Sk, -- '^ rs ' \ , 'S 'ns ^ ^ fN 'm^ SnKi J^:^;t:,^,r^^^ , - , ^' i ■ .,/\r ^^Hi^-:^ \ ^^w ''1! m^% .%^ 5^ ^^st %mm ^P '':'^Ww ^m Wm ■ ^l/iA^*-:'^. f^&^^mSrwinSM Wmi: ' ■"'Y^mM^mM PsPPw^nSRK/QnC? LI BRARY OF CONGRE SS. I. [SMITHSONIAN DEPOSIT.] t wS^Ll'^kl ^UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. | - ^ ^ «. A ^ \/. /* aiTfiiir if^*« '^».m -v^^« 1^^^ }/^m^^^^^mi a'^Aa^'2^ %,0mm /<-^^.^ MM tfi§iiliu« U^Wm' 'IPSaS. '^W«WQWF?As»ff,_, M:^^ i^^rnrAK^. mMmi^m '"^'^^^0^^ ^^^^^^^^''::^-T^'' iA^aili^^) A BOOK FOR EVERY FARMER t"h e" " FARMER'S PEACTICAL FARRIERY. CONTAINING PRACTICAL RULES ON BUYTNG, BREEDING, BREAKING, LAMENESS, VICI0U3 HABITS, MANAGEMENT, PREVENTION, SYMPTOMS, TREATMENT AND . CURE OF DISEASES. ALSO, TUE GREAT SECRET OF TAMING WlLa„g5p^jp^ HORSES ; HOW THEY CAN BE FULLY SUBDUED, CAUSE«r"^ . ,. -, TO LIE DOWN, STAND WITHOUT HOLDINGj/^ WILL NOT BE FRIGHTENED AT ANY ' OBJECT, FOLLOW AT COMMAND, ropagated from the finest animals, that in the thirteenth century they had obtained a just and un- rivaled celebrity. The Arabs divide their horses into three classes, the Attechi, or inferior bred, which are of little value; the iLadischi, or mixed breed; and the Koddaiii^ or thorough-bred, whose genealogy, according to the Arabian account, is known for two thousand years. The Arabian Horse would not be acknowledged by every judge to possess a perfect form. His head, how- The Arabian Horse. 15 ever, is inimitable. This is universally acknowledged to be unsurpassed in any other breed. In the formation of his shoulders, next to that of his head, the Arabian is superior to any other breed. The withers are high, and the shoulder-blade inclines backward, and so nearly adjusted, that in descending a hill, the point or edge of the hame never ruffles the skin. The muscles of the thigh and fore-arm are strikingly developed, and assure us of his ability to perform many of the feats of strength and endurance related of him. The Arabian is as celebrated for his docility and good temper as for his speed and courage. It is to the Arabian that the English are chiefly indebted for their unrivalled breed of horses for the turf and chase. Layakd, the explorer of Nineveh, who is as familiar with Arabs as he is with antiquities, gives some curious details respecting the true horse of the desert. ^ Con- trary to the popular notion, the real Arabian is cele- brated less for unrivalled swiftness than for extraordi- nary powers of endurance. Only when pursued, does a Bedouin put his mare to full speed. It is the distance they will travel, in emergency, the weight they wiU carry, and the comparative trifle of food they require, which render the Arabian horses so valuable. Layard says that he knew of a celebrated mare, which carried two men in chain armor beyond the reach of some Aneyza pursuers. This mare rarely had more than twelve handsful of barley in twenty-four hours, except during the spring, when the pastures vrere green, and it is only the mares of the wealthy Bedouins that can get even this allowance. They are never placed under cov^r during the summer^ nor protected fi*om the biting 16 The Horse Farrier. winds of the desert in winter. The saddle is rarely taken from their backs. Cleaning and grooming are strangers to them. They sometimes reach fifteen hands in height, and never fall below fomleen. In disposition, they are as docile as lambs, requiring no guide but a halter ; yet in the uight or pursuit their nostrils become blood red, their eyes glitter with fire, the neck is arched, and the main and tail are raised and spread to the wind ; the whole animal becomes trans- formed. Their value is so great, that a thorough-bred mare is generally owned by ten, or even more persons, and one can rarely be obtained, except by fraud and excessive bribery. A stallion may be obtained, though at a great price. The reason is, that on account of its fleetness and power of endurance, it is- invaluable to the Bedouin, who, once on his back, can defy any pursuer. An American racer, or even an English hunter, would break down, in those pathless deserts, almost before an Arabian became warmed up to its work. Layard thinks that no Arabian of the best blood has been seen in England. If this is so, we can scarcely suppose that any have come to America, but must believe the so- called Arabians, given to our government at various times, to be jpf inferior breeds. Rarely, indeed, are the thorough breeds found beyond the desert. It will be a subject of regret, to those who admire fine horses, to learn that the Arabian is considered to be degener- ating ; the consequence of the subjugation of Arabia, and the decline of the Bedouin tribes. The Morgan Horse. 11 ?^^^ • GENERAL GIFFORD. THE MORGAN HORSE. Tliis breed of American variety of horses is, perhaps, held in higher estimation, and has obtained a greater celebrity than that of any other in the United States, particularly in tlie Northern and Eastern States ; and, we think, the fact would sustain the assertion, no horse has been so generally admired, and taken the number of first class prizes at our State and other Fairs as the Morgan fimily. The original or Justin Morgan is universally admitted to have been tlie root of this famous race ; there has been some diverse accounts of his origin. The one that is now generally admitted to be most authentic is, that he originated near Springfield, Mass., in 1793 ; was got by a horse called "True Brittain, or Beautiful 18 The Hokse Farrier. Bay." His dam was of the Wild-air blood, a horse celebrated as a valuable stock. The original Justin Morgan is thus described by Linsley, in his "Premium Essay on the Morgan Horse :" "He was fourteen hands high, weighed about 950 lbs. His color was a dark bay, with black legs, mane and tail. Head good, not extremely small, but lean and bony; forehead broad; \ ears, small and rather wide apart ; eyes, medium size, dark, and prominent, with a spirited and joleasant ex- jn-ession; his nostrils, very large; muzzle, small ; lips, close and firm ; back, short ; shoulder-blades and hip bones, very long and obliqued ; loins, exceedingly broad and muscular. His body is rather long, round and deep, close ribbed up ; chest, deep and wide ; breast, broad, projecting in front ; legs, short, close-jointed, thin, but very wide, hard, and free from meat ; mus- cles, remarkably large for his size. His hair was short, soft and glossy ; a little long hair about the fetlocks ; feet, small, but well shaped. He was a very fast walker ; in trotting, his gait is low and smooth, his step sliort and nervous. He was not what is called, in these days, a fast horse, though it is claimed by some that he could trot a mile in three minutes. His proud, bold and fearless style of movement, his vigorous, untiring ac- tion have, perhaps, never been surpassed. He was per- fectly gentle and kind to handle, loved to be groomed and caressed, but disliked children about him ; had an inveterate hatred for dogs; if loose, always chased them the instant he saw them ; was an eager and nim- ble traveler, patient in bad spots, and celebrated for his willinguess to do his best, and for his great power The Moegan Horse. 19 at what is called a 'dead lift.' He died in 1821, at the age of twenty-nine, from the etfects of a kick from another horse. Previous to which he was perfectly sound. His appearance was remarkably fresh and youthful. Age had not quenched his spirit, nor damp- ened the ardor of his temper. His eye was still bright, his step firm and elastic." All the immediate descendants of this remarkable horse have a striking resemblance in all his leadhig characteristics. Each exhibit in a high degree those qualities that have given such celebrity to their sire ; all had the compact form, wide bony legs, great ener- gy, vigorous health and iron constitution. The Mor- gans of the present day possess the spirit, compactness, strength of constitution, power of endurance, general structure of the body of their illustrous ancestor in an eminent degree. There has been, and are, doubtless, more "fast horses" of the Morgan breed, than of any other one variety in the United States. Among them may be named "Fanny Jenks," (who trotted 100 miles hi 9 hours 25 minutes;) "Black Hawk," (who trotted 5 miles in 16 minutes ;) the celebrated "Lady Suttin," (who trotted 2 miles in 5 minutes 17 seconds;) "Blue Morgan," "Know Nothing," "Flying Morgan," and a score of others that might be named, all havmg more or less of the Morgan blood. This breed sell at extravagant prices. Linsley says, "The best stallions cannot be purchased for less than from 1,000 to $3,000 ; the best geldings from 200 to $400; and the best mares from 300 to $600; and horses 20 The Horse Farrier. possessing extra value, on account of their speed, are not included in this statement. The editor of the Albany Cultivator, Louisville Journal, Farmer's Encyclopedia, Maine Farmer, N. Y. Herald, R. L. Allen, of New York, various Committees at Agricultural Fairs, and many others, consisting of men of eminence, and supposed to be good judges of horses, have spoken in the highest terms of the Mor- gan breed. But it is no more than just to say there are some, and, perhaps many, who do not place the vaiue and esteem as higlrly as expressed in the forego- ing sketch. " Black Hawk Hero," (a portrait of which is given in the front of this book, is a line specimen of this breed,) the property of Mr. Thomas Gould, of Au- rora, Cayuga Co., N. Y. He was awarded the first premium as a foreign two year old stallion, at the New York State Fair in 1853, also a premium in 1855. THE RACE-IIORSE. Mr. Youatt says : " Tliere is much dispute with re- gard to the origin of the thorough-hred horse. By some he is traced th'*ough both sire and dam to Eastern pa- rentage ; others believe him to be the native horse, im- proved and perfected by judicious crossing with the Barb, the Turk, or the Arabian." But it cannot admit of a doubt, that the English trained horse is more beautiful, and far swifter than the justly famed horse of the desert. He has invariably beaten every antag- onist on his native soil. The racer is generally distin- guished by his beautiful Arabian head ; his fine and finely-set-on-neck; his oblique, lengthened shoulders; well-bent hinder legs ; his ample, muscular quarters ; The Kace Hokse. 