It is also used when the exact cause of the symptoms is not fully understood or when it is not connected with a well-defined disease. In this case, "New Home Syndrome" is connected to a horse being placed in a new home where its entire world changes, leading to psychological and physiological impacts. While it might be transient, the ramifications can be significant for both the horse and anyone handling or riding it.

Let me explain...

Think about how good it feels to get home after a busy day. How comfortable your favourite clothes are, how well you sleep in your own bed compared to a strange bed, and how you can really relax at home. This is because home is safe and familiar. At home, the part of you that keeps an eye out for potential danger turns down to a low setting. It does this because home is your safe place (and if it is not, this blog will also explain why a lack of a safe place is detrimental).

Therefore, the first symptom of horses experiencing "New Home Syndrome" is being unsettled, prone to anxiety, or difficult behaviour. If you have owned them before you moved them, you struggle to recognise your horse, feeling as if your horse has been replaced by a frustrating version. If the horse is new to you, you might wonder if you were conned, if the horse was drugged when you rode it, or if you were lied to about the horse's true nature.

A horse with "New Home Syndrome" will be a stressed version of itself, on high alert, with a drastically reduced ability to cope. Horses don't handle change like humans do. If you appreciate the comfort of your own home and how you can relax there, you should be able to understand what the horse is experiencing.

Respecting that horses interpret and process their environments differently from us helps in understanding why your horse is being frustrating and recognising that there is a good chance you were not lied to or that the horse was not drugged.

Horses have survived through evolution by being highly aware of their environments. Change is a significant challenge for them because they notice the slightest differences, not just visually but also through sound, smell, feel, and other senses. Humans generalise and categorise, making it easy for us to navigate familiar environments like shopping centres. Horses do not generalise in the same way; everything new is different to them, and they need proof of safety before they can habituate and feel secure. When their entire world changes, it is deeply stressful.

They struggle to sleep until they feel safe, leading to sleep deprivation and increased difficulty.

But there is more...

Not only do you find comfort in your home environment and your nervous system downregulates, but you also find comfort in routines. Routines are habits, and habits are easy. When a routine changes or something has to be navigated differently, things get difficult. For example, my local supermarket is undergoing renovations. After four years of shopping there, it is extremely frustrating to have to work out where everything is now. Every day it gets moved due to the store being refitted section by section. This annoyance is shared by other shoppers and even the staff.

So, consider the horse. Not only are they confronted with the challenge of figuring out whether they are safe in all aspects of their new home while being sleep deprived, but every single routine and encounter is different. Then, their owner or new owner starts getting critical and concerned because the horse suddenly seems untrained or difficult. The horse they thought they owned or bought is not meeting their expectations, leading to conflict, resistance, explosiveness, hypersensitivity, and frustration.

The horse acts as if it knows little because it is stressed and because the routines and habits it has learned have disappeared. If you are a new human for the horse, you feel, move, and communicate differently from what it is used to. The way you hold the reins, your body movements in the saddle, the position of your leg – every single routine of communication between horse and person is now different. I explain to people that when you get a new horse, you have to imprint yourself and your way of communicating onto the horse. You have to introduce yourself and take the time to spell out your cues so that they get to know you.

Therefore, when you move a horse to a new home or get a new horse, your horse will go through a phase called "New Home Syndrome," and it will be significant for them. Appreciating this helps them get through it because they are incredible and can succeed. The more you understand and help the horse learn it is safe in its new environment and navigate the new routines and habits you introduce, the faster "New Home Syndrome" will pass.
"New Home Syndrome" will be prevalent in a horse’s life until they have learned to trust the safety of the environment (and all that entails) and the humans they meet and interact with. With strategic and understanding approaches, this may take weeks, and their nervous systems will start downgrading their high alert status. However, for some horses, it can take a couple of years to fully feel at ease in their new home.

