Home Current News News Archive Shop/Advertise Ridecamp Classified Events Learn/AERC
Endurance.Net Home Ridecamp Archives
ridecamp@endurance.net
[Archives Index]   [Date Index]   [Thread Index]   [Author Index]   [Subject Index]

RE: [RC] Help! Need advice regarding treatment of crusty, scabby thinggies! - EnduroGal

Another great response... thank you, Diane.  However, I could be wrong, but
I do not think my horse has a tick problem.  I just have not seen any on
him.  However, it could be a gnat problem.  They've been a real bother for
the past several days, and perhaps they have something to do with the
problem. And yes, I definitely think it's possible that the "resin" I note
on his hair was actually produced by him.  When I get a bad case of poison
ivy, my skin bubbles and oozes if I do not treat it immediately (yeah, nice
visual!).  I'm sure horses' skins can suffer in a similar manner.  Anyway, I
hope to get a clear diagnosis when the vet comes out tomorrow morning!

-----Original Message-----
From: ridecamp-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:ridecamp-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Diane Trefethen
Sent: Thursday, September 03, 2009 12:01 PM
To: Ridecamp
Subject: Re: [RC] Help! Need advice regarding treatment of crusty, scabby
thinggies!

Hi, Don.  Thanks so much for your response.  The stuff on my horse's front
pasterns is more like a resin rather than yellowish and sticky.  Seems a
bit
like hair gel that's been allowed to dry, and then some of the hairs are
stuck together in little hard-ish clumps.

That could still be caused by ticks.  A horse that is sensitive to tick
saliva 
will produce a yellowish sticky ooze that dries and hardens into what looks
like 
what you are describing.  I call those scabby thingies "gribblies".

Your original description failed to make it clear whether the "resin" was 
external or produced by your horse.  First you said it, "looks like some
type of 
plant sap" and then you said, "His skin has definitely been irritated from 
something".  If you are dealing with a plant's sap, it would not be likely
for 
that sap to penetrate to the skin over any sizable area.  On the other hand,
if 
something is irritating your horse and the "resin" is his reaction to that 
irritation in its dried state, since the original ooze is FROM the skin, it
will 
likely be attached to or ON the skin.

One of my horses is very sensitive to ticks and it amazes me that come Fall,
he 
starts showing signs of having been bitten when I can't find a single tick
on 
him.  The gribblies are there but the ticks aren't.  Because he is so
sensitive 
to the tick saliva, he loses patches of hair in most of the places he gets
bitten.

One clue that it is probably not a contact irritant is that the Micro Tek
isn't 
working.  That product can't help with ticks because the ticks aren't
bothered 
by it.  It is an anti-bacteriological/fungicide, not an insecticide.

Also, if there are other horses in the pasture and they do NOT show signs of

what your horse has, that heightens the probability that it is ticks.  There
are 
very few commonly found plants that produce a severe allergic reaction in
just 
some horses but the reaction to tick bites ranges from nothing noticeable to

grapefruit sized pustules.

So pursue whatever course you feel wise for an allergic reaction but don't
fully 
dismiss the possibility that it is ticks, or worse, ticks AND something else

that is making diagnosis difficult.

I plan on giving my sensitive horse a tick bath as soon as he starts showing

signs that they are active.  If anyone has any favorites, I would really 
appreciate your posting the brand names.  Many thanks :)

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

Ridecamp is a service of Endurance Net, http://www.endurance.net.
Information, Policy, Disclaimer: http://www.endurance.net/Ridecamp
Subscribe/Unsubscribe http://www.endurance.net/ridecamp/logon.asp

Ride Long and Ride Safe!!

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=



=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

Ridecamp is a service of Endurance Net, http://www.endurance.net.
Information, Policy, Disclaimer: http://www.endurance.net/Ridecamp
Subscribe/Unsubscribe http://www.endurance.net/ridecamp/logon.asp

Ride Long and Ride Safe!!

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=


Replies
Re: [RC] Help! Need advice regarding treatment of crusty, scabbythinggies!, Diane Trefethen