the_jersey_lilly_2000
Well-known member
Today, Lil Lilly's Summer job employer called her from Baton Rouge LA and asked if we could go out to his horse ranch here and check on a horse that the care taker said was cut. Wanted us to decide whether or not to put him down. This is the horse that Lil Lilly was gonna take to the WBR Finals in Oklahoma this month but decided against it because he had such issues goin in the alley way.
We loaded up with a few vet supplies and headed out there. What we found was horrible. The care taker of the place had told the man that owns them that the accident happened yesterday. No way was this YESTERDAY!!!!!
this is what it looked like when we got there, after the makeshift bandage that the fella put on there was taken off......YUCK...and the smell was horrendous!!!
Lil Lilly set to work cleanin it up as best she could usin a water hose, a small brush, and a bottle of bedadine scrub. Got it fairly clean, and rewrapped it lightly just to keep dirt and stuff out of it while goin down the road in the trailer to the vets office. We called the owner and I just couldn't be the one to make the final decision as to put him down. I wanted an expert opinion on what could be done, or couldn't be done. So we loaded him up after callin in to the Equine Hospital that we used with her horse. Some awesome folks there for sure.
He banged the leg gettin into the trailer, and made it bleed, but that's a good sign that it's got good blood flow to the area.
Lady Doc cleanin it up.....man she really scrubbed it...with a brush..after givin him some bute in the vein of course and puttin a twitch on him.
She said that the wound was at least 3 or 4 days old, because of all the dried tissue that she had to remove with scissors. And yes, there is a small amount of bone exposed, so bone infection will be a concern for the next few weeks.
All clean and ready for a pressure bandage to try and get some of the swelling down so they can access just how much damage there really is.
First, some guaze soaked with saline and nolvasan solution packed into the deepest part of the wound, wet dry pack they call it, which when taken off tomorrow will peel away the dead tissue. It will stick to the bandages, they said that's the easiest way to get it off, and is alot like they do burn patients. Then, some really thick guaze wraps, layered with what looked like panty hose wrap, then topped off with really tight vet wrap. We'll Know more tomorrow after noon when they take it off what all they will be able to do for him, but they are optomistic as to this horse returnin to riding. Not probably barrel racing, but pleasure riding, and trail riding they said would be his limit.
The final wrap of Green vet wrap.
Ughhhh what a day.
We loaded up with a few vet supplies and headed out there. What we found was horrible. The care taker of the place had told the man that owns them that the accident happened yesterday. No way was this YESTERDAY!!!!!


this is what it looked like when we got there, after the makeshift bandage that the fella put on there was taken off......YUCK...and the smell was horrendous!!!
Lil Lilly set to work cleanin it up as best she could usin a water hose, a small brush, and a bottle of bedadine scrub. Got it fairly clean, and rewrapped it lightly just to keep dirt and stuff out of it while goin down the road in the trailer to the vets office. We called the owner and I just couldn't be the one to make the final decision as to put him down. I wanted an expert opinion on what could be done, or couldn't be done. So we loaded him up after callin in to the Equine Hospital that we used with her horse. Some awesome folks there for sure.
He banged the leg gettin into the trailer, and made it bleed, but that's a good sign that it's got good blood flow to the area.

Lady Doc cleanin it up.....man she really scrubbed it...with a brush..after givin him some bute in the vein of course and puttin a twitch on him.
She said that the wound was at least 3 or 4 days old, because of all the dried tissue that she had to remove with scissors. And yes, there is a small amount of bone exposed, so bone infection will be a concern for the next few weeks.

All clean and ready for a pressure bandage to try and get some of the swelling down so they can access just how much damage there really is.

First, some guaze soaked with saline and nolvasan solution packed into the deepest part of the wound, wet dry pack they call it, which when taken off tomorrow will peel away the dead tissue. It will stick to the bandages, they said that's the easiest way to get it off, and is alot like they do burn patients. Then, some really thick guaze wraps, layered with what looked like panty hose wrap, then topped off with really tight vet wrap. We'll Know more tomorrow after noon when they take it off what all they will be able to do for him, but they are optomistic as to this horse returnin to riding. Not probably barrel racing, but pleasure riding, and trail riding they said would be his limit.

The final wrap of Green vet wrap.
Ughhhh what a day.