21 FLYING CHILDERS. his flat legs, rather short from the knee downward, al- though not always so deep as they should be ; and his long and classic paster. The Darley Arabian was the parent of our best racing stock. The descendants of this valuable horse were the Flying Childers, and Bart- lett's Childers, from them descended another Childers, Blaze, Snap, Sampson, Eclij^se, Consternation, and a host of excellent horses. Eclipse and Consternation have justly gained a great celebrity in some portions of tliis country. Of Con- sternation, Mr. Randall says : " We believe that it is by a judicious cross with the thorough-bred horse, that the greatest improvement is to be made with a class of our common mares, in breeding animals with Btyle^ speed, and, above all, bottom^ for the carriage, 22 The Horse Farrier. the buggy and the saddle; and because, we believe, on the principle that like produces like^ Consternation 2yromises better for such a cross than any other blood stallion of which we have any knowledge." The progeny of the race-horse is very numerous. In most of the States the majority of the horses in ordin- ary use possess traces of racing blood. THE CANADIAN HORSE, Says Randall, "is found in the Canadian Provinces, and somewhat in the Northern United States. He is mainly of French descent — though many, so called, and doubtless some of the fleetest ones, are the produce of a cross between the Canadian and the English thorough- bred stallion. They are a long-lived, easily kept, and exceedingly hardy race, making good farm and draft horses, when sufficiently large. In form, many of them display, in a marked manner, the characteristics of the Norman — so, too, in their general qualities — but they are usually considerably smaller. Stallions of this breed have, in various instances, of late, been introduced in- to New York and other northern States, to cross with our common mares. The result has been decidedly satisfactory, particularly in giving compactness and vigor of constitution, where the dam does not excel in those particulars. A black stallion, imported from Canada, a few years since, by Mr. John Legg, of Skaneateles, N. Y., has got several hundred colts, which, when broken, have averaged, in value, considerably above the average prices of horses in the country. They are almost in- The Norman Horse. 23 variably fair roadsters, and excellent farm-horses. This cross is more and more finding favor among our farm- ers. THE NORMAN HORSE. The origin of the most esteemed variety of the Nor- man horse, is said to have been a cross between the Andalusian stock of Spain, (\Yhich were derived from a cross of the Arabian or Barb,) and the old Norman draught horse. They are remarkable for their strength, good wind, and great power of endurance. It is said, " with their necks cut to the bone, they flinch not ; they put forth all their efforts at the voice of the driver, or at the dreaded sound of his whip ; they Izeep their condition when other horses icould die of neglect and hard treatment. A better cross for some of our horses of a certain description, cannot be imagined, if we wish to produce, in any reasonable time, a most invaluable race of horses for the farm and the road, than to breed from the full-sized Norman horse." They dre so hardy that there is but little risk in raising them. They are very gentle and docile, free from vicious habits, and at the same time, lively. They break-in without any difficulty. They cannot be called a fast horse, though there are many smart ones among the ordinary road horses. The jDostmen and stage proprietors in France use them exclusively. They drive them before the mail coaches at the rate of eight miles an hour, includ- ing stops. They are generally about 15 hands high, and weigh 1,100 lbs. 24 The Horse Farrier. the cleveland bay. This breed has been considerably spread in the State of New York. They have been exhibited at our State Fairs. They are of an unusual size, though of a good symmetry and respectable action. We have not been able to ascertain whether they spring from the unmixed Cleveland stock of England, which is very scarce there, or not. Mr. Randall says, "The half-bloods, the pro- duct of a cross with our common mares, are Hked by many of our farmers. They are said to make strong, servicable farm beasts, though rather prone to sulli- ness of temper. THE AMERICAN TROTTING HORSE. These, in reality, do not constitute a breed, or a dis- tinct variety. Mr. Randall says : "There is a family of superior trotters, including several the best our country has ever produced, the descendants of Abdal- lah and Messenger, and running back through their sire Mambrino, to the thorough-bred horse, old Mes- senger. But many of our best trotters, including the extraordinary animal. Lady Suffolk, have no known pedigree, and some of them, without doubt, are en- tirely destitute of the blood of the race-horse. Lady Suffolk is by Engineer, but the blood of Engineer is un- known, (she is a gray mare, fifteen hands and two inches high.) Dutchman has no known pedigree. Other celebrated trotters stand in the same category, though we are inclined to think that a decided majority of the best, especially at long distances, have a greater or less infusion of the blood of the race-horse. The American Tbotting Horse. 25 LADY SUFFOLK. The United States has, uadoubtedly, produced more superior trotters than any other country in the world, and in no other country has the speed of the best Am- erican trotters been equalled. The New York 'Spirit of the Times' — the best authority in our country on this and all kindred topics — thus compares the English and American trotters : ' There is no comparison what- ever between the trotting-horses of the two countries. Mr. Wheelan, who took Rattler to England last sea- son, and doubly distanced with ease every horse that ventured to start against him, as the record shoics^ in- forms us that there are twenty or more roadsters in common use in this city, that could comjDete success- fully with the fastest trotters on the English turf. They 26 The Hokse Farrier. neither understand the art of training, driving, or rid- ing, there.' " All this is exiDlained in the same way we account for the great number of superb hunters that are admitted to abound in England above all countries. The differ- ence is occasioned by the management, trammg and attention to this definite object. DEAT OR DRAFT HORSE. This breed are generally small headed for their size, short necked, with thick shoulders, standing rather up- right to the collar, short in the back, very wide in the breast, deep and round in the body, with broad backs and loins ; the quarters thick, the thighs and fore arms very strong, the legs short, with round hoofs. They possess great strength, and though somewhat slow, they are not deficient in bottom, and from their great w^eight, as well as muscular power, they go through draft work that could be performed by no other ani- mal. From what we have seen of this class of horses, we are inclined to the opinion that they possess properties that are w^ell calculated to improve the stock of this country for farming purposes. Several years ago a grey horse called Columbus^ w^as sent into Massachu- setts by Gen. John Coffin of the British army — a gen- tleman who, vrith his brother. Admiral Sir Isaac Coffin, expended much money in the purchase of the best cat- tle and horses in England, which were sent as presents to the Agricultural Society of Massachusetts, their native State. Columbus was kept several years in the The Draft Horse. 27 different counties of Massachusetts, and his progeny- were esteemed as the most powerful draft horses that could be had. The form and size of this horse indicate prodigious strength, and though a person who was unacquainted with the breed might suppose his motions were slug- gish, we are satisfied from having seen him in harness, that his natural walk is faster than that of horses in general, and that he is sufficiently active for the plow or wagon. They will move off with a load that would astonish the driver of a common horse. They are hardy, and are kept fat with only moderate feeding. The best of the heavy Dutch horses of Pennsylvania, bear a considerable resemblance to the horses above described, and some of them are excellent for draft. CHAPTER II. BREEDING AITD MANAGEMENT OF COLTS. BREEDING. That a proper knowledge of the laws of breeding, is a matter of primary and vast importance, is a generally admitted fact, and requires no argument to prove, as it is only by this means we can maintain the present qualities of our improved breeds, and prevent the race from degenerating, and correct and improve their im- perfections. And it is equally true that there are many erroneous views entertained and practiced by many of our Farmers. No person should attempt breeding, particularly the horse, without first making it a matter of investigation, patient study, and inquiry. The first axiom we would lay down, says Youatt, is, that Uke will produce like, that the progeny will inherit the general or mingled qualities of the parents. There are but few diseases by which either of the parents are affected that the foal does not inherit or show a predisposition to. Broken wind, spavms, ring-bones, founders, blind- ness, roaring and the like, are transmissible, there can be no question not excepting ill-usage and hard work. Like Begets Like. 29 These blemishes may not appear in the immediate pro- geny, but will in the next or more distant generation. From this arises the necessity of some knowledge of both the sire and the dam. The most careless breeders have observed qualities appearing in their stock that belonged to neither sire nor dam, but which belonged to their ancestry further back ; such as a vicious temper, some peculiar mark, white face or feet. Not only are diseases inherited by the offspring, but the form, spirit, constitution and temper. *This maxim, however, that " Uke begets Hke," is only true in part, as there is a constant tendency to change, arising from difference in food. Change of climate, or other physi- cal conditions to which they might be exposed, might naturally be expected to produce considerable cor- responduig modifications in the form, size, color, and coating of animals ; as it is well known that cattle generally become very large and fat when reared for many generations on moist rich soils, where good pasturage abounds, but are distinguished by the short- ness of their legs ; while on drier situations, where the herbage is sparse, their whole bulk is less, and their limbs more muscular and strong. A country of heaths, or of other innutritions plants, will not produce ahorse so large nor so strong as one of plentiful herbage, as is manifested between those reared on bleak mountains and fertile plains, high latitudes and more temperate climes, sandy deserts and watered vales. A change of situation in the one case, after a succession of gen- *D. J. Bowne, in Patent Office Official Report, 1854. 30 The Horse Farrier. erations, not only diminishes the size of the animal, but affects the character and form of his body, head, and hmbs. Thus, if a London dray horse be conveyed to Arabia, and subjected to the same influences to which the native breed of that country is exposed, in the course of some generations he will present the leading characters of the Arabian horse. On the con- trary, if the race thus changed be conveyed again to England, in the course of several generations, it will gradually acquire the j:)roperties it formerly jDOSsess- ed. This fact would seem to prove that the Ara- bian horse cannot exist in perfection in any of the northern or western countries of Europe, and that the humidity of the climate and the influence indirectly arising from that cause, are the principal reasons of this change. Similar instances might be given in reference to the changes wdiich have been observed in the sheep, the goat, and the hog. The former, when subjected to the chmate of the West Indies, from Thibet, Spain, or Vermont, where their fleeces are fine, delicate, and soft, after a few years are entirely covered with rough, coarse hair, resembling that of the goat. Breeding should be conducted wdth some definite object in view. There is no greater error than the common remark of some farmers, of some Avretched under-sized, ewe-necked, cat-hammer Avi'eck of a mare, broken-Avinded, ring-boned, and spavined, "Oh, she Avill do to raise a colt out of!" She will do ! but Avhat Avill the colt be ? It will not be worth the mare's grass, let alone the price of the stallion's service. But it is a good feature that there is a growing anxiety among fai'mers to raise valuable stock. This is attributable to Breeds in Horses. 