So, next time you move your horse or acquire a new horse and it starts behaving erratically or being difficult, it is not being "stupid", you might not have been lied to or the horse "drugged" - your horse is just experiencing an episode of understandable "New Home Syndrome." And you can help this.❤

I would be grateful if you could please share, this reality for horses needs to be better appreciated ❤
‼️When I say SHARE that does not mean plagiarise my work…it is seriously not cool to copy and paste these words and make out you have written it yourself‼️

07/07/2024
07/07/2024

đź“Ł HIRING! đź“Ł

We are looking for a dedicated individual to join our team. Duties include but are not limited to: saddling, grooming, warming up horses, bathing, braiding manes, overall barn organization, turning out, and possibly traveling to shows.

Housing is provided onsite, pay is based on experience.

This is a great opportunity to learn in a program focused on developing reiners and reined cowhorses.

Please call 951-795-5885 for more information.

05/07/2024

EPM can manifest in different ways. I've sometimes heard it described as "he feels like he's wearing moon boots," "he just started flinging his legs around," "she's developed a tilt," or "he’s spooky about things on the ground or in the bushes."

EPM attacks the nerves, meaning they no longer function correctly, and the information they are supposed to transmit about where the body is in space, where "up" is, how things feel and the surface they are moving on is not being conveyed accurately.

Massage therapy can stimulate nerve growth, potentially improving recovery. By increasing blood flow, massage helps deliver essential nutrients and oxygen to damaged tissues. It also stimulates growth factors, increases cellular energy for healing, and helps reduce inflammation. By doing so, massage promotes healing and encourages the regeneration of nerve fibers.

Massage can even enhance neural plasticity, the ability of the nervous system to adapt and reorganize, further aiding in the recovery of nerve function and overall healing.

Link to more info in the comments

05/07/2024
04/07/2024
You know how you've been meaning to replace your dog's lost ID tags? Drat! And now your neighborhood sounds like a war z...
01/07/2024

You know how you've been meaning to replace your dog's lost ID tags? Drat! And now your neighborhood sounds like a war zone and your dog is going nuts. Or maybe it's your neighbor who forgot, and you're staring out the window wondering how long before his dog freaks out and jets over the fence and into the night in a blind panic...

Don't let that happen. Do This: Open your junk drawer, dig out a sharpie and write phone numbers on your dog's collar and offer to do your neighbors' dogs' collars.

Then, before the BOOMS get bad, bring your dogs inside, close the drapes, turn up your television to muffle the sound, laugh, play silly games with your dog to distract him, bake something that smells irresistible, give'em stuffed kongs to soothe their brains.

29/06/2024

TOO HOT TO FUNCTION: Today our breed expert Carol Price looks at the dangers dogs face from overheating – and how to prevent heatstroke in your own dog this summer.

When summer arrives and the weather warms up, it is natural for us to want to spend more time out with our dogs, while not always realising the risks higher temperatures can pose for them. Dogs, in general, manage heat less well than us because they have fewer sweat glands and mostly lose heat from their mouths through panting. Plus their inner body temperatures are already slightly higher than ours. (A normal human body temperature is between 97.6 - 99.6 Fahrenheit when a dog's is between 101-102.5 F).

Moreover once a dog's temperature rises to 104 F or more it begins to be in serious trouble of heatstroke, collapse and even organ failure and possible death. And this can all happen frighteningly fast. Humidity as well as heat can also be particularly dangerous to dogs.

Despite this reality, however, the number of people I still see out in hot weather making their dogs chase after balls or - my own personal horror – forcing them to run after them on hot tarmac while they themselves are running, or on bikes – is still too depressingly high. As well as being unbelievably thoughtless and inconsiderate. Ignorance is possibly mostly at the heart of this, as well as a dangerous human misconception that a dog is experiencing, or coping with, heat in much the same way that they are. So we really need to realise that they are not.

PREVENTION
Key things to do when the weather hots up is to always walk your dog at cooler times such as very early in the morning or later in the evening. And cut out all the more active stuff like ball chasing. With elderly dogs, and those with heart or breathing issues it may be best not to exercise them at all in higher temperatures.

