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Regular
Posts: 59
 
| Recently I rescued a coming 2 year old filly. She's bred nice and both parents have some decent size and shape to them however when I got her she had a huge belly full of worms and was pretty malnourished. I started her on Blue Bonnet Grow Colt and power packed her for worms. Has anyone else ever experienced this? Will she ever grow into a normal sized horse or will she be stunted forever? |
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 Undercover Amish Mafia Member
Posts: 9992
           Location: Kansas | any current pictures of her? It might have stunted her growth a bit, but keep her on good nutrition |
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 Tried and True
Posts: 21185
         Location: Where I am happiest | Usually once healthy they will catch up. Especially at her age. Get her on a good mineral, are you feeding alfalfa? If not, start her on it and keep her on a good grain. After her worming did you give her probiotics? If not, do that and if it's been a couple weeks since a power pack I would give her a zimectrin and probiotics again. It takes time but be vigilent and she will catch up and blossom. |
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 Best of the Badlands
          Location: You never know where I will show up...... | She will eventually get caught up. My current futurity horse was extremely stunted when I purchased her as a 2 year old. When I got her home after purchase, she was literally no bigger than my weanlings. I power pack dewormed her, and started her on a daily wormer. I fed her with my weanlings, and turned her out on pasture to grow up when spring came. I waited until she was 3 to get her started under saddle. She's going to run in 2017 as a 5 year old. You'd never know she was as little & ugly as she was when she came here, to look at her now.
Edited by rockinas 2016-12-23 9:41 AM
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Regular
Posts: 59
 
| Thanks for the input! I think in my heart I know she'all be ok I just needed to hear that someone else had done it before to calm my nerves!
Edited by CallMeBetty 2016-12-23 11:31 AM
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 851
      Location: West Texas | She just needs good feed and digestible protein. Alfalfa will help the most. Don't worry. However, I would X-ray her knees to make sure they are not growing uneven. |
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 Take a Picture
Posts: 12841
       
| Prenatal nutrition and proper nutrition the first year are the most critical periods of growth in a horse's life. A horse that has not had good nutrition during that time period will probably not catch up as it ages. |
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 Saint Stacey
            
| Be very careful though. In neglect cases, you can get them growing too fast once you line them out. In those cases, the tendons and ligaments can't keep up with the rate of the bone growth. You end up then having to slow the growth back down to allow the tendons and ligaments to catch up. There's a very fine balance between the right amount of growth and too much growth in many neglect cases. |
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 Expert
Posts: 1302
    Location: California | Yes we had one. We learned a had lesson from him too. He was awful looking January of his 2 year old year. I will attach photos. We upped his food to alfalfa/grass hay with rice bran/beet pulp/minerals and some 14% grain. Within a few months he looked like a different horse, however, to make a long story short when I went to start him he was constantly tripping. After a few months I decided it wasn't normal and had him vetted. He was diagnosed with Wobblers Syndrome and is now a permanent pasture pet. It is possible it wasn't us that caused it but my gut says we accidentally caused his growth too much too quickly and his spinal column didn't grow enough for his spinal cord. Lesson learned for sure. I wish you the best of luck, just be careful!
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 My Heart Be Happy
Posts: 9159
      Location: Arkansas | little_bug - 2016-12-24 11:44 AM
Yes we had one. We learned a had lesson from him too. He was awful looking January of his 2 year old year. I will attach photos. We upped his food to alfalfa/grass hay with rice bran/beet pulp/minerals and some 14% grain. Within a few months he looked like a different horse, however, to make a long story short when I went to start him he was constantly tripping. After a few months I decided it wasn't normal and had him vetted. He was diagnosed with Wobblers Syndrome and is now a permanent pasture pet. It is possible it wasn't us that caused it but my gut says we accidentally caused his growth too much too quickly and his spinal column didn't grow enough for his spinal cord. Lesson learned for sure. I wish you the best of luck, just be careful!
That's terrible, but at least you gave him a home no matter what. Good for you |
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Expert
Posts: 3514
  
| I would start her on Blue Bonnet Growth and Development. Add Align. Good Hay. I feed Alfalfa/Timothy |
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Regular
Posts: 59
 
| That is pretty close to what my little girl looks like now! She is so sweet and has a forever home regardless of whether or not she grows and is useable. |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 899
       Location: Idaho | How is she bred? Mine was like that, he's mostly working cow horse/reining bred. I pulled him off the pasture at 11 months old. He was tiny as a yearling going into his 2 year old year, people thought he was 6 months old! Kept up with good nutrition, He didn't really hit a growth spurt until he was about three, I prayed that he would push 15 hands.
He is now 5 1/2 years old and standing 15.1 and stout! I have a filling this one will catch up. When I worked cutting horses down in Texas their 2-3 year olds were TINY, I felt so bad jumping on them but once they hit about 5 years old and got turned out to pasture they turned into monsters lol I think a lot of it has to do with their breeding.
Edited by DashNDustem 2016-12-25 10:22 AM
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Regular
Posts: 59
 