31 the fact, that it is not only as cheap to keep a good horse as a bad one, but in reality it is much cheaper. The prime cost is the only difference to be considered ; the cost of stable room, keep and care is identical, while the wear and tear is infinitely less, in the sound, able, useful animal, than in the broken jade. The work which can be done, and the value earned by the one, is in no possible relation to thLt of the other. The horse bought at the age of four years at $300, when he has attained the age of eiglit is worth tA\ice the money, either for work or for sale, to the horse that was bought for a third of that price, when he has attained the same age. What is called breed in horses, consists in the supe- rior organization of the nervous and thoracic organs, as compared with the abdominal ; the chest is deeper and more capacious ; and the brain and nerves are more highly developed. More air is respired, more blood purified, more nerA^ous energy expended. — Whilst the heavy cart-horse may be considered , to possess the lymphatic temperament, the blood horse may be regarded as the emblem of the nervous and sanguine temperament combined ; the latter, however, predominating. When the nervous temperament has the ascendance, the animal ^dll carry but little flesh, but will go till he drops, never seeming to tire. He will, however, take too much out of himself, become thinner, and is what is called a hot horse. When the sanguine temperamelat greatly prevails, the horse will have great muscular powers, but not much incfination to put them to the stretch. When the lymphatic tern- 32 The Horse Farrier. perament has superior influence, the animal, though looking fresh and fat, and starting well at first, will soon flag and knock up, and will rather endure the lash than make an extra exertion. It is the happy combination of these three temperaments that make a perfect horse, when severe exertion is demanded. The full development of the abdominal organs is essential, inasmuch as it is through the food that both the mus- cular system and the nervous energy is furnished. If the digestion is weak, the other powers will be in- efficiently suppUed. The sanguineous organs are need- ed to furnish the muscular powers, and the nervous sys- tem is demanded to furnish the muscles with the re- quisite energy and capability of endurance. What is called bottom in the horse, is neither more nor less than the abundant supply of nervous energy, the muscles being at the same time well developed. There are two errors commonly committed by per- sons selecting animals from which to breed. Some pay too much attention to pedigree, and too little to form, spirit, etc. The correct theory is, though form and character is of primary importance, the blood should never be neglected. The great point to be aimed at in a horse for all work, is the combination in the same animal, of maximum of speed, compatible with suffi- cient size, bone, strength, and solid power, to carry heavy weights, draw large loads, and to secure to the stock the probability of not inheriting deformity or disease from either parent. Breed as much as possible with pure blood, of the right kind, and breed what is technically called up, not down, that is to say, by breed- Breed with Pure Blood. 33 ing the mare to a male of superior, not inferior blood to herself; except where it is desired to breed like to like, as Morgan to Morgan, for the purpose of perpet- uting a pure stream of any particular variety which is needful. A half-breed mare should never be put to a half-breed stallion, as in that case the product in nine cases out of ten degenerates below the dam, whereas if she be bred to a thorough-bred stallion, the product will be superior. And the error is, to breed from mares that have become noted for their speed. Some persons will pick up some long-legged, rangy, broken down, trotting mare, which could perhaps trot her mile in 2.30, thinking to produce something very fine. Nothing can be more ill-judged, as in the majority of instances it is sure to end in disappointment. A mare, with all the best blood in her veins, if she has not got good shape and good points, is not fit for a stallion. And the great and common error in breeding, is to cross a compact dam with a large sire, the object being to increase the size of the offsj^ring above that of the dam ; the result is almost sure to end in disappoint- ment. This has been attempted in England, and has proved a failure. The rule deduced from experience, is, the dam must be as large or larger than the sire. — This is a historical fact. The history of breedmg shows that to improve a breed, we must select the best formed, largest mares, and cross them with medium sized, compact, muscular stallions. Size is not the measure of power. Some horses that weigh 900 lbs. will exceed in strength and endurance others of 1,200 lbs., or more ; and of those horses that have distuiguished themselves as trotters, a large 34 The Horse Farrier. majority have been of medium size. Shortness of legs with compactness of form is indispensable to great endurance. The size of the muscles of a horse, other things being equal, determines his power. In selectuig a stallion, aim to get one that excells in the points that the mare is deficient in, and you wish to avoid in the offspring. Let him exhibit courage and endurance, rath- er than speed. No one stallion is best adapted to all mares ; determine, with a matured judgment, which class of animals your mare is best calculated to produce, whether a roadster, coach horse, or draught animal, and having determined this, use a stallion best cal- culated to produce the thing reasonably expected, bearing in mind the rule that " I-ike will produce like." Breeding, to be successful, must be a matter of study. One point, says Youatt, is, absolutely essential, it is " compactness" — as much goodness and strength as possible, condensed into a little space. 'Next to compactness, the inclination of the shoulder will be regarded. A huge stalhon, with upright shoulders, never got a capital hunter or hackney. From him the breeder can obtain nothing but a cart or dray horse, and that, perhaps, spoiled- by the op- posite form of the mare. On the other hand, an up- right shoulder is desirable, if not absolutely necessary, when a mere slow draught-horse is required. The condition of the stallion, is too often over- looked by the most of our farmers. By condition is not meant a high state of fatness, but on the contrary, it indicates the greatest, health and strength, reducing all superfluous fat, bringing the fiesh into clear, hard, Condition of a Stallion. 35 and powerful muscles. Too many farmers are content with the form and figure of a horse, without regard to condition. A remarkable case occur)*ed in England, some years since. George the IV. owned, and was in the habit of riding as a hunter, a horse of unequaled excellence. His Royal Highness caused a few of his mares to be bred to him in the spring, after he had been kept in the highest condition as a hunter throughout the winter, and the produce, on growing up, jDroved every way worthy of their sire. When His Royal Highness be- came seriously engaged in the cares of Government, and therefore relmquished the pleasures of the chase, bemg desirous to perpetuate the fine qualities of this stock, he ordered the horse to be kept at Windsor for public covering, provided the mares should be of the first quality ; and in order to insure a sufiicient number of these, directed the head gix)om to keep him exclu- sively for such, and to make no charge, with the ex- ception of the customary groom' s-fee of half a guinea each. The groom, anxious to pocket as many half guineas as possible, published His Royal Highness's liberality, and vaunted the qualities of the horse, in order to persuade all he could to avail themselves of the benefit. The result w^as, the horse bemg kept with- out his accustomed exercise and in a state of reple- tion, and serving upwards of a hundred mares yearly, the stock, although tolerably promising in their early age, shot up into lank, vreakiy, awkw^ard, leggy, good- for-nothuig creatures, to the entire rum of the horse's character as a sire — until some gentlemen, aware of the 36 The Horse Farrier. cause, took pains to exjolain it, proving the correctness of their statements by reference to the first of the horse's get, produced under a proper system of breed- ing, and which were tlien in their prime, and among the best horses in England. ** In selecting a mare," says Youatt, " it is perhaps more difficult to select a good mare to breed from than a good horse, because she should possess somewhat op- posite qualities. Her carcase should be long, in order to giv^e room for the growth of the foetus, and yet with this there should be compactness of form and shortness of leg. In frame, the mare should be so formed as to be capable of carrying and well nourishing her off- spring ; that is, she should be what is called ' roomy.' There is a formation of the hips which is particularly unfit for breeding purposes, and yet which is some- times carefully selected, because it is considered ele- gant ; this is the level and straight hip, in which the tail is set on very high, and the end of the haunch bone is nearly on a level with the projection of the hi]) bone. Nearly the opposite form is the more desirable. She re- quires such a shape and make as is well adapted for the purpose she is intended for," that is to say, for pro- ducing colts of the style and form she is intended to produce. We will add, that she must have four good legs under her, and those legs standing as a foundation on four good, well shaped, large feet, opened-heeled and by no means flat-soled. That she should have a good, lean, bony head, small cased, broad fronted, well set on, upon a high, well carved neck, thin at its Selection of Mares. 