This message is from: [EMAIL PROTECTED] In a message dated 3/27/99 2:58:19 AM Pacific Standard Time, owner-fjordhorse- [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
<< So I am not the only Fjord owner with the sheath cleaning problem. Noboby else at the stable lars lives in cleans their horse's sheath. They get done twice a year, by the vet, if they're lucky. I need to do Lars on a two week cycle, or it runs down his legs. My vet just says that for some horses, this frequency is normal. Certainly not for any horse I ever saw, before Lars. I use Betadine scrub, and simply go in after after it, though most of it is in the front section, not the rear cavity. He isn't happy about it,but he tolerates it. I use one of the shoulder-length polyethylene exam gloves from Nasco Farm Supply. I wonder if this is some sort of Fjord thing, as I never knew of a horse needing it this often. I just assumed it was a curse from G_D for my evil lifestyle. Merek >> I also have a Fjord in my barn by the name of Lars and he is "blessed" with one of the dirtiest weanies I've ever seen! He and a couple of the others, require cleaning quite frequently as indicated by the black tar, smegma, that smears all over their hind legs. I've often wondered why some are worse than others. I once had a Quarter Horse gelding that developed nasty infections and would get quite swollen if he wasn't cleaned often enough. I do sheath cleaning about the same way with betadine scrub. I have never had a problem with scalding, but am super careful about rinsing. For giggles, in my barn, sheath cleaning is affectionately referred to as "weanie washing" and it seems that I have been designated the official "weanie washer" as no one else wnats to do THAT! Have a nice day. Gayle Ware Field of Dreams Eugene, OR