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Standing in Mud for Hours

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  • Standing in Mud for Hours

    Our barn paddocks have turned to mud with the spring melt and I'm worried about my horse's feet and heels, as he's out for half a day walking around in it.

    Anyone else in the same situation? What do you do to protect your horse's feet and heels? We unfortunately don't have alternative paddocks.

  • #2
    Your horse might have to stay inside longer during the day. Some people reset to hand walking their horses. Sorry about the tough situation.
    You know, everybody thinks we found
    this broken-down horse and fixed him,
    but we didn't. He fixed us. Every one of us.

    Comment


    • #3
      Well I hate to admit that I have the same situation. My horses have been in it for months already here. (Except for short spurts when my fields were dry enough as not to get murdered.) I have been fortunate in that with regular brushing and washing w/Betadine I haven't had any problems except my frustration. Made me actually want to keep them inside like big show barns!

      But I too look forward to hearing how others are dealing with it.

      On the bright side I have finally found someone to come out and we will be putting in a drainage ditch to prevent runoff from our driveway and scraping and changing the type of footing in the sacrifice area.

      Comment


      • #4
        Sometimes mud just can't be avoided. As long as my horse isn't having issues like thrush or keeping shoes on, I just try to make sure they get cleaned up once a day and inside overnight so the feet can dry out. I also use Keratex hoof hardener and hoof gel for any of mine that are in the mud. And like someone said, scrubbing the legs with betadine to keep mud fever/scratches from starting. Then drying them completely before putting away as just hosing off and putting in the stall will get it going too.

        Comment


        • #5
          I also have a few horses standing in mud. Usually it is not a problem, but if they begin to have an issue, I coat them up with desitin. I have had to do this to one horse in five years, so again, usually it is not a problem.

          Comment


          • #6
            I feel your pain. And I live in my muck boots when at the barn. In worst case scenarios, you put your foot down, hold onto the calf rim, pull it out and move that foot forward, repeat.
            www.specialhorses.org
            a 501(c)3 organization helping 501(c)3 equine rescues

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            • #7
              You know they are built to stand in mud part of the year... your horse is only in it for half the day and then gets to dry out. Don't worry. It will be fine. Brush or wash the mud off as often as you can, but I don't think you need to panic if you can't do it daily so long as you do it several days a week.

              Comment


              • #8
                I try to rinse off their legs as often as I can to help take the "buildup" off. Other than that, there isn't much you can do. Mine can get out of the mud by moving to an "upward" part of their pens, but still has to get in nastyness to get out the gate and to get to the waterers.

                My barn is working on some drainage issues right now, and will be reconfiguring their pens in the next few months. Mare's pen will be a bit smaller but the drainage should improve which makes up for it. Right now, Boy is inside because of some wire cuts that mean he cannot be in mud at all.
                A proud friend of bar.ka.

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                • #9
                  Muck Itch sprayed regularly seems to repel the mud. Thrush Buster once a week (maybe more if it's really bad).

                  DuraSole for soft soles.

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                  • #10
                    If he's just out for half a day, he should be fine. I wouldn't worry.
                    Jigga:
                    Why must you chastise my brilliant idea with facts and logic? **picks up toys (and wine) and goes home**

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                    • #11
                      I suppose we could start draining all of Missouri, and direct all subsequent rainstorms elsewhere....
                      www.specialhorses.org
                      a 501(c)3 organization helping 501(c)3 equine rescues

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        My horse's paddock is half mud up to his fetlocks and half dry/super over grazed grass and every time I come to the barn he is standing in the muddy portion. By choice. As a result I tend not to worry about it. I just squirt a little thrushbuster in his feet every now and then when I groom him. I have also been smearing some corona on one of his heels that has a cut to keep the mud out and that seems to work pretty well too, if you did want to try to add a protective layer.

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                        • #13
                          My horses are quite used to standing in mud for most of the year! Mine choose to stand in muddy parts too unless the grass is coming in. At any rate they get hosed on the way in and that's it. I have never had thrush and only one horse has issues with her heals which she's had from the day I got her. For her we do extra things to keep mud fever at bay.

                          Terri
                          COTH, keeping popcorn growers in business for years.

                          "I need your grace to remind me to find my own." Snow Patrol-Chasing Cars. This line reminds me why I have horses.