37 junction with the head ; high withers, thin shoulders, and, above all, long, sloping shoulders. A straight shoulder is an abomination; it renders speed impos- sible, and gives a rigid, inflexible motion, often pro- ducing the bad fault of stumbhng. She should be wide-chested and deep in the heart place. Her quarters should be strong, well let down, long and sickle-shaped above the hocks. It is better that she go with her hocks somewhat too wide apart than too near together — the former point indicating power, the latter weakness, of a bad kind. It has been shown that a breed mare may, nay, should be considerable longer in the back than one would choose a working horse to be, but if she be particularly so, it is desirable to put her to a particularly short-backed and close-coupled horse. The next thing to be observed by the horse-breeder, in raising stock of any kind, after the blood and form of the mare and the qualities of the stallion, is the temper and condition of the dam. The former, be- cause nothing is more decidedly transmissible in the blood than temper ; the second, because, unless she is in good health and vigor, it is impossible that she can produce vigorous and healthy ofispring. The first time a mare is to be covered, it is of the utmost importance that the stallion should be the best that can be procured, as instances have been known where the stallion having possessed some striking points, the colts of the mare have shown those points for several colts after, though a different stallion was used. 38 The Horse Farriee. Under no possible circumstances breed from a stal- lion which has any affection of any kind of the respi- ratory organs, whether seated in the lungs or in the windpipe, or from one which has any affection of the eyes, unless it be the direct result of an accident, such as a blow or a puncture, nor even then, if the accident, having occurred to one eye, the other has sympatheti- cally followed suit; and, on the other side, we should say on no account breed from a mare affected in either way, unless she be possessed of some excellences so extra- ordinary and countervailing, that for the sake of pre- serving the stock one would be willing to run some risk of having a worthless animal for his own use, in the hope of possibly having one free from the dreaded defect and of superlative excellence. Previous to sending the mare to the horse she should be got into the most perfect state of health and con- dition, by moderate exercise, abundance of good, nutri- tous food and warm stabling. It is not desirable that she should be in a pampered state produced by hot stables or extraordinary clothing, that she should have the short fine coat or the bloomino^ and orlowinor con- dition of the skin, for which one would look in a race- horse about to contend for a four mile heat — not that she should be m that wiry form of sinew and steel-like hardiness of muscle, which is only the result of train- ing. Still less desirable is it she should be overloaded with fat, especially that soft fat generated by artifi- cial feeding. The temper is of great importance, by which must Condition of Mares. 39 be understood, not that gentleness at grass, which may- lead the breeder's family to pet the mare, but such a temper as will serve for the purpose of the rider, and will answer to the stimulus of the voice, whip or spur. A craven or a rogue is not to be thought of as the mother of a family ; and if a mare belong to a breed which is remarkable for refusing to answer to the call of the rider, she should be consigned to any task rather than the stud farm. Sulkiness and savageness are hkewise to be avoided, whether in stallion or mare. From the time of covering, to within a few days of the expected period of foaling, the cart-mare may be kept at moderate labor, not only without injury, but with decided advantage. It will then be prudent to release her from work, and keep her near home, and under the frequent insiDcction of some careful j^erson. When nearly half the time of pregnancy has elapsed, the mare should have a little better food. She should be allowed one or two feeds of grain in the day. This is about the period when they are accustomed to slink their foals, or when abortion occurs : the eye of the owner should, therefore, be frequently, upon them. Good feeding and moderate exercise will be the best preventives of this mishap. The mare that has once aborted, is liable to a repetition of the accident, and therefore should never be suffered to be with other mares between the fourth and fifth months : for such is the power of imagination or of sympathy in the mare, that if one suffers abortion, others in the same pasture will too often share the same fate. Farmers 40 The House Farkier. wash, and pamt, and tar tlieir stables, to jn-event somo supposed infection; — the infection lies in the imagla- ation. When the period of parturition is drawing near, she should be watched and shut up during the night in a safe yard or loose box. If the mare, whether of tlie pure or common breed, be thus taken care of, and be in good health while in foal, little danger will attend the act of parturition. If there is false presentation of the foetus, or difficulty in producing it, it will be better to have recourse to a well-informed practitioner, than to injure the mother by the violent and injurious attempts that are often made to relieve her. The parturition being over, the marc should bo turned into some well-sheltered pasture, with a hovel or shed to run into when she pleases ; and if she has foaled early, and grass is scanty, she should have a couple of feeds of grain daily. The breeder may de- pend upon it, that nothmg is gained by starvmg the mother and stinting the foal at this time. It is the most important period of the life of the horse ; and If, from false economy, his growth is arrested, his puny form and want of endurance will ever afterwards testi- fy the error that has been committed. The grain should be given in a trough on the ground, that the foal may partake of it with the mother. When the new grass is plentiful, the quantity of corn may gradually be diminished. The mare will usually be found again at heat at or After-Management of Mares. 41 before the expiration of a month from the time of foal- ing, when, if she is principally kept for breedmg pur- poses, she may be put again to the horse. At the same time, also, if she is used for agricultural purposes, she may go again to work. The foal is at first shut in the stable during the hours of v/ork ; but as soon as it acquires sufficient strength to toddle after the mare, and especially when she is at slow work, it will be better for the foal and the dam that they should be to- gether. The work will contribute to the health of the mother ; the foal will more frequently draw the milk, and thrive better, and will be hardy and tractable, and gradually familiarized with the objects among which it is afterwards to live. While the mother, however, is thus worked, she and the foal should be w^ell fed ; and two feeds of corn, at least, should be added to the green food which they get when turned out after their work, and at night. In four or six months, according to the growth of the foal, it may be weaned, and the mother should be put to harder work, and have drier food. One or two urine-balls, or a physic ball, would be useful in the milk, should she be troublesome or pine after the foal. Mares frequently produce colts, at fourteen and fifteen years of age, and sometimes twenty. Experience has proved that from six to twelve, is the most valu- able part of a mare's life for raising colts. They are fre. quently incapacitated by breeding too young. 42 The Horse Farrier. BEEEDIXG FANCY COLOES. The following is taken from a correspondent in the Albany Cultivator ; as to the correctness of the theory we cannot vouch : " In order to obtain a cream color- ed colt from a bay horse out of a bay mare, I tried the following experiment, which proved entirely success- ful : a cream stud was first led out and used to tease the mare. After putting blinds on the mare, the cream was taken out of the way, and the bay horse used to cover the mare, and not seen by her, but immediately returned to the stable, and the cream colored horse led ■ right in front of her, and exposed to her view for some time." This may be attributable to the nervous influence of the dam, or what is called the influence of the imagination of the dam on the faetus. It may have been something akin to this, by the influence of which, through the medium of peeled rods, Jacob caused the cattle to be born ringed streaked and spot ted^ KEARING AXD MANAGEMENT OF COLTS. Colts should be taken from the dam when about six months old, if in a good condition, and shut up in a house loose, or in a small yard, (if the yard is large they are Hkely to run themselves poor,) with a fence that they cannot leap. It is at tliis time they usually acquire the habit of leaping which follows them through life. They should be kept out of sight and hearing of the dam, as much as possible. They may be allowed to re-join each other once a day, for a short time, in or- Management of Colts. 43 der that the foal may empty the udder, and not be suddenly deprived of its natural food. They should be fed with oat meal and sweet apples shced ; about two pints of the former, and two quarts of the latter, three times a day, with a sufficiency of good timothy hay. They should eat out of a manger about as high as they naturally hold their heads — a stable with earth foundation, kept dry with straw, — chaff, or leaves is preferable — if on a stable floor, their dung should remain with occasionally leveling off, and provided with linter — they should be let out daily for exercise, and should not be tied in the stable. Con- tinue this feed through the winter. If fed oats, they should be soaked. There is no period which is of more importance than the first winter. "We frequently see very prom- ising colts make poor horses from want of proper man- agement when young. They should on no account be allowed to get poor while growing, unless it be on grass when three years old, for a short time this is thought by some to be beneficial. No investment that the farmer can make will pay better than keep- ing colts in a good condition. On the other hand they should not be too fat, nor forced to maturity too soon, or you may give them a kind of hot-bed growth. BKEAKING. As this subject is one of vital importance, and is too little understood, and should receive more attention from the majority of breeders of horses, we venture 44 The Horse Farrier. a few remarks in addition to Mr. Davis' method. The training of colts should commence at an early age. As they advance towards maturity they become more fixed in their habits, are more resolute in their temper, less able to be taught, and are able to offer greater resistance, and there is less danger of their injuring themselves or their trainer, by their efforts to free themselves from restraint. The training of a colt may commence before they are a month old, by handling, caressing, currying, and making a pet of them, tak- ing care to touch them only in such places as are agreeable to them, such as the back, jowls, and the un- der side of the neck, taking care to avoid the ears. A halter may be put on when three months old, one that will be impossible for them to break. Fasten it to the collar of the mare, and teach them to follow the mare thus early, being careful that they do not hang back on the halter. The habit once confirmed, it wiU be diflScult to break them of it. Let perfect kindness characterise aU your first efforts — reward every act of obedience, and bring them under perfect subjection. Of all the vicious habits which are found in horses, we believe nine-tenths are owing to unkind treatment, harsh usage, and improper management. A colt may be broken to do very light work in har- ness at two years old, but should not be backed, ex- cept by a small boy, until three, and a light man until four years old. When he becomes accustomed to the reins, a person may take hold of the traces and occas- ionally pull on them, teaching the colt to keep steadily Breaking of Colts. 