Health

“Hast thou given the horse strength? hast thou clothed his neck with thunder? Canst thou make him afraid as a grasshopper? the glory of his nostrils is terrible. He paweth in the valley, and rejoiceth in his strength; he goeth on to meet the armed men. He mocketh at fear, and is not affrighted; neither turneth he back from the sword.” JOB 39:19-22

He heaves his front end up, flinging the cloth off his face, scattering all four humans. His legs collapse and he falls heavily to one side. He scrambles up, half-slithers across the lawn. We give him space but position ourselves carefully, to keep him out of the trees and pond. Then Erin gets a halter on him, and now we can give him support and direction. He rises to his feet again and this time he sways left, wobbles right, and then steadies himself with a wide stance. One hoof trembles. One blink. Two. An ear flick. His eye finds a focus, no longer glazed with panic. He exhales with force and we breathe a sigh of relief.

The posterior digital neurectomy (PDN) operation is one of the most common equine surgeries in the world. It’s a routine procedure that can be done in a ranch call, without having to transport the horse to a hospital and rig him up in slings and restraints.

(Note: I couldn’t find any explanations of the PDN procedure online, and certainly nothing from a layperson point of view. I am writing it out for anyone else who is researching what PDN is and whether to schedule it for their horse and will post it soon.)

But Rocky’s full name is Rockstar for a reason. He has never been an average, everyday kind of horse. He is extraordinarily intelligent, very sensitive, playful in his own subtle way. He thinks. A lot. And he is a survivor.

He has no trouble with sedatives other than his faster-than-light metabolizing of them so that they wear off too fast. But as we discovered yesterday, he has an idiosyncratic reaction to general anesthesia. Even though Appaloosas (and paints) are known for fighting off drugs faster than other breeds, Rocky’s reaction was extreme. The vet had to give him more frequent anesthesia boosters than any horse in the past 30 years of his practice. He even added a side order of valium. Even then, Rocky’s muscles never relaxed, and his body twitched and jerked as if in an unending seizure.

I got a battlefield education in how to keep 1200 pounds of should-be-completely-unconscious-but-does-not-seem-to-be prey animal down on his side. I’m keeping the details private as they affect people other than just me. Suffice it to say that it was an abnormally long and difficult example of what should have been simple.

But because of it, I have left my apprenticeship behind. I am now a journeyman horseman. I am now fully confident about my ability to make decisions about what is best for my horses, no longer automatically deferring to those I perceive as more experienced than I.

For hours, I crouched over Rocky’s poll, hands on his neck, leaning hard on him every time he moved his  front end. A horse uses its head and neck to swing himself up; it was my  job, as vet tech draftee, to keep that powerful fulcrum down.

They say your horse is your mirror. It’s even an English proverb: Show me your horse and I will tell you who you are.

I am 19 and scheduled for a routine umbilical hernia repair operation. My doctor hands me a valium to relax me before they wheel me in. But instead it makes me anxious, tense, jittery. I can’t keep still. I have full-body spasms when I try to sit down, so I pace, four strides each way. Eventually they strap me on a gurney, then transfer me to a table and strap down my wrists. I try to breathe and there’s a prick for the IV and then I spiral down and it’s dark. But suddenly there’s an excruciating pain right in the hernia and I can feel the surgeon’s hands inside me and I hear him saying “don’t let her cross her legs” and someone straps my ankles wide and they can’t hear me screaming that I am awake, I should not be awake, I should not have his voice booming in my ears, his fingers pressing in my guts.

I held Rocky down and I breathed for us both, deep into my belly, breathed like my wellness trainer is teaching me. Connect to the breath and you cannot get trapped in future or past. (If your mind has run off, you’ve stopped breathing properly.)

I watched Rocky’s  nostrils and imagined him slowing his breath to my rhythm, grounding himself through me even as I grounded myself through my breath. This steadied me, although after one huge spasm in which Rocky almost rolled onto his belly, I choked with tension  and tears, and the resulting snot inhibited my airflow.

We got through it. Rocky returned from anesthesia at a gallop instead of a sensible amble and so he ended up with some skinned knees, which the vet painstakingly cleaned and treated with antibiotics, just to be on the safe side.

Obviously, we’ll have no more field surgeries, no matter how routine and simple.  (“Clinics are great, but give me a drafty barn and equine surgery anytime, that’s where I live,” I once overheard the vet say to another owner.) Should Rocky ever need another operation, it will be at the hospital, in a sling.

