by Mary Tulin, with Kip Tulin, MD
“Is your horse insulin resistant?”
“No.
Uh, what’s that?” I asked, feeling oddly defensive. I was chatting with
a woman participating in a clinic at Freedom Farm last year (2015), a
fellow Morgan fancier.
“It’s kind of like diabetes, “
she replied. “My horse has it, and mature Morgans are prone to get it.”
Her Morgan horse, a handsome, trim gelding, stood nearby.
I
quizzed her further, sure that my 15-year old gelding Magnum was
perfect in every way and destined to be healthy and fit into old age.
“Well, I noticed Magnum had some little bumps,” she pointed to his side. “My guy had those, so I had a vet check him.”
Bumps?
Yep, there they were. But there weren’t very many. And even though a
few professionals (riding coach, saddle fitter, etc.) had pointed out
Magnum’s occasional crestiness, I’d never worried. He was a lively,
feisty middle-aged horse and I was sure he was fine. Perfectly normal.
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Magnum and me, a few months earlier. |
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