Been really nice sunny weather past 3 days, but I've been stuck at home due our one car being repaired and mom needing the other one. So no way to get to the stable until today. Heta's shedding like crazy already and with me not being able to groom her so often, means when ever I do groom her there's a mountain of fur on the ground when I'm done(though you can rarely been truely done with shedding Icelandic). >_< Took her for a walk today and it went nice since not so much snow stuck to her feet. So, other than imo shedding too much and too soon, Heta's doing okay. She's getting some shots tomorrow and I'll ask if the vet has de-wormers with her which I could already buy for the baby(and Heta could probably use a dose herself before foaling). If it were our usual vet I'd have probably asked her oppinion about the foal, but as it's not I think I'll pass as the vet coming over hasn't been that good in our experience...
I'm still little sick with the flu and now I got sore throat again after that stable trip... -__-
Also some barn drama, as don't we all secretly love it. lol One of the most recent boarders hasn't been around much and her young-ish gelding has been paddocking with the older geldings with pretty much 0 exercise. They are free fed hay and the hay they get is quite strong due the old ones' needs. Now this young gelding is pretty fat(you can just about feel his ribs though) and worst part is that top part of his neck is rock solid and really thick (=cresty neck). He's also moving bit odd imo. So L is thinking metabolic syndrome and made the owner call a vet before they try get that gelding loose weight by putting him with younger geldings(who get less strong hay). How ever it also came out somewhere in that talk, that the horse in question has had several laminitis episodes in past. O_O I'm really not going to be suprised if he does have metabolic syndrome for real... I also do feel sorry for L for some stupid things we boarders do. Like if the owner in this case had told L about the laminitis backround, the horse probably wouldn't be in this situation as it would not have been put on that stronger hay in the first place.