45 along, whether he feels any draught on his shoulders or not. When accustomed to this, he can be put in a sulkey, or beside another horse. See that every part of the harness is strong and perfect. All that now re_ mains is to teach him in his paces, and this is of much importance, as on the perfection of these depends his usefulness and value, and no pace is of more impor- tance than the walk. He should be thoroughly drilled in this before any attempt is made to push him to a trot. Keep every j^ace clear and distinct from the other. When walking, he should not be allowed to trot a few steps and then conmience his walk again. When trotting, as in walking, keep him steadily at his pace, and not allow him to slacken into a walk for a step or two. If you wish to make him a fast trotter, occasionally push him to his extreme speed, for a few moments at a time, and then reward him with kind and soothing words. CASTRATION. Youatt says of castration : " The period at which this operation may be best performed depends much on the breed and form of the colt, and the purpose for which he is destined. For the common agricultural horse the age of four or five months will be the most proper time, or, at least, before he is weaned. Few horses are lost when cut at that age. Care, however, should be taken that the weather is not too hot, nor the flies too numerous. 46 The Horse Farrier. " If the horse is designed either for the carriage, or for heavy draught, the farmer should not think of cas- trating him until he is at least a twelvemonth old ; and, even then, the colt should be carefully examined. If he is thin and spare about the neck and shoulders, and low in the withers, he will materially improve by re- maining uncut another six months; but if his fore- quarters are fairly developed at the age of twelve months, the operation should not be delayed, lest he beoome heavy and gross before, and perhaps has be- gun too decidedly to have a will of his own. No specific age, then, can be fixed; but the castration should be performed rather late in the spring or early m the autumn, Avhen the air is temperate, and particu- larly when the weather is dry. " No preparation is necessary for the sucking colt, but it may be prudent to bleed and to physic one of more advanced age. In the majority of cases, no after treatment will be necessary, except that the animal should be sheltered from intense heat, and more par- ticularly from wet. In temperate weather, he will do much better running in the field, than nursed in a close and hot stable. The moderate exercise that he will take in grazing will be preferable to perfect inaction. "The old method of opening the scrotum (testicle bag) on either side, and cutting off the testicles, and pre- venting bleeding by a temporary compression of the vessels, wdiile they are seared with a hot iron, must not, perhaps, be abandoned ; but there is no necessity of that extra pain, when the spermatic cord (the blood Castration. 47 vessels and the nerve) is compressed between two pieces of Avood as tightly as in a vice, and there left until the following day, or until the testicle drops off. The practice of twitching^ exposes the animal to much unnecessary pain, and is accompanied with consider- able danger. " Another method of castration is by Torsion. An incision is made into the scrotum, and the vas dif evens is exposed and divided. The artery is then seized by a pair of forceps, contrived for the purpose, and twisted six or seven times round. It retracts without untwist- ing the coils, and bleeding ceases. The most painful part of the operation — the operation of the firing-iron or the clams — is avoided, and the wound readily heals." All the pain and severe struggling may be prevented by the use of chloroform. With this assistance the whole performance can be accomplished in several minutes. It should be used with care. , HOW TO TAME WILD HOESES. The person of whom I obtained this receipt, paid Perry Plancher, the Arabian Horse tamer, $20 for it, and has been selling it through the country for $1,00. We have no faith in it. Take the warts from the leo:s dry and powder them, blovv^ up his nose, then take a few drops of the oil of arodium on your hand, and rub on his nose. CHAPTER III B. F. DAVIS' NEW METHOD OF TAMING WILD HOKSES. THREE FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES. First. — That he is so constituted by nature that he will not offer resistance to any demand made of him, which he fully comprehends, if made in any way con- sistent with the laws of his nature. Second. — That he has no consciousness of his strength beyond his experience, and can be handled according to our will without force. Third. — That we can, in compliance with the laws of his nature, by which he examines all things new to him, take any object, however frightful, around, over or on liim, that does not inflict pain, without causing him to fear. To take these assertions in order, I will give you Firsts some of the reasons why I think he is natur- ally obedient, and will not offer resistance to anything fully comprehended. The horse, though possessed of some faculties superior to man's, being deficient in reasoning powers, has no knowledge of right or wrong, of free will and independent government, and knows FiKST Pkinciples. 49 not of any imposition practiced upon him, however unreasonable these impositions may be. Consequently he cannot come to any decision what he should or should not do, because he has not tho reasoning facul- ties of man to argue the justice of the thing demanded of him. If he had, taking into consideration his super- ior strength, he would be useless to man as a servant. Give him mind in proportion to his strength, and he will demand of us the green field for his inheritance, where he will roam at leisure, denying the right of servitude at all. God has wisely formed his nature so that it can be operated upon by the knowledge of man according to the dictates of his will, and he might well be termed an unconscious, submissive servant. This truth we can see verified in every day's experience by the abuses practiced upon him. Any one who chooses to be so cruel, can mount the noble steed and run him till he drops with fatigue, or, as is often the case with the more spirited, falls dead beneath the rider. If he had power to reason, would he not vault and pitch his rider, rather than to suffer him to run him to death ? Or would he condescend to carry at all the vain im- postor, who, with but equal intellect, was trying to impose on his equal rights and equally independent spirit ? But, hapf)ily for us, he has no consciousness of imposition, no thought of disobedience, except by impulse caused by the violation of the law of his na- ture : consequently, when disobedient, it is the fault of man. Then we can but come to the conclusion that, if a horse is not taken in a way at variance with the laws 50 The Horse Farrier. of his nature, he lYill do anything that he fully com- prehends without making any offer of resistance. Second — The fact of the horse being unconscious of the amount of his strength, can be proven to the sat- isfaction of any one. For instance, such remarks as these are common, and perhaps famihar to your re- collection. One person says to another, " If that wild horse there was conscious of the amount of his strength, his owner would have no business with him in that vehicle — such light reins and harness, too : if he knew, he could snap them asunder in a minute, and be as free as the air we breathe ; " and " that horse yonder, that is pawing and fretting to follow the company that is fast leaving him, if he knew his strength, he would not remain long fastened to that hitching-post, so much against his will, by a light rein, that would no more resist his powerful weight and strength, than a cotton thread would bind a strong man," Third — He will allow any object, however frightful in appearance, to come around, over or on him, that does not inflict pain. We know, from a natural course of reasoning, that there has never been an effect without a cause : and we infer from this that there can be no action, either in animate or 'inanimate matter, without there first being some cause to j^i'oduce it. And from this self-evident fact, we know there is some cause for every impulse or movement, of either mind or matter. Then, accord- imr to this theorv, there must be some cause before fear can exist ; and if fear exists from the effect of im- agination, and not from the infliction of real pain, it cannot be removed by complying with those laws of Third Principles. 51 nature by wliicb the horse examines an object, and determmes upon its innocence or harm. A log or stump by the road-side may be, in the im- agination of the horse, some great beast about to pounce upon him ; but after you take him up to it, and let him stand by it a little while, and touch it with his nose, and go through his process of examination, he will not care anything more about it. And the same principle and process will have the same efiect Avith any other object, however frightful in appearance, in which there is no harm. Take a boy that has been frightened with a false face, or any other object that he could not comprehend at once, but let him take that face or object in his hands, and examine it, and he will not care anything more about it. This is a demonstra- tion of the same principle. With this introduction to the principles of my the- ory, I shall next attempt to teach you how to put it into practice, and whatever instructions may follow, you can rely on as having been proven practically by my own experiments. And knowing from experience just what obstacles I have met with in handUng bad horses, I shall try to anticipate them for you, and as- sist you in surmounting them, by commencing with tha first steps to be taken with the colt, and accom- pany you through the whole task of breaking. HOW TO SUCCEED IN GETTING THE COLT FKOM PASTURE. Go to the pasture, and walk around the whole herd quietly, and at such a distance as not to cause them to scare and run. Then approach them very slowly, and if they stick up their heads, and seem to be frightened, 63 The Horse Farriek. hold on until they become quiet, so as not to make them run before you are close enough to drive them in the direction you want them to go. And when you begin to drive, do not flourish your arms, or halloo, but gently follow them ofl", leaving the direction free for them that you wish them to take. Thus taking advantage of their ignorance, you will be able to get them in the pound as easily as the hunter drives the quails into his net. For, if they have always run in the pasture uncared for, (as many horses do in prairie countries, and on large plantations,) there is no reason why they should not be as wild as the sportsman's birds, and require the same gentle treatment, if you want to get them without trouble ; for the horse, m his natural state, is as wild as any of the undomesti- cated animals, though more easily tamed than most of them. HOW TO STABLE A COLT WITHOUT TROUBLE. The next step will be, to get the horse into a stable or shed. This should be done as quietly as possible, BO as not to excite any suspicion in the horse of any danger befalling him. The best way to do this is to lead a gentle horse into the stable first, and hitch him ; then quietly walk around the colt, and let him go in of his own accord. It is almost impossible to get men who have never practiced on this principle, to go slow and considerate enough about it. They do not know that, in handling a wild horse, above all other things is that good old adage true, " haste makes waste ;" that is, waste of time, for the gain of trouble and per- plexity. Stabling Colts. 