Ben H
Well-known member
We had a horse foal out on Tuesday, she didn't clean right away and my wife called the Vet. She was always told it's a big problem if horses don't clean within 3 hours. I was always taught with cattle that you can cause more damage trying to remove it, and you treat it for being there, not to remove it.
I get home and the vet had her drugged up and the placenta removed. My wife asked him to explain the difference with horses and cattle, I wasn't too convinced. He said it's a difference in species, that horses can quickly get toxic and sometimes get laminitis (I understand that connection). Then he said she did have a little bit of a fever, 101.3. That didn't sound that high to me, so later I looked it up and that is in fact normal.
I really question these horse vets sometimes, too many drugs, way too much money. They often charge double what my cattle vet does for the same drugs.
I get home and the vet had her drugged up and the placenta removed. My wife asked him to explain the difference with horses and cattle, I wasn't too convinced. He said it's a difference in species, that horses can quickly get toxic and sometimes get laminitis (I understand that connection). Then he said she did have a little bit of a fever, 101.3. That didn't sound that high to me, so later I looked it up and that is in fact normal.
I really question these horse vets sometimes, too many drugs, way too much money. They often charge double what my cattle vet does for the same drugs.