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Thursday, September 8, 2011

Canker?!

Here is Australia it is cheap and easy to keep horses living outside in yards and/or paddocks 24/7. Most of the country has relatively mild winters (only small pockets of the country actually get snow) and a few good waterproof rugs is generally all you need for winter.

So, I have not been exposed to the delights and pitfalls of the stabled horse. There is a lot about managing the stabled horse that I have no clue about or have never heard of. One of those things is Equine Canker.

I was googling for some pictures of frogs for an upcoming post and came across this canker business. I thought canker was just an old English word for cancer. And apparently that is sort of what it is - hoof cancer. The pictures I saw were grotesque. I'll post a few at the end of this post.

Here is a link to an Aussie PDF info page about canker:
http://www.barehoofcare.com/fact%20sheets/equine_canker.pdf

The short of it is that canker is an eventual result of infected feetsies standing around in excrement for too long. It is an over growth of hoof tissues and apparently smells pretty disgusting due to the overactive cells getting infected with all sorts of vile and disgusting microbes. Yummo.

It is treatable but is degenerative and needs to be sorted out pretty early apparently.

I have never even heard of this. So there you go.

5 comments:

  1. YIKES!!! I've heard of cankers but had no idea that's what they look like!!

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  2. Oh man we are covering this topic in school right now as we speak.... it's insanely difficult to treat and really hard to diagnose because it is so rare.... I have some interesting stuff I can e-mail you if you are interested!

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  3. Yes please Andrea! My email is lcastle at gmail dot com. :)

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  4. I honestly think if I had a horse with canker I'd put it down. Like Andrea said, it's incredibly hard to treat and pretty painful for the horse. Here in the US it seems to afflict older drafts more often. I just don't know if I could put a horse through that kind of painful iffy rehab, you know?

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  5. Good point Funder - I was thinking about the whole ethical aspect of treating serious hoof conditions recently and I think I need to mull it over a little more. Luckily canker is super duper rare over here so hopefully I will never have to deal with it. I was just horrified to learn about it!!

    I did read about the fact that it is more common to see draft breeds suffer from this. I wonder why that is?

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