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                          • #14
                            I have the same situation. Our horses are out all day in mud during the spring. I'm glad to hear that most people have NOT had any problems. That's been my experience too. Other than a couple of lost shoes, no issues. Knock on wood since spring is here and the mud is coming.

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                            • #15
                              Mud is part of spring, and the majority of us have to deal with it.

                              I just rinse my mares legs off when she's coated in it, and she stays in over night to dry.

                              She is really prone to scratches, so I keep a close eye on her and coat on a little desitin if the mud lasts more than a few days.
                              She hasn't had a full blown case of scratches for 4 years now.
                              Strong promoter of READING the entire post before responding.

                              Comment


                              • #16
                                Well, you all are very lucky. I have had problems with mud.
                                My first horse, had to walk through a muddy area to get to pasture, developed scratches, systemic eventually and was told by the farrier, if you don't move the horse, you won't have a horse eventually. That was almost 40 years ago.

                                Now, I have a percheron who is prone to scratches to the point she developed cellulitis and lymphangitis.
                                So, no, I do not turn out in mud. Her herd gets the driest paddock, the others are also in fairly dry dry turnouts. I also keep her shaved so mud does not cake and create a good environment for scratches.

                                I have brought in stone dust and hard pack to avoid mud, or eliminate it. It means quite a bit of work in cleaning up manure to keep it from returning to organic muck.
                                I also constantly chain harrow my paddocks after I bring the horses in at night to smooth out any ruts/hoofprints and help it dry out quicker.

                                Last night as I was chain harrowing, I thought, there is a lot of work to keeping horses in this environment.

                                I did board one of my horses for training, but in the spring the paddocks were so full of muck up to their shins, I brought him home. Usually you find out that mud can cause problems with or for some horses, but at that point, the damage is done. Some horses seem ok with it, but I am not going to find out which ones are ok with it.

                                Mud is really not a good thing from my experience.
                                save lives...spay/neuter/geld

                                Comment


                                • #17
                                  We have a lot of mud in the sacrifice paddocks... I keep the feathers on his fetlocks to help protect them, and I only brush off the mud when it's dry. I also spray his fetlocks and soles with Animal Legends Tea Tree-ADE spray... for some reason that seems to really help prevent scratches.
                                  "Remain relentlessly cheerful."

                                  Graphite/Pastel Portraits

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                                  • #18
                                    Originally posted by Fairview Horse Center
                                    If your horse is trimmed up like he is ready to show, you are going to have to do more to protect him. I never trim the leg hair or feathers until the mud dries up later in the spring. Their hair really is designed to protect them.
                                    I have to clip my horses' legs to keep them from getting scratches. The long hair traps moisture and mud, creating the perfect environment for fungal and/or bacterial infections.

                                    Comment


                                    • #19
                                      Originally posted by fourmares View Post
                                      You know they are built to stand in mud part of the year... your horse is only in it for half the day and then gets to dry out. Don't worry. It will be fine. Brush or wash the mud off as often as you can, but I don't think you need to panic if you can't do it daily so long as you do it several days a week.
                                      This.

                                      Comment


                                      • #20
                                        Have to say FHC is always one of my favorite posters because she has common sense above anything else. And in this day and age of over analyzing everything we do with our horses because of all the information at hand, it's nice to know someone who does a great job keeps things simple.

                                        Now I have become an expert in mud living in Ireland and I can tell you there are different levels and variety of mud. Take today, my horses are all back in again because it's tanking down and will be for the next 48 hours along with sleet and snow. So nobody got washed off today as the mud was the watery kind which will be gone by this afternoon. The mud I do wash off legs is the heavy drying out mud which when you get on your muck boots feels like it weighs 1000pds. Otherwise known as the welly sucking mud - my personal favorite!

                                        But in all honesty if I worried about mud or overly fussed about legs having dirt I would never have time for anything else. For the last 3 summers we have had every bit as much mud as we do in the winter. I use to fuss over mud on legs and cracked heels all the time. Washing, dressing, preventing and I found that I had more issues then than I do now with a more relaxed approach. FWIW, the mare I do have issues with has always had an issue with her immune system. It isn't actually the mud with her.

                                        Terri
                                        COTH, keeping popcorn growers in business for years.

                                        "I need your grace to remind me to find my own." Snow Patrol-Chasing Cars. This line reminds me why I have horses.

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