53 One wrong move may frighten your horse, and make him think it necessary to escape at all hazards for the safety of his life, and thus make a two hours' ivork of a ten minutes' job ; and this would be all your fault, and entirely unnecessary; for he will not run unless you run after him, and that would not be good policy, unless you knew that you could outrun him ; for you will have to let him stop of his own accord af- ter all. But he will not try to break away, unless you attempt to force him into measures. If he does not see the way at once, and is a little fretful about going in, do not undertake to drive him, but give him a little less room outside, by gently closing in around him. Do not raise your arms, but let them hang at your side ; for you might as well raise a club. If he at- tempts to turn back, walk before him, but do not run ; and if he gets past you, encircle him again in the same quiet manner, and he will soon find that you are not going to hurt him ; and then you can walk so close around him that he will go into the stable for more room, and to get farther from you. As soon as he is in, remove the quiet horse and shut the door. This will be his first notion of confinement — not knowing how he got in such a place, nor how he got out of it. That he may take it as quietly as jDossible, see that the stable is entirely free from dogs, chickens, or anything that would annoy him ; then give him a few ears of corn, and let him remain alone fifteen or twenty min- utes, until he has examined his apartment, and has be- come reconciled to his confinement. 54: The Hoese Farrier, the kind of halter. Always use a leather halter, and be sure to have it made so that it will not draw tight around his nose, if he pulls on it. It should be of the right size to fit his head easily and nicely, so that the nose-band will not be too tight or too low. Never put a rope halter on an unbroken colt, under any circumstances what- ever. They have caused more horses to hurt or kill themselves, than would pay for twice the cost of all leather halters that ever have been needed for the pur- pose of haltering colts. It is almost impossible to break a colt that is very wild with a rope halter, with- out having him pull, rear, and throw himself, and thus endanger his life ; and I v,-ill tell you w^hy. It is just as natural for a horse to try to get his head out of anything that hurts it, or feels unpleasant, as it would be for you to try to get your hand out of a fire. The cords of the rope are hard and cutting ; this makes him raise his head and draw on it, a sKp-noose, (the way the halters are always made,) tightens, and pinches his nose, and then he will struggle for life, until, per- chance, he throws himself; and who would have his horse throw himself, and run the risk of breaking his neck, rather than pay the price of a leather halter ? But this is not the worst. A horse that has once pulled on his halter, can never be as well broken as one that has never pulled at rJl. REMARKS ON THE HORSE. But before we attempt to do anything more with the colt, I will give you sonic of the characteristics of his nature, that you may better understand his motions. EXPKRBIENTS WITH THE RoBE. 55 Every one that lias ever paid any attention to the horse, has noticed his natm-al inclination to smell of everything which to him looks new and frightful. This is their strange mod'e of examining everything. And, when they are frightened at anythmg, though they look at it sharply, they seem to have no confidence in this optical examination alone, but must touch it with the nose before they are entirely satisfied ; and as soon as this is done, all is right. EXPERIMENT WlTH THE ROBE. If you want to satisfy yourself of this characteristic of the horse, and learn something of importance con" cerning the peculiarities of his nature, etc., turn him into the barnyard, or a large stable v/iil do. And then gather up something that you know will frighten him ; a red blanket, buffalo robe, or something of that kind. Hold it up so that he can see it, he will stick up his head and snort. Then throw it down somewhere in the centre of the yard or barn, and walk ofi* to one side. Watch his motions, and study his nature. If he is frightened at the object, he will not rest until he has touched it^with his nose. You will see him begin to walk around the robe and snort, all the time getting a little closer, as if drawn up by some magic spell, until he finally gets within reach of it. He will then very cautiously stretch out his neck as far as he can reach, nearly touching it with his nose, as though he thought it was ready to fly at him. But after he has repeated these touches a few times, for the first, (though he has been looking at it all the time,) he seems to have an idea of what it is. But nov/ he has found, by the sense 56 The Horse Fahrier. of feeling, that it is nothing that will do him any harm, and he is ready to play with it. Yet the horse is never so well satisfied when he is about anything that has frightened him, as when he is standing with his nose to it. And in nine cases out of ten, you will see some of that wild look about him again, as he turns to walk from it. And you will probably see ^him looking back very suspiciously as he walks away, as though he thought it might come after him yet. And in all probability, he will have to go back and make another examination before he is satis- fied. But he will familiarize himself with it, and if he should run in that yard a few days, the robe that fright- ened him so at first, will be no more to him than a familiar stump. SUPPOSITIONS ON THE SENSE OF SMELLING. We might very naturally suppose, from the fact of the horse's aj^plying his nose to everything new to him, that he always does so for the purpose of smelling these objects. But I believe that it is as much or more for the purpose of feeUng, and that he makes use of his nose, or muzzle, (as it is sometimes called,) as we would our hands ; because it is the only organ by which he can touch or feel anything with much susceptibihty. I beheve he invariably makes use of the four senses, seeing, hearing, smelling and feeling, in all of his ex- aminations, of which the sense of feefing is, perhaps, the most important. And we know from experience, that if a horse sees and smells a robe a short distance from him, he is very much frightened, (unless he is used to it,) until he touches or feels it with his nose ; which is a positive proof that feeling is the controlling sense in this case. Powel's System. 57 powel's system of appkoaching the colt. But before we go further, I will give you Willis J. Powel's system of approaching a wild colt, as given by him in a work published in Europe, about the year 1814, on the "Art of taming wild horses." He snys, " A horse is gentled by my secret in from two to six- teen hours. The time I have most commonly em- ployed has been from four to six hours." He goes on to say : " Cause your horse to be put in a small yard, stable, or room. If in a stable or room, it ought to be large, in order to give him some exercise with the hal- ter before you lead him out. If the horse belongs to that class which appears only to fear man, you must introduce yourself gently into the stable, room, or yard, where the horse is ; he will naturally run from you, and frequently turn his head from you ; but you must walk about extremely slow and softly, so that he can see you whenever he turns his head towards you, which he never fails to do in a short time, say in a quarter or half an hour. I never knew one to be much longer without turning towards me. '' At the very moment he turns his head, hold out your left hand towards him, and stand perfectly still, keeping your eyes upon the horse, watching his mo- tions, if he makes any. If the horse does not stir for ten or fifteen minutes, advance as slowly as possible, and without making the least noise, always holding out your left hand, without any other ingredient in it than what nature put in it." He says, " I have made use of certain ingredients before people, such as the sweat under my arm, etc., to disguise the real secret, and many beheved that the docihty, to which the horse ar- rived in so short a time, was owing to these ingredients ; 58 The Hokse Farriek. but you see from this explanation that they were of no use whatever. The implicit faith placed in these ingredients, though innocent of themselves, becomes " faith without works." And thus men remained al- ways in doubt concerning the secret. If the horse makes the least motion when you advance towards him, stop, and remain perfectly still until he is quiet. Remain a few moments in this condition, and then ad- vance again in the same slow and almost imperceptible manner. Take notice ; if the horse stirs, stop, without changing your position. It is very uncommon for the horse to stir more than once after you begin to advance, yet there are exceptions. He generally keeps his eyes steadfast on you, until you get near enough to touch him on the forehead. When you are thus near to him, raise, slowly, and by degrees, your hand, and let it come in contact with that part just above the nostrils as lightly as possible. If the horse flinches, (as many will,) repeat with great rapidity these Ught strokes upon the forehead, going a Uttle further up towards his ears by degrees, and descending with the same ra- l^idity until he will let you handle his forehead all over. Now let the strokes be repeated with more force over all his forehead, until you can handle that part with equal facility. Then touch in the same light manner, making your hands and lingers play around the lower part of the horse's ears, coming down now and then to his forehead, which may be looked upon as the helm that governs all the rest. "Having succeeded in handling his ears, advance towards the neck, with the same precautions, and in the same manner ; observing always to augment the Handling the Colt. 59 force of the strokes whenever the horse will permit it. Perform the same on both sides of the neck, until he lets you take it in your arms without flinching. " Proceed in the same progressive manner to the sides, and then to the back of the horse. Every time the horse shows any nervousness, return immediately to the forehead as the true standard, patting him with your hands, and from thence rapidly to where you had already arrived, always gaining ground a considerable distance farther on, every time this happens. The head, ears, neck, and body being thus gentled, proceed from the neck to the root of the tail. " This must be managed with dexterity, as a horse is never to be depended on that is skittish about the tail. Let your hand fall lightly and rapidly on that part next to the body a minute or two, and then you will begin to give it a slight pull upwards every quar- ter of a minute. At the same time you continue this handling of him, augment the force of the strokes as well as the raising of the tail, until you can raise it and handle it with the greatest ease, which commonly happens in a quarter of an hour in most horses, in oth- ers almost immediately, and in some much longer. It now remains to handle all his legs ; from the tail come back again to the head, handle it well, as likewise the ears, breast, neck, etc., speaking now and then to the horse. Begin by degrees to descend to the legs, al- ways ascending and descending, gaining ground every time you descend, mitil you get to his feet. " Talk to the horse ; let him hear the sound of your voice, which at the beginning of the operation is not quite so necessary, but which I have always done in 30 The Horse Fareier. making him lift up his foot. 