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Animal Treatment


 
 

Farrier and Dentist - Keeping Horses in Condition - Laminitis - Cattle and Sheep - Foot and Mouth

Before the days of qualified vets

Animal treatment in the countryside has always been mainly the duty of the farmer. It was quite usual to find the farmer dosing his own stock. His horsemen kept recipe books for internal and external medicines. They were made of such things as arsenic or mercury - serious traditional poisons that people today would never be allowed to buy, let alone consider using as medicine - as well as milder hedgerow herbs like wild garlic. This habit of on-farm dosing went on even after it was common to find a vet in every large town.

assorted horse shoes

Farrier...

Physical problems with horses' feet were referred to the farrier, who shod them according to their way of going. It was the farrier's reponsibility to keep horses on the road. If one cast a shoe out in the country, he was expected to put it right at his own cost.

<< Here's a sample of the different shoes he might produce. The foot sizes vary from farm Clydesdales to light hunters and Fell ponies.

The farrier was expected to deal with horses' teeth as well as their feet.

... and dentist

A horse's teeth grow constantly and sometimes wear into sharp edges or points which cause pain by cutting its lips and the sides of its mouth. Naturally the horse then works badly and is hard to control, not to mention that it becomes a weak, "poor doer" and loses weight because it can't chew its food properly.

horse tooth rasp

This rasp was used to remove those rough edges. Horses that are well handled appear to go to sleep during this yearly inspection and servicing. It seems to be hypnotic for them, rather than the nerve-tingling experience humans associate with dentistry. The equine dentist usually has hold of the horse's tongue to steady its head and prevent the tongue itself being rasped.

The rasp is 18" long. It has a wooden handle, rounded edges, and a rim either side of the face to stop it slipping off the row of teeth it's working on. Once the teeth are levelled off, the sound of the rasp changes and it moves freely over the teeth. It's all over for another year.

Early 20th C recipes

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From "The Complete Horseman" by William Scarth Dixon, 3rd edition of 1912; to his credit, he recommends calling the veterinary surgeon at the first sign of illness. It wasn't always so with everyone, however. His vet said of another customer: "He about kills his horse and then sends for me." Here are some of the remedies he suggests:

Indigestion is shown by a tight skin, rough "harsh" looking hair and lack of condition. An old powder we used to give our horses as a corrective once or twice a week was composed of Flowers of Sulphur, White Resin, Nitre, and Black Antimony in equal quantities. A tablespoon in a warm bran mash is a dose.

A remedy recommended by Capt. Hayes is a drench composed of Laudanum 2 oz, Turpentine 2oz, Linseed oil 1½ pints.

Powders comprised of Sulphate of Magnesia 3 oz and Powdered Nitrate of Potash 3 drs should be given three times a day in the drinking water. In very bad cases 30 drops of Belladonna may be given twice or three times a day. Fowler's Solution of Arsenic may be given for four or five days at first, then a powder consisting of Sulphate of Iron 2 drs, Powdered Gentian, Powdered Camomile and Powdered Ginger 1 dr each. This powder should be given in a feed of corn once a day for ten days.

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