
Nature has its place, as does going "natural."
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It’s
a beautiful image—a wild horse standing on a hill top, head up, luxuriant mane
blowing in the wind. Unfortunately, this romanticized, cinematic portrayal of
the beauty, vigor, health and soundness of horses in their natural environment
isn’t necessarily always the case. They can and do get sick and go lame. They
have problems with worms, illness and malnutrition just like any
animal.
These
glorified images of wild horses have caused domestication to be blamed for many,
if not all, problems related to lameness and health, with the proposed solution
being “natural” care.
While
there’s certainly some truth to this on many fronts, the fact is there’s no way
to duplicate free-range living conditions even if we wanted to, and some of the
suggestions being put forth as better, more-natural approaches to horse care are
flat-out incorrect and harmful to the horse.
Some
examples of myths and misconceptions include:
Horses can be kept outside 24/7 with no blanketing even in severe winter
weather. They’ll do fine. Sure, if “do fine” means little more than survive.
Very hardy breeds, true to their free-roaming ancestors, who grow a very dense
coat and require little along the lines of food may do OK, but most of the
modern breeds bear little resemblance to wild horses and require blankets and/or
shelter in the winter months or they will lose a considerable amount of weight
trying to keep themselves warm, and severely stress their immune systems in the
process.
The
very old and very young horses often have decreased ability to regulate their
body temperature. Horses with a history of chronic laminitis can have
sufficiently compromised circulation to their feet. Exposure to cold causes too
much shunting of blood and extreme foot pain that can progress to even more
damage.
Horses should not be dewormed because parasites are a natural part of the
horse’s environment and may even be beneficial. Death and disease are “natural,”
too. That doesn’t mean they’re good. While it’s true that unnecessary deworming
should be avoided, there most definitely are times when horses need to be
dewormed.
Horses in the wild seek out and medicate themselves with herbs. If animals, like
people in primitive cultures, could learn that certain plants have certain
effects or uses, there’s no proof anywhere to support the idea.
An
integral part of the human heritage of medicinal herb use is the ability to pass
down the information from generation to generation. Experimentation led to
certain observations/opinions that would be passed on, and later users would
either confirm the effect or discard it. Even the most radical believers haven’t
suggested that people can instinctively know what plants or herbs they need to
help them. How could a horse?
Herbs/plants should be used instead of drugs because they are safe and natural.
Any herb/plant that is actually effective in treating something is itself, by
definition, a drug. Safety is by no means assured because it’s a
plant.
Mineral and vitamin overloads can’t happen because the horse’s body will keep
what it needs and get rid of the rest. The horse’s body can only handle so much
excess before overload occurs. While some minerals and vitamins have a wider
margin of safety than others, anything in excess can be
harmful.
Horses should only be offered minerals free choice so they can decide for
themselves how much, and what, they need. With the exception of a natural hunger
for salt, there’s absolutely no evidence whatsoever that horses can tell what
mineral deficiencies they have, let alone select the correct mineral or mixture
of minerals to rectify them.
Barefoot is better. Much good came from this at first, in terms of reminding
people that horses did not evolve with iron on their feet, and in shifting
emphasis back to the anatomy and function of the horse’s real shoe—the hoof
wall, sole, frog—instead of focusing on what is nailed onto it.However,
in the process some odd ideas have emerged that amount to horseshoes being the
source of all that is wrong with horses, or that every horse’s foot needs to be
trimmed to a set formula that mimics observations this or that person has made.
A hefty dose of common sense will tell you that horseshoes don’t make feet numb,
that the heart is the center of circulation (not the foot), and that the
dimensions and angles observed on 14-hand wild horses ranging free over rocky
terrain are exactly that—findings appropriate for 14-hand wild horses ranging
free over rocky terrain.
Most dangerous of all is the talk about detoxing. When basic biology, physiology
and medical knowledge are abandoned and replaced with references to “toxins,” or
“energy imbalances” that call for a variety of “detoxing” or “cleansing” and
rebalancing alternative therapies we’re in trouble. Or, actually, our horses are
in trouble. What toxins? What
imbalances? These claims are difficult to disprove because they’re vague. We
have a lot to learn about how the body functions, but to regress to the days
when illness was blamed on evil spirits is a huge step backward. Short of
dialysis, there is no way to “clean” the blood.
The
so-called detoxing or cleansing herbs for the most part either stimulate urine
production, intestinal purging or release of bile. Obviously these are indeed
important bodily functions, but these remedies work by themselves being
irritants and poisons. Most of the liver remedies, for example, stimulate
contraction of the gallbladder —but the horse doesn’t have a gallbladder. We
are, or should be, past the point where all disease is blamed on plumbing
backups.
It’s
true that many things are wrong about what we do with horses—poor breeding
choices, feeding the wrong things and not enough exercise—but major advances
have been made in nutrition and preventing disease. Discarding this with a
back-to-nature approach is not the way to go.