'Hold up your foot' — at the same time hft his foot with your left hand. He soon becomes familiar with the sounds, and will hold up his foot at command. Then proceed to the hind feet, and go on in the same manner ; and in a short time the horse will let you lift them and even take them in your arms. " All this operation is no magnetism, no galvanism ; it is merely taking away the fear a horse generally has of a man, and familiarizing the animal with his master ; as the horse doubtless experiences a certain pleasure from this handUng, he will soon become gentle under it, and show a very marked attachment to his keeper." REMARKS ON POWEL'S TREATMENT HOW TO GOVERN HORSES OF ANY KIND. These instructions are very good, but not quite suf- ficient for horses of all kinds, and for haltering and leading the colt ; but I have inserted it here because it gives some of the true philosophy of approaching the horse, and of establishing confidence between man and horse. He speaks only of the kind that fear man. To those who understand the philosophy of horse- manship, these are the easiest trained ; for when we have a horse that is wild and lively, we can train him to our will in a very short time ; for they are generally quick to learn, and always ready to obey. But there is another kind that are of a stubborn or vicious dis- position, and although they are not wild, and do not require taming, m the sense it is generally understood, they are just as ignorant as a wild horse, if not more so, and need to be learned just as much ; and in order to have them obey quickly, it is very necessary that Governing tiie Horse. 61 they should be made to fear then* master ; for, in order to obtain perfect obedience from any horse, we must first have him fear us, for our motto is, Feai\ love^ and obey ; and we must have the fulfillment of the first two, before we can expect the latter, and it is by our philosophy of creating fear, love and confidence, that we govern to our will every kind of horse whatever. Then, in order to take horses as we find them, of all kinds, and to train them to our liking, we will alwasy take with us when we go into a stable to train a colt, a long switch whip, (whalebone buggy whips are the best, (with a good silk cracker, so as to cut keen and make a sharp report, which, if handled with dexterity, and rightly applied, accompanied with a sharp, fierce word, will be sufficient to enliven the spirits of any horse. With this whip in your right hand, with the lash opinting backward, enter the stable alone. It is a great disadvantage in training a horse, to have any one in the stable with you ; you should be entirely alone, so as to have nothing but yourself to attract his attention. If he is wild, you will soon see him in the opposite side of the stable from you ; and now is the time to use a little judgment. I Avould not want, for myself, more than half or three-quarters of an hour to handle any kind of a colt, and have him runnmg about in the stable after me ; though I would advise a new beginner to take more time, and not be in too much of a hurry. If you have but one colt to gentle, and are not particular about the length of time you spend, and have not had any experience in handHng colts, I would advise you to take Mr. Powel's method at first, till you gentle him, which, he says, takes from two to six hours. 62 TuE Horse Farkiek. But as I want to accom2:)lish the same, and what is much more, learn the horse to lead m less than one hour, I shall give you a much quicker process of ac- complishing the same end. Accordingly, when you have entered the stable, stand still and let your horse look at you a minute or two ; and as soon as he is set- tled in one place, approach him slowly, with both arms stationary, your right hanging by your side, hold- ing the whip as directed, and the left bent at the elbow, with your right hand projectmg. As you approach him, go not too much towards his head or croup, so as not to make him move, either forward or backward, thus keeping your horse stationary ; if he does move a little, forward or backward, step a little to the right or left very cautiously ; this will keep him in one place. As you get very near him, draw a little to his shoulder, and stop a few seconds. If you are in his reach he •will turn his head and smell of your hand, not that he has any preference for your hand, but because that is projecting, and is the nearest portion of your body to the horse. This all colts will do ; and they ^vdll smell of your naked hand just as quick as of anything that you can put in it, and with just as good an effect, how- ever much some men may have preached the doctrine of tammg horses by giving them the scent of articles from the hand. I have already proved that to be a mistake. As soon as he touches his nose to your hand, caress him as before directed, always using a very light, soft hand, merely touching the horse, always rubbing the way the hair lies, so that your hand will pass along as smoothly as possible. As you stand by his side you may find it more convenient to rub his neck, or the Learning the IIokse to Lead. 63 side of his head, which will answer the same purpose as rubbing his forehead. Favor every inclination of the horse to smell or touch you with his nose. Always follow each touch or communication of this kind with the most tender and affectionate caresses, accompanied with a kind look, and pleasant word of some sort, such as, " Ho ! my little boy, ho ! my little boy, pretty boy, nice lady ! " or something of that kind, constantly re- peating the same words, with the same kind, steady tone of voice ; for the horse soon learns to read the expression of the face and voice, and will know as well when fear, love or anger prevails, as you know your own feelings ; two of which, fear and anger ^ a good horseman should never feel. HOW TO PROCEED IF TOUR HORSE IS OF A STUBBORN DISPOSITION. If your horse, instead of being wild, seems to be of a stubborn or mulish disposition ; if he lays back his ears as you approach him, or turns his heels to kick you, he has not that regard or fear of man that he should have, to enable you to handle him quickly and easily ; and it might be well to give him a few sharp cuts with the whip, about his legs, pretty close to the body. It will crack keen as it plies around his legs, and the crack of the whip will affect him as much as the stroke ; besides, one sharp cut about his legs will affect him more than two or three over his back, the skin on the inner part of his legs or about his flank be- ing thinner, more tender than on his back. But do not whip him much, just enough to scare him, it is not because we want to hurt the horse that we whip him, 64 The Horse Farrier. we only do it to scare that bad disposition out of him. But whatever you do, do quickly, sharply, and with a good deal of fire, but always without anger. If you are going to scare him at all, you must do it at once. Never go into a pitch battle with your horse, and whip him until he is mad, and will fight you ; you had better not touch him at all, for you will establish in- stead of fear and regard, feelings of resentment, ill- will and hatred. It will do him no good, but an injury, to strike a blow, unless you can scare him ; but if you succeed in scaring him, you can whip him without making him mad ; for fear and anger never exist to- gether in the horse, and as soon as one is visible, you will find that the other has disappeared. As soon as you have frightened him so that he will stand up straight, and j)ay some attention to you, approach him again, and caress him a good deal more than you whipped him, then you will excite the two controlling passions of his nature, love and fear, and then he Avill love and fear you too, and as soon as he learns what to do, will obey quickly. HOW TO HALTER AND LEAD A COLT. As soon as you have gentled the colt a httle, take the halter in your left hand and approach him as be- fore, and on the same side that you have gentled him. If he is very timid about your approaching closely to him, you can get up to him quicker by making the whip a part of your arm, and reaching out very gent- ly with the butt end of it ; rubbing him Hghtly on the neck, all the time getting a little closer, shortening the whip by taking it up in your hand, until you finally get close enough to put your hands on him. If he is Stubborn Disposition. 