Monthly Archives: July 2012

Watch Live Olympic Streaming Video

 NBC - 2012 Summer Olympics

 

http://www.nbcolympics.com/online-listings/sport=equestrian/day=july-28/index.html

Olympic Equestrian Events Schedule

via Olympic Equestrian Events Schedule.

Snakebite! – Quarter Horse News – The News Magazine of the Performance Horse Industry

snakebite

For the most part, Diamondback rattlesnakes are the primary cause of venomous snakebites in the Southwestern U.S., with Copperheads and Moccasins coming in a distant second and third, respectively. The type of snake, in my opinion, is not as important as the severity of the bite. The only time I have actually seen the snake that bit the horse I was called to look at it was still in the stall when I went in to examine it! No one bothered to check that out before calling me, and I have since learned my lesson. That being said, I’m sure young, small snakesbite as many horses as large, older ones do. But based off human medicine where most snakes are positively identified, there is some variance in the severity of the bite based solely on how much venom was injected by the snake, not the size.

Since horses do not get bit at the vet clinic, here are a few things you should have thought out and prepared for in the unfortunate case your horse is bitten. Almost all snakebites with horses occur on their nose, and subsequently the most immediate complication becomes whether or not the nasal passages swell shut. Horses cannot breathe well through their mouths alone, and if you ever see one doing it they are fixing to die, so remember that. As bad as snake venom is, it is rarely fatal in horses due to the relative proportions of venom versus the size. Therefore, the most important thing you can do is to maintain a good airway through the nostrils to prevent your horse from suffocating before emergency treatment can be started by a veterinarian. Any way you can do this is the right way. Cut off pieces of garden hoses, syringe cases, or anything else you can find that is round and about 1 inch in diameter and about 5-6 inches long. The horse may not appreciate it at the time, but having sections of tubing stuck up his nose will save his life. Step 2 is to get some type of anti-inflammatory in them. Most horsemen will have Banamine® handy and the real cool ones will have some dexamethasone also. Giving one or both of them as soon as possible will not reverse the toxin, but will mitigate some effects of it.

via Snakebite! – Quarter Horse News – The News Magazine of the Performance Horse Industry.

 

Another Quick Tip: Using a Sponge in a Plastic Bag For an Ice Pack

The Horse | Horse Owners Challenged by Heat, Drought

Earlier this summer, triple digit temperatures had horse owners and their animals sweltering. Now owners remain hot under the collar as they worry about hay and feed availability with the persistent heat and ongoing drought.

In late June and early July temperatures rose to 100 degrees and higher in the Midwest, the Tennessee Valley, Kentucky, and elsewhere. Though rain began to fall in some areas in the Midwest since then, the National Weather Service Climate Prediction Center of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) sees little long-term relief. On July 16 NOAA reported that drought conditions continue to increase in both extent and intensity across much of the Ohio and Tennessee Valleys, the Corn Belt region, the middle and lower Mississippi Valley, and much of the Great Plains.

Brian Fuchs, spokesman for the National Drought Mitigation Center, said 60% of the lower 48 states are under drought conditions. What’s more, he said, the combined hot and dry conditions have already taken a toll on corn and hay crops and have left pastures parched.

“Pastures that got good (rain) soakings in the spring are brown and have gone dormant,” Fuchs said. “It’s doubtful that hay producers will get a third cut, and the corn crop will be reduced.”

That’s not news to Frank Bowman, executive director of the Horseman’s Council of Illinois. According to Bowman, the Illinois corn crop has already failed due to high heat and scant rain. Meanwhile, hay fields and pastures are rapidly turning brown, he said, and the combination makes for high feed and hay prices for horse owners.

“Last year we (in Illinois) were sending hay to Texas,” Bowman said. “Now, people who don’t already have their hay up will have a hard time finding any.”

Conditions are a bit better in south central Kentucky where several days of rain brought some relief. But Wayne County barn operator Kari Sullivan says she can only hope to get another cutting of hay.

“The rain made everything look like spring again, but we’re still not sure we’ll get more hay in,” Sullivan said. “Other counties didn’t get the rain we did and they’re really worried.”

Fuchs agrees there’s reason to worry: “There may be small rain storms throughout the drought area, but it’s doubtful that they will have any real effect. It does not look like either the heat or the drought will end soon.”

When forage is expected to remain in short supply, Alessandra Pellegrini-Masini, DVM, PhD, Dipl. ACVIM, clinical assistant professor of large animal internal medicine at the University of Georgia, previously told The Horse that horse owners should consider making adjustments. She suggests they supplement their animals’ diets with Dengie Hay, a commercially produced heat-dried, short cut grass and alfalfa product that provides calories a

The Horse | Texas A&M Veterinarian Offers Equine Deworming Suggestions

Deworming treatments are often a regular component of horse health maintenance, but some horse owners might not know the best schedule for their horse. While deworming regimens vary by region, there are some guidelines for owners to follow as they work with their veterinarians on a proper deworming schedule.