| DashNDustem - 2016-12-25 10:21 AM
How is she bred? Mine was like that, he's mostly working cow horse/reining bred. I pulled him off the pasture at 11 months old. He was tiny as a yearling going into his 2 year old year, people thought he was 6 months old! Kept up with good nutrition, He didn't really hit a growth spurt until he was about three, I prayed that he would push 15 hands.
He is now 5 1/2 years old and standing 15.1 and stout! I have a filling this one will catch up. When I worked cutting horses down in Texas their 2-3 year olds were TINY, I felt so bad jumping on them but once they hit about 5 years old and got turned out to pasture they turned into monsters lol I think a lot of it has to do with their breeding.
She's Impressive way back and Doc O Lena but those are the only names I would consider recognizable on her papers. I'lol admit she was an impulse buy but she is just so sweet! |
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 To the Left
Posts: 1865
       Location: Florida | Worm, 2 weeks worm, and then good feed and hay. He will be caught up in no time. |
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| If you decide to buy something under 2yo that has mane and tail longer than normal and a bad hair do along with pot gut and/or ribby ...
You can bet it will remain stunted/dwarfed forever ...
99% of the time with horses ...
you get what you are looking at ..
If breeding or feeding doesn't have anything to do with size ..
then there would not be any 14.1 hh famous studs breeding mares ..
lol
The other thing you have to look at long term is ...
what kind of bone, joint. feet problems are going to show up
when you start training or running one hard ...
Edited by BARRELHORSE USA 2016-12-27 12:57 PM
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 Georgia Peach
Posts: 8338
       Location: Georgia | My coming three year old is barely pushing 14 hands. I bred her dam and raised her so I know for a fact that she has had great nutrition. I love seeing all these success stories with small babies. I pray everyday that mine makes it to 15 hands. I keep telling her that she better grow because regardless, she is still going to have to carry my fat butt around some barrels! LOL! To the OP, your filly will catch up. Don't overfeed her but just put her on a good feed program. She will be big and strong in no time! |
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Sock Snob
Posts: 3021
 
| my june 15th yearling is 14 hands. 1 also bought a 2 year old 14.2 as a 2 year old now 16.1 |
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 490
      
| I had one that wasnt fed very well her yearling year, courtesy of my a-hole parents...... When I got her as a long yearling she was maybe 13.3. Pot bellied, long hair and UGLY! She didnt stop growing until she was 7 and now stands 15.3 and is BEAUTIFUL! Noone can believe its the same horse. The only ones that know are the ones that were around when I brought her home. Theres still hope. Good feed and deworming program will do wonders for her! |
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Regular
Posts: 59
 
| Thank you all for the info! I'm confident we can get her feeling better and back on the right track! Almost home from traveling for Christmas and I'll post some pictures of what I'm working with when I get back to my computer at the house! Hey btw y'all rock!  |
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 A Somebody to Everybody
Posts: 41354
              Location: Under The Big Sky Of Texas | Jazz's Girl - 2016-12-28 1:26 PM I had one that wasnt fed very well her yearling year, courtesy of my a-hole parents...... When I got her as a long yearling she was maybe 13.3. Pot bellied, long hair and UGLY! She didnt stop growing until she was 7 and now stands 15.3 and is BEAUTIFUL! Noone can believe its the same horse. The only ones that know are the ones that were around when I brought her home. Theres still hope. Good feed and deworming program will do wonders for her!
What does A-hole parents mean?  |
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Elite Veteran
Posts: 672
   
| I acquired a yearling that had been locked up in a small lot with too many others and fed bad hay. She had long hair, was ribby and had a tight pot belly. Stunted and poor was too nice to describe her. My late yearling was quite a bit bigger then her. When I got her in I started her on good grass hay, wormed her and slowly started her on alfalfa. She has shot up and now is definitely thicker than my other colt and almost as tall. I can't beleive the change, I wish I had taken before and after pictures. I was thinking she would have to get put off a year but the way she's looking will be ready to start with the other 2s. It's taken probably 5 months to get her to really bloom. |
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 My Heart Be Happy
Posts: 9159
      Location: Arkansas | Southtxponygirl - 2016-12-28 2:59 PM
Jazz's Girl - 2016-12-28 1:26 PM I had one that wasnt fed very well her yearling year, courtesy of my a-hole parents...... When I got her as a long yearling she was maybe 13.3. Pot bellied, long hair and UGLY! She didnt stop growing until she was 7 and now stands 15.3 and is BEAUTIFUL! Noone can believe its the same horse. The only ones that know are the ones that were around when I brought her home. Theres still hope. Good feed and deworming program will do wonders for her!
What does A-hole parents mean? 
Miss Roxie, think "donkey butt" parents. . . |
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 490
      
| Chandler's Mom - 2016-12-28 11:20 PM
Southtxponygirl - 2016-12-28 2:59 PM
Jazz's Girl - 2016-12-28 1:26 PM I had one that wasnt fed very well her yearling year, courtesy of my a-hole parents...... When I got her as a long yearling she was maybe 13.3. Pot bellied, long hair and UGLY! She didnt stop growing until she was 7 and now stands 15.3 and is BEAUTIFUL! Noone can believe its the same horse. The only ones that know are the ones that were around when I brought her home. Theres still hope. Good feed and deworming program will do wonders for her!
What does A-hole parents mean? 
Miss Roxie, think "donkey butt" parents. . .
Yep you got it. They refused to feed the filly. All because I moved out and left to go to college. Theres more to the story but thats the jist of it. I eventually got her and the rest is history. She is now with a youth rider running 1/2D!!!! But it took work to get her looking good! |
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