CrescentMinis
Well-Known Member
I'm going to vent/whine a bit, but if anyone has any opinions about this, please share.
This mare was bred last year and would be due NOW; however, the vet was just here updating everyone's vacs, and she thinks Annie is just obese
, not PG. This opinion is based on the palpation she did in November where she was sure she felt the uterus without the muscle tone it would've had if pregnant. Dang, I wanted to hope for a baby after losing the other foal last week.
Before that, I thought this mare was probably in foal, I could swear I feel/see some random movements that wouldn't be breathing.
So unless Annie is just getting entirely too much hay, what gives? (The horses are on dry lot and other than hay, get a cup of Strategy in the morning and evening. That's it...no grass!) Yet that belly has gotten bigger. Her neck is fat too. Is there any danger in decreasing her hay gradually over the next 2 weeks, IF there is a sneaky foal hiding in there? She's been spending some time when stalled, leaning back against the wall with her back end. Vet was concerned this could be a sign of founder, but her feet seem OK as of now. Oh great, something else to worry about!
Thanks for reading. I don't know what to think, and I guess it won't hurt to monitor on the Equifone and camera regardless of the end result.
Any opinions or "been there" advice would be very welcome.
edited to add picture
This mare was bred last year and would be due NOW; however, the vet was just here updating everyone's vacs, and she thinks Annie is just obese


So unless Annie is just getting entirely too much hay, what gives? (The horses are on dry lot and other than hay, get a cup of Strategy in the morning and evening. That's it...no grass!) Yet that belly has gotten bigger. Her neck is fat too. Is there any danger in decreasing her hay gradually over the next 2 weeks, IF there is a sneaky foal hiding in there? She's been spending some time when stalled, leaning back against the wall with her back end. Vet was concerned this could be a sign of founder, but her feet seem OK as of now. Oh great, something else to worry about!
Thanks for reading. I don't know what to think, and I guess it won't hurt to monitor on the Equifone and camera regardless of the end result.
Any opinions or "been there" advice would be very welcome.
edited to add picture

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