Is Your Horse Lane in Front or Back? Here"s How to Tell
Your horse appears lame, and is favoring a leg. But because there is no obvious swelling, you can't feel a warmer area, there are no cuts or other visible injuries so you're not sure what leg to start looking for a problem on. Here is how to tell whether your horse is lame on a front or back leg.
First of all watch the horse as it is standing still. If it is lame, and obviously resting and avoids placing weight on one leg, that will probably be the injured leg.
Watch the horse as it is ridden on a loose rein, or trotted in hand in a straight line on a loose lead rope over firm, level ground. If the horse is lame on a front leg, the horse will dip its nose down. If the horse pops its head upwards slightly, the lameness is in the hindquarters or legs. If a horse is obviously lame on both front or rear legs, there will be no head bob. Their strides will be choppy and short.
When the horse is lame in the front you can determine which leg is lame by watching carefully and noticing when his head is up, and which leg has hit the ground at that moment. He will dip his head down as the sound leg hits the ground. If the lameness is in the rear, he'll drop his hip slightly on the side that is lame.
When looking for the site of injury, start with the the hooves and work your way up. Stone bruising, tender soles after a trim, and injury or strain anywhere up the leg can cause a horse to be lame.
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