HORSEILLUSTRATED.COM
Equine Allergies and Asthma During Fall - Horse Illustrated
Many of you have asked about returning horses to work. We would like to share this presentation to help answer your questions. Thanks to our friends at Northwest Equine Performance and Dr Phoebe Smith for this presentation
https://youtu.be/WDOtf7nsFcw
YOUTUBE.COM
Wildfire Smoke and Horses
From UC Davis
https://www.vetmed.ucdavis.edu/news/guidelines-horses-exposed-wildfire-smoke
VETMED.UCDAVIS.EDU
Guidelines for Horses Exposed to Wildfire Smoke
Lots of questions today about air quality and horse health! This chart is a good resource
Some tips for keeping your horse healthy during these smokey times. TheHorse.com
THEHORSE.COM
Wildfire Season and Feeding Horses for Lung Health – The Horse
KER.COM
Acorn Poisoning in Horses: Beware the Old Oak Tree in Autumn - Kentucky Equine Research
“Few animals are as precocious as the horse. Within 20 minutes of birth a foal may stand, and within hours can be ready to run at speeds no human athlete will ever achieve. At this stage of life, even with this exceptionally early development, horses have only 17% of their mature bone mineral content, but they also have only 10% of their ultimate body weight.” Kentucky Equine Research
KER.COM
Principles of Bone Development in Horses - Kentucky Equine Research
Halloween 🎃 goals!
DynaPhysio - Bérengère Feltz
January 21 at 11:45 AM ·
Pour les dresseurs, un petit zoom sur la mobilité articulaire lors du passage-piaffé
Thanks Horses Inside Out and Laura Bechtolsheimer Dressage for this video !
Merci Johanna Hellborg de me l’avoir montrée.
“As summer transitions into autumn 🍂 , new horse-keeping challenges arise. Be on the lookout for these four potential problems.” Kentucky Equine Research
KER.COM
Four Autumn Feeding Facts for Horses - Kentucky Equine Research
A little Tuesday trivia courtesy of Horse & Rider Magazine.
HORSEANDRIDER.COM
Trivia Challenge: Are You Savvy About Horse ID?
Some tips on saving money around the barn - all the way from New England.
EQUUSMAGAZINE.COM
Neighborly advice
🤣🤣
Steph Ranger
October 16 at 9:38 AM ·
We all know that one person who is forever trying to get their horse on the trailer. 💀💀💀
Grooming is about more than just making your horse look good.
HORSEANDRIDER.COM
The Lesser-Known Benefits of Grooming Your Horse
We are always thankful for all of our wonderful clients, but sometimes they just go above and beyond! ❤️ Thank you to Amy and Sophie Click for the beautiful flowers - we appreciate your longtime support of our practice and love seeing your continued success in the show ring! 🏇🏽
🌻🍂🍁🌺
A classic is being reimagined. Are you excited for the release?
NWHORSESOURCE.COM
Black Beauty Reimagined - NW Horse Source
It may not be a trip to the spa for your horse but here are some tips to keep that mane looking luxurious.
HORSEANDRIDER.COM
Main and Tail Solutions to Protect and Grow
Does your horse come to when called?
HORSEANDRIDER.COM
Train Your Horse to Come to a Voice Cue
The time has come for cold temps and frost❄️. Is your horse prepared?
KER.COM
Winter Care of Horses: Blankets and Body Condition - Kentucky Equine Research
Dr. Heather Fraser celebrated her birthday over the weekend! We are so thankful for all that you do! ❤️
We love our little office helpers! 🤍
"When the rate of bone adaptation lags with the demands placed on the skeleton—as happens with overtraining, increasing exercise too quickly after a layup, or overuse—microfractures, also known as stress fractures, can occur. These tiny fractures may go unnoticed at first, as some horses do not show any unsoundness." -Kentucky Equine Research
KER.COM
Support Bone Remodeling to Avoid Fractures in Athletic Horses - Kentucky Equine Research
Trivia Tuesday! Who was the first horse to win the Triple Crown? 👑
A. Man O' War
B. Seattle Slew
C. Sir Barton
D. Secretariat
The correct answer is SIR BARTON!
It's almost Friday! Let's see some happy horses!
“In addition to biting at your horse’s nose, Jack Frost has an affinity for some horses’ toes!” Kentucky Equine Research
KER.COM
Seasonal Soundness: Avoiding Winter Laminitis in Horses - Kentucky Equine Research