Thomas Craig, DVM, MS, PhD, professor at Texas A&M University College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences (CVM), who specializes in epidemiology and the control of internal parasites in equines and grazing animals, offered some insight into deworming. Craig explained that in a given population of horses, about 20% will have 80% of the total internal parasites of the herd.

Another basic guideline is that deworming should be based on the age of the horse. There is a drastic difference in the deworming needs of a foal (less than a year old) and an adult horse.

“What’s effective in adults may not be effective in foals,” Craig said.

Craig suggested deworming foals for the first time at two months of age. Parascaris equorum are of particular concern at this age.

“I recommend using fenbendazole, a broad spectrum benzimidazole anthelmintic… or a pyrantel dewormer … for foals two months old,” Craig said.

As the foal matures, it is recommended that the same treatment be used at four and six months of age. When the foal reaches a year old, Craig suggested using an ivermectin or moxidectin treatment for deworming.

When worming adult horses (older than one year), the approach changes considerably. The most dangerous parasitic threat to horses are small strongyles, which are present in most horses. Craig recommended testing mature horses through fecal samples to determine the number and types of parasitic eggs in the horse’s digestive system.

via The Horse | Texas A&M Veterinarian Offers Equine Deworming Suggestions.

via The Horse | Texas A&M Veterinarian Offers Equine Deworming Suggestions.

No Country For Old Horses? Senate considers horse slaughter – News Blog – The Austin Chronicle

Horses awaiting slaughter at the now-closed Dallas Crown plant in Kaufman

When the Dallas Crown Inc. horse slaughter plant operated in Kaufman, plant operators bought the small North Texas city a large American flag to place outside the American Legion Hall. In retrospect, that flag did nothing but to make “a mockery of our values,” former Kaufman mayor Paula Bacon told the Texas Senate Committee on Agriculture & Rural Affairs.

It would be better, she said, to have a “lead-smelting plant and sex-oriented businesses up and down” a city’s main drag than it would to have a horse slaughtering facility in any Texas town. Bacon was among many who came out to a four-hour meeting at the Capitol to testify and show their opposition to the possible resumption of horse slaughtering in Texas – for meat that is then primarily shipped to Europe and Japan for human consumption – a practice that has been banned in the state since 1949.

In Kaufman, which was home to one of three U.S. slaughterhouses when the industry was effectively shuttered in 2007 (the others were in Fort Worth and in Dekalb, Ill.), the industry brought with it nothing positive, Bacon testified; crime was high while the plant operated there, she noted, and the burden the plant placed on the city’s environmental infrastructure, including on its water treatment facility, was enormous. Indeed, during the mid-Eighties, the plant was shuttered for nearly a year because neither the plant nor the city’s water treatment facility was able to process the blood from the slaughtered horses, which was full of antibiotics. “Literally, blood was coming up through the streets,” she testified, “and into people’s bathtubs.” In a single 19-month period, she said, the Dallas Crown plant was “out of compliance” 487 times, racking up 23 local citations that would have cost the company nearly $1 million; they never did pay up, she said. When the plant finally shut down its operations, the city of Kaufman was able to breathe a collective sigh of relief.

via No Country For Old Horses? Senate considers horse slaughter – News Blog – The Austin Chronicle.

via No Country For Old Horses? Senate considers horse slaughter – News Blog – The Austin Chronicle.

US Drought Monitor

http://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/

US Drought Monitor, July 10, 2012

The Horse Clones Are Coming : BuzzFeed

In 2009, Tailor Fit had a problem — or, more accurately, his owners did. He had a great lineage, two AQHA championships behind him and, under other circumstances, he would have had a lucrative string of stud fees ahead of him. But like most champion quarter horses, Tailor Fit was a gelding and couldn’t breed — so his owners lost out on a wealth of stud fees and anyone who wanted to breed towards a better quarter horse was out of luck. Unless, of course, they were into cloning.At the time, Blake Russell was three years into his tenure at Viagen, a livestock cloning company. He was also a racing fan, so when Tailor Fit caught his eye, he was able to collect a tissue sample and work up an exact clone. The resulting horse was christened Pure Tailor Fit, an ungelded replica of the original, ready to be replicated whenever the need might arise.

via The Horse Clones Are Coming.

 

Two more West Nile cases confirmed in county | Denton Local News – News for Denton, Texas – The Denton Record-Chronicle – Denton Record-Chronicle

Two more cases of West Nile virus have been confirmed in Denton County, this time inside the city limits of Denton.

County health department officials confirmed the cases last week. City officials soon will be spraying pesticide to ward off the pests, while health officials encourage people to heed their tips to protect themselves from mosquito exposure.

“We know this is very early for the disease in our county. Usually we’ll start taking cases in July or August,” said Sarah McKinney, Denton County Health Department spokeswoman.

A case of the virus was confirmed in Denton County in late May. Of the three cases, one was confirmed to be West Nile fever while the other two were the more serious neuro-invasive disease. Two of the patients were hospitalized but have since been discharged and one from last week’s cases remains in a hospital, she said.

via Two more West Nile cases confirmed in county | Denton Local News – News for Denton, Texas – The Denton Record-Chronicle – Denton Record-Chronicle.