Black coated dogs, like Border collies, naturally absorb more heat and thus may find hotter weather more uncomfortable, especially if they are not more acclimatised to it. During the hotter parts of the day your dog also needs to rest in the shade, or a cooler room (with a fan or air con), to lessen as much strain as possible on their heart rate and metabolism.

Plenty of cool fresh drinking water should also always be available to them. There are also special cooling mats or jackets you can now buy for dogs.

Under NO circumstances leave dogs in a car or other vehicle in hotter or even just warmer weather - which can so often prove to be a deathtrap for them. Even in overcast weather, or with the windows open, cars can still heat up frighteningly fast inside. Also never leave any dog anywhere outside where they do not have ready access to shade and cool water.

HEATSTROKE – THE EARLIEST SIGNS
Heatstroke is one of those conditions in dogs that begins with milder symptoms – i.e. excess panting, greater difficulty breathing, lethargy. Then moves on to more serious ones – like drooling, foaming at the mouth, shaking, vomiting/diarrhoea, pale or bright red gums – before finally escalating into seizures or collapse and loss of consciousness. And you must be mindful of how rapidly one set of symptoms can progress to another without more urgent and immediate intervention to cool your dog down again. (More on how to do this a bit later).

Every day in warmer weather, keep remembering how utterly fragile a dog's heat regulation mechanisms can be, and it may not take much in the way of excess exertion during the heat to trigger a crisis whereby they are no longer able to sufficiently cool down again. Be aware too that even if dogs are playing or swimming in rivers, paddling pools or the sea in warmer weather, the excess internal heat they are generating from such exertion may still raise their overall temperature too high for the cooler temperature of the water to compensate for.

Ultimately it does neither humans nor dogs any harm to lower their normal activity levels in response to more extreme temperatures. It really is the safest thing to do. Meanwhile the link below is really helpful in outlining more about over-heating in dogs, what to do if it happens in your own dog, and also more tips on keeping dogs cooler:
https://www.pdsa.org.uk/pet-help-and-advice/pet-health-hub/conditions/heatstroke-in-dogs?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTAAAR3gAm_3rlLVIQDYMKpkyei2ZHVivbxpVPUeNt1N_b1BhVJnCdEPusQwC80_aem_xFnvBKtftmzuLG3eDcApew
All text © Carol Price/Collieology 2024

22/06/2024
22/06/2024
16/06/2024

New research indicates that the bone-derived hormone osteocalcin, not adrenaline, drives the fight or flight response. When the brain recognizes danger, it instructs the skeleton to release osteocalcin into the bloodstream, preparing the body to react swiftly.

Learn more interesting facts about the equine skeleton here - https://koperequine.com/the-skeleton-foundation-of-the-body/

15/06/2024

Fibrotic myopathy is a type of mechanical lameness that occurs when abnormal scar (fibrotic) tissue forms in the muscle. Unlike normal muscle fibers, scar tissue is inelastic and can restrict the muscle’s natural elasticity, altering its function. Ossifying myopathy is a related but distinct condition.

Learn more about them both here - Fibrotic Myopathy: A Comprehensive Guide Plus Tips for Prevention and Recovery - https://koperequine.com/fibrotic-myopathy-a-comprehensive-guide-plus-tips-for-prevention-and-recovery/

Happy Flag Day
15/06/2024

Happy Flag Day

14/06/2024

The TQHA The Classic showbill is now available. Join us in Ft Worth. The Texas Cash is back and NEW this year will be a welcome opportunity for the non-AQHA horses and a Dual/Approved option of all of these classes too. Fence exhibitors - please support the show with a full slate of fence classes. https://www.anequineproduction.com/the-classic-tqha

14/06/2024

On June 8th, 2024, a heart-wrenching barn fire claimed the lives of over 70 cherished horses, leaving devastation in its wake. Among those profoundly affected are Brandon & Cathy Brant, his dedicated team, Eric Priest and his team.

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