Wednesday, 20 January 2016

Ustinov recovers in new 'forever home'


When Kim Wilson first saw Ustinov, she knew she just had to have him, but their journey together didn’t have the smoothest of starts, as Kim explains....
Ustinov in October 2014
Usti will be eight this year, but when I bought him in October 2014 as a six-year-old, he had spent a few years as a working stallion, but just wasn’t coping with that life and in a very poor condition. Even though he had severed a tendon and arteries in his near fore pastern as a three-year-old, my initial hope was that he would event. I saw him loose jump and after a trip to my trainer’s yard during which he never put a foot wrong, the deal was done and two weeks later, newly gelded, I picked him up.
Although never graded as a stallion, he is ‘pink papered’ with the Anglo European Studbook. By Udo van Padhuis, he has Dutch bloodlines which are predominantly dressage, but he is also a talented jumper!
Ustinov in October 2014
Initially he was hard work and I think being gelded had traumatised him, destroying his confidence, so he didn’t trust any of these new people in his life and was even wary of being brushed. As we tried to improve his weight I quickly found out that any hard feed sent him ‘nuts’.  The only feeding suitable has been haylage and chaff. He did not enjoy turnout much and after a couple of months of being extremely unsettled, he finally injured himself running the fence line in his field. It was the same near fore, which already had a mass of scar tissue that was affecting hoof growth, but as I still don’t know the full details of his original injury, we weren’t sure what he might have done this time.
I agreed with my vet that we’d box rest him and watch his progress before undertaking lameness investigations, but after a couple of days of box rest he became very stressed, rearing and canter pirouetting in his stable and was very difficult to handle. At this stage my friend told me about the ArcEquine and offered me the loan of her unit.  I spoke with the company and got some very helpful advice and a re-rehabilitation plan for us to follow.  
After a few days on the ArcEquine Usti became noticeably calmer and manageable in his stable, but I have a full time job so due to the lack of an arena and short daylight hours because it was winter, the rehabilitation stage was extremely difficult and much slower than recommended and discussed.
 When spring arrived, there was massive improvement in his lameness, so he was introduced to turn out again, along with in-hand work.  We had a slight set back due to scatty behaviour and I thought it best to start the ArcEquine programme all over again.
This time, with the longer daylight hours and a newly installed arena, rehabilitation was much easier. I noticed that during Phase 2 of the ArcEquine treatment programme, there was considerable change in his hoof growth, which my farrier found extremely surprising as he had thought there was no chance of the hoof re-forming correctly.  We agreed to keep him on this phase for longer than the treatment programme states and as a result, the improvement in hoof growth has been immense.  My vet was also happy with the progress and agreed we should just to continue to work him, as there was no point in scans.  As we progressed into the summer I slowly built up his rehabilitation programme and he coped with the increase in work.
At last Ustinov enjoys turnout with other horses
It took me a year to establish the same trusting relationship on the ground that he had with his previous owner and from needing constant supervision in the field, he is now happy to be turned out with horses either side for company. His hoof grows well, his gait appears normal and his ridden work is progressing, so we are aiming for low level dressage competition to start the season.  
Usti benefitted from ArcEquine treatment for approximately 10 months and he still receives maintenance level treatment.  This is a longer recovery time than expected with the unit, but he had a large number of issues to overcome, not just one injury.
Ustinov's ridden work is progressing well
He was very poor, run down, newly gelded, he developed a cough when we started his vaccinations and he had the scarring – physical and mental – from his previous injury. I strongly believe the ArcEquine helped heal not just the leg injury, but every aspect of him and this is perhaps why he needed the treatment for so long.  Mentally he is much calmer and able to deal with changing situations around him far better than when he arrived. 
He can still have a difficult and spooky stallion day, but more and more days are nice gelding days and he is getting better under saddle. Life for Usti would have been very different without the ArcEquine treatment and now he has recovered well, he loves work and enjoys being busy, with plenty of mental stimulation, so thanks from both of us to all the team at ArcEquine.

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