Lameness Lab #3: Is this horse lame? Training your eye to see lameness By Equine Guelph
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- Опубліковано 9 лют 2025
- Early detection and treatment of lameness is the best course of action to help maintain a horses' soundness throughout its lifetime.
For a review on how to determine lameness watch this video: • How to tell if your ho...
Understanding lameness is complex. However detecting lameness can be much easier. Here, with the help of Equine Guelph we are offering a series of videos to help you learn and understand how to identify lameness in your own horse before the vet arrives. Watch the video. Determine your answer. Then keep watching to see what the vet has to say. For more great videos check out www.equineguelph.ca
Equine Guelph is the horse owner’s Centre at the University of Guelph, supported and overseen by equine industry groups, and dedicated to improving the health and well-being of horses.
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i was watching this thinking 'this horse isn't lame or am i just an idiot'
Came here to the comments to see if anyone else thought left hind like I did... But as I was watching I felt like I was REALLY looking for it. I didn't realize that "not lame" was a potential option when I went into the video. I felt like the left hind wasn't tracking as well as the right and neither were perfect, which I started to notice on the circle. It's subtle though. Subtle enough that it could be due to the sort of natural asymmetry all horses have? All horses turn better one way than the other. It's the same for humans, we have a dominant hand, foot, and eye. Is my left hand lame because I can't write with it? Maybe that's all we're seeing.
Completely sound. Lovely floating action, very nice horse.
I noticed something wrong with the left rear leg as well.
Yeah he looked a little stiff in the left rear.
Oh thank god this horse wasn’t lame I thought I was just being dumb lmao
Me too!
Back left stifle looks a little stiff. Sound for a jumper but not a high end dressage or hunter. More testing needed. A rider should collect the head and make the horse work through their back to see if the horse can carry themselves without loss of stride.
I also noticed left rear leg
keep your eye on the right rear.
I think, the left rear leg has problem and limps.
Me too!!
I agree with you, the left rear looks off to me too but I am new to this!
I'm no expert but I learn from experts and they say they rarely see a truly sound horse!
i think that rear left leg tracking is more due to a conformation trait than a lameness issue so i think thats why they said it was fine?
i saw it too !
It might not be lame but it appears to me that shes a bit stiff on the back left?
Thank you a lot
First time I've seen these videos which are very interesting and educational. However, in this video I disagree with the vet that this horse is tracking up from behind. My uneducated assessment is that he is NOT tracking up at all. His hind legs never come through further than the pelvis.
Please respond
I see no lameness, but both stifles look stiff.
left hind
Sound