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Were bashing, battering and breaking our horses knees.
You can blame some of it on our selective breeding, and you can
blame the rest of it on our insane desire to have horses use their
front ends for slowing forward speed or stopping.
Its all the rage.
A horses knee can be compared to a humans wrist. Its
comprised of two rows of four bones each. Actually the horses
knee joint is three joints. The radius makes a joint with the upper
row of knee bones; the upper row makes a joint with the lower row;
and the lower row joins with the cannon bone.
The knee is a complex system, and therefore presents plenty of opportunity
for trouble.
The horses knee was meant to flex, and normally should be able
to be bent easily so the bottom of the horses hoof touches the
horses elbow. Such flexion should cause no distress.
The knee was designed to bend only one way. When it is bent the wrong
way, inverted toward the rear of the horse, damage occurs. Unfortunately,
such inversion takes place frequently among performance horses, especially
when they are being asked to slow down by a rider pulling back on
the reins.
When a rider pulls on the reins to stop a horse, the horse is virtually
forced to use his front legs as brakes. The knees are bent backwards
when the horse tries to stop his mass with his front legs instead
of allowing that mass to move over the stationary leg. A western slide
stop is an exaggeration of how a horse should use his hindquarters
to stop while his front legs keep moving.
The cartilage between the bones of the knee, the joint fluid and
the bones themselves were designed to withstand a certain amount of
stress. However, the stresses of sprint racing, jumping, pole bending,
calf roping and polo--to mention just a few--are a little too great
when compounded by a rider balancing on the horses mouth or
pulling back on the reins.
The result of consistent excessive stress to both young and old knees
is a squeezing and pinching and deterioration of the cartilage, a
leaking of joint fluid, and a chipping, denting or scratching of bone.
All of which leads to inflammation, then arthritis, and often joint
deformities. Once injured, a knee takes a long time to heal because
the knee has a poor blood supply.
And seldom does an injured knee get help as quickly as it should,
because knee injuries are hard to detect in the early stages.
A horse with a knee problem will show a little stiffness in the injured
leg when first brought from a stall, but if you are not looking for
it, you might not see it. The horse, if viewed from the front, will
tend to swing the affected leg outward, eventually putting most of
his weight on the inside heel.
But during the early stages, the horse will "warm up" and
lose all symptoms of lameness. Just about the time the rider thinks
the horse is a "bit off," the horse begins to travel fine.
The rider goes on with the exercise as planned, and the sound horse
is becoming one with a major knee problem.
Time off from work (not stall rest) is the greatest healer of knee
injuries. There are some drug therapies, but they too require major
amounts of "time off." When drug therapies are used to keep
the horse in competition, there is no healing.
Horses which are "back at the knee" are the most susceptible
to knee problems.
And, of course, todays competitive pleasure horse--of nearly
every breed--has to move slowly, with no reach by his front legs.
What kind of front legs move slowly with no reach? Front legs, hanging
from a straight shoulder, back at the knees. So we are breeding them
that way.
To compound the problem, the desire for excessive slowness is moving
into other areas of competition. Now we have more and more riders
cranking the horses head down to force the horse to go slow
by braking with his front legs.
We are literally bashing and breaking the horses knees.
Of course there is no way to help the horse whos rider will
not learn. The more the rider hangs and pulls on the horse, the more
battered the horses knees.
Its the "in" thing, man!
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