Erin has also sworn off such things, even though Rocky’s reaction is so rare and had the vet not taken off his halter to make his head more comfortable, we’d have been able to help Rocky even though he tried to stand too soon. Any other horse would have come to much more slowly, giving us time to halter and help him.

By dinnertime, we had Rock settled in a deeply bedded stall, munching away on grass hay, drinking water, peeing and pooping like normal, a bit woozy but steady on his feet. He has to be cooped up for a week before he can be hand-walked, but he can stick his head outside and we put Salsa in the stall next to him. Salsa hangs out in the run where Rocky can see him and both are taking comfort in the proximity. This morning, Rocky licked my hand, and then put his head on my shoulder for a moment before returning to his hay net.

A special thank you for your supportive comments in the “pre surgery” post. I had your words with me during the unexpectedly dramatic day.

Categories: Health, Learning Experience | 8 Comments

And the sun comes out

Today is the third day of sunshine, blue skies, temperatures above 60 F, and holiday from work. I’m sitting on the rubber mats in Salsa’s paddock while he stands hipshot soaking up warmth and occasionally scratching his face on his feed tub.

Let me take a pic with my phone and post it here:

In just three days of relaxed “being outside with horses,” so much has happened. I still have video to cut together from these past few nonbloggy weeks, but for right now, words are the only tool I have to capture the brilliance of today.

I let Rocky loose on the ranch to wander around and graze while I visited with Danielle and Tony, who brought their Mustang up to live with us for a while. Danielle and Tony used to live here and Danielle was the ranch caretaker, and they know Rocky pretty well. Both Danielle and Tony commented on Rocky’s confident exploration of the nooks and crannies of the property.

He walked between a pen and my backyard fence without a problem — a squeeze about 20 feet long and 2.5 feet wide, with one fence about six feet tall and the other about ten feet. He drove the donkeys around the loop, even ducking under a tree while hopping over a tarp-covered pile of debris. He played cutting horse and kept the donkeys out of his open pen, which still had hay in it. He trotted the length of the driveway, where he used to have trouble walking in his bare feet. He grazed, rested, wandered, met Kessler the Mustang through the arena fence, and didn’t even flinch when Erin and Kim showed up in the big truck with the camper shell attached. They drove up the lane right past where he stood in the margins and he just looked casually in their direction.

Salsa has just in the past few days trusted me enough to lean into my fingers when I scratch the base of his mane, and even to take steps to stay with me when I thought I was done. He makes camel faces and last night, for the first time, trusted me to keep Riley away when she wanted to drive him off. It’s hard to keep Riley away as she is an American Spotted Draft and a bossy boss mare; the combination of physical size and space bubble is nothing short of awe-inspiring. I had a halter and lead in my hand and I flapped it at her and clucked, every time she stepped past the treeline, and that worked. When I later went to scratch her, she kicked up her heels, squealed, and trotted away, then glared back at me to make sure I got the point, before ambling back to be petted.

Rock no longer flinches when I press the abscess bruise, and he puts his weight on it and rests the other foot, so I think that means I should get to sit on him soon. I hope this means that the pain in MY right hind heel will go away too.

I was thinking this weekend how different our relationship might be if I could actually just get on him, spontaneously, whenever. Without the formality of walking him to a fence or a mounting block — and for bareback it has to be a high block. To be able to grab mane and swing up at any time, just grazing or resting or wherever, making the various configurations of our two bodies become mundane. Me sitting up, lying back, crossing one leg up, etc. Standing and walking. No halter or anything, just up there, informally. As it is, we are either on the ground or there’s a whole Production that has to go into riding.

I did climb on the arena fence yesterday saying in my Silly Voice “you WANT me to ride you, you know you do, you’re going to come over here and line yourself up, I know you want me to ride,” and then he DID. Just for a moment, before he backed up a few steps to put his nose on my stomach. But he had to walk several steps and do a 180 turn and align his left side with the fence and he did! I was astonished and laughing. I made no move to swing a leg over and just enjoyed that he pretended to offer. I don’t think it was a real offer as he didn’t hold still very long, nor did he look at me expectantly.  But he did want to be near me and was neither annoyed nor afraid when I climbed up there and hovered above him.

I have to get back outside and do the evening ranch hand shift. I’ve been trying to get outside, even if not “doing anything” out there, just watching the horses — and learning, every time I pay attention, new nuances of language, form, athleticism.

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