65 inclined to hold his head from you, put the end of the halter strap around his neck, drop your whip, and draw very gently ; he will let his neck give, and you can pull his head to you. Then take hold of that part of the halter which buckles over the top of his head, and pass the long side, or that part which goes into the buckle, under his neck, grasping it on the opposite side with your right hand, letting the first strap loose — the lat- ter will be sufficient to hold his head to you. Lower the halter a little, just enough to get his nose into that part which goes around it, then raise it somewhat, and fasten the toj) buckle, and you will have it all right. The first time you halter a colt you should stand on the left side, pretty well back to his shoulder, only taking hold of that part of the halter which goes around his neck, then with your two hands about his neck you can hold his head to you, and raise the hal- ter on it without making him dodge by putting your hands about his nose. You should have a long rope or strap ready, and as soon as you have the halter on, attach this to it, so that you can let him walk the length of the stable without letting go of the strap, or without making him pull on the halter, for if you only let him feel the weight of your hand on the hal- ter, and give him rope when he runs from you, he will never rear, pull, or throw himself, yet you will be hold- ing him all the time, and dokig more towards gentling him than if you had the power to snub him right up, and hold him to one spot ; because he does not know anything about his strength, and if you don't do any- thing to make him pull, he will never know that he can. In a few minutes you can begin to control him. 6Q The Hokse Farrier. with the halter, then shorten the distance between yourself and the horse, by taking up the strap in your hand. As soon as he will allow you to hold him by a toler- ably short strap, and step up to him without flying back, you can begin to give him some idea about lead- ing. But to do this, do not go before and attempt to pull him after you, but commence by pulling him very quietly to one side. He has nothing to brace either side of his neck, and wUl soon yield to a steady, grad- ual pull of the halter ; and as soon as you have pulled him a step or two to one side, step up to him and ca- ress him, and then pull him again, repeating this oper- ation until you can pull him around in every direction, and walk about the stable with him, which you can do in a few minutes, for he will soon think when you have made him step to the right or left a few times, that he is compelled to follow the pull of the halter, not know- ing that he has the power to resist your pulling ; be- sides you have handled him so gently that he is not afi-aid of you, and you always caress him when he comes up to you, and he likes that, and would just as leave follow you as not. And after he has had a few lessons of that kind, if you turn him out in a lot he will come up to you every opportunity he gets. You should lead him about in the stable some time before you take him out, opening the door, so that he can see out, leading him up to it and back again, and past it. See that there is nothing on the outside to make him jump when you take him but, arid as you go out with him, try to make him go very slowly, catching hold of the halter close to the jaw with your left hand, I \ Leading Colts. 67 while the right is resting on the top of his neck, hold- ing to his mane. After you are out vritii him a little while, you can lead him about as you please. Don't let any second person come up to you when you first take him out ; a stranger taking hold of the halter would frighten him, and make him run. There should not even be any one standing near him to attract his attention, or scare him. If you are alone, and manage him right, it will not require any more force to lead or hold him than it would to manage a broke horse. HOW TO LEAD A COLT BY THE SIDE OF A BROKE HORSE. If you should want to lead your colt by the side of another horse, as is often the case, I would advise you to take your horse into the stable, attach a second strap to the colt's halter, and lead up your horse along side of him. Then get on the broke horse and take one strap around his breast, under his martingale, (if he has one on,) holding it in your left hand. This will prevent the colt from getting back too far ; besides, you will have more power to hold him, with the strap pulling against the horse's breast. The other strap take up in your right hand, to prevent him from run- ning ahead ; then turn him about a few times in the stable, and if the door is wide enough, ride out with him in that position ; if not, take the broke horse out first, and stand his breast up against the door, then lead the colt to the same spot, and take the straps as before directed, one on each side of his neck, then let some one start the colt out, and as he comes out, turn your horse to the left, and you will have them all right. This is the best way to lead a colt ; you can 68 The Horse Farrier. manage any kind of a colt in this way without any trouble, for, if he tries to run ahead, or pull back, the two straps will bring the horses facing each other, so that you can very easily follow up his movements with- out doing much holding, and as soon as he stops run- ning backward, you are right with him, and ready to go ahead. And if he gets stubborn, and does not want to go, you can remove all his stubbornness by riding your horse against his neck, thus compelling him to turn to the right, and as soon as you have turned him about a faw times, he will be willing to go along. The next thing, after you are through leading him, will be to take him into a stable, and hitch him in such a way as not to have him pull on the halter, and as they are often very troublesome to get into a stable the first few times, I will give you some instructions about getting him in. HOW TO LEA.D A COLT INTO THE STABLE AND HITCH HIM WITHOUT HAVING HIM PULL ON THE HALTER. You should lead the broke horse mto the stable first, and get the colt, if you can, to follow in after him. If he refuses to go, step up to him, taking a little stick or switch in your right hand ; then take hold of the halter close to his head with your left hand, at the same time reaching over his back with your right arm, so that you can tap him on the opposite side with your switch ; bring him up facing the door, tap him lightly with your switch, reaching as far back as you can. This tapping, by being pretty well back, and on the opposite side, will drive him ahead, and keep him close to you, then by giving him the right direction with your left hand you can walk into the stable with him. Pulling on the Halter. 69 I have walked colts into the stable this way, in less than a minute, after men had worked at them half an hour trying to pull them. If you cannot walk with him at once in this way, turn him about and walk him around in every direction, until you can get him up to the door without pulling at him. Then let him stand a few minutes, keeping his head in the right direction with the halter, and he will walk in, in less than ten minutes. Never attempt to pull the colt into the stable ; that would make him think at once that it was a dan- gerous place, and if he was not afraid of it before, he would be then. Besides we don't want him to know anything about pulling on the halter. Colts are often hurt, and sometimes killed, by trying to force them into the stable ; and those who attempt to do it in that way, go into an up-hill business, when a plain, smooth road is before them. If you want to hitch your colt, put him in a tolera- bly wide stall, which should not be too long, and should be connected by a bar or something of that kind to the partition behind it ; so that after the colt is in, he cannot get far enough back to take a straight back- ward pull on the halter ; then by hitching him in the centre of the stall, it would be impossible for him to pull on the halter, the partition behind preventing him from going back, and the halter in the centre checking him every time he turns to the right or left. In a stall of this kind you can break every horse to stand hitched by a light strap, any where, without his knowing any- thing about pulling. But if you have broke your horse to lead, and have learned him to use the halter, (which you should always do before you hitch him to TO The Hokse Farriee. anything,) you can hitch him iu any kind of a stall and give him something to eat to keep him up to his place for a few minutes at first, and there is not one colt out of fifty that will pull on his halter. THE KIND OF BIT, AND HOW TO ACCUSTOM A HORSE TO IT. You should use a large, smooth, snaffle bit, so as not to hurt his mouth, with a bar on each side to pre- vent the bit from pulling through either way. This you should attach to the head-stall of your bridle and put it on your colt without any rems to it, and let him run loose in a large stable or shed some time, until he becomes a little used to the bit, and will bear it with- out trying to get it out of his mouth. It would be well, if convenient, to repeat this several times before you do anything more with the colt ; as soon as he will bear the bit, attach a single rein to it, without any martingale. You should also have a halter on your colt, or a bridle made after the fashion of a halter, with a strap to it, so that you can hold or lead him about without pulling on the bit much. He is now ready for the saddle. HOW TO SADDLE A COLT. Any one man, who has this theory, can put a saddle on the wildest colt that ever grew, without any help, and without scaring him. The first thing will be to tie each stirrup strap into a loose knot to make them short, and prevent the stirrups from flying about and hittmg him. Then double up the skirts and take the saddle under your right arm, so as not to frighten him with it as you approach. When you get to him, rub Stabling Colts. 71 him gently a few times with your hand, and then raise the saddle very slowly, until he can see it, and smell, and feel it with liis nose. Then let the skirts loose, and rub it very gently against the neck the way the hair lays, let- ting him hear the rattle of the skirts as he feels them against him, each time getting a little farther backward, and finally slip it over his shoulders on his back. Shake it a little with your hand, and in less than five minutes you can rattle it over his back as much as you please, and pull it off and throw it on again, without his paymg much attention to it. As soon as you have accustomed him to the saddle, fasten the girth. Be careful how you do this. It often frightens the colt when he feels the girth binding him, and making the saddle fit tight on his back. You should bring up the girth very gently, and not draw it too tight at first, just enough to hold the saddle on. Move him a little, and then girth it as tight as you choose, and he will not mind it. You should see that the pad of your saddle is all right before you put it on, and that there is nothing to make it hurt him, or feel unpleasant to his back. It should not have any loose straps on the back part of it, to flap about and scare him. After you have sad- dled him in this way, take a switch in your right hand, to tap him up with, and walk about in the stable a few times with your right arm over your saddle, taking hold of the reins on each side of his neck, with your right and left hands ; thus marching him about in the stable until you learn him the use of the bridle, and can turn him about in any direction, and stop him by a gentle pull of the rein. Always caress him, and loose the reins a Httle every time you stop him. 72 The Horse Farrier. You should always be alone, and have your colt in some tight stable or shed, the first time you ride him ; the loft should be high, so that you can sit on his back without endangering your head. You can learn him more in two hours' time in a stable of this kind, than you could in two weeks in the common way of break- ing colts, out in an open place. If you follow my course of treatment, you need not run any risk, or have any trouble in riding the worst kind of a horse. You must take him a step at a time, until you get up a mutual confidence and trust between yourself and horse. First learn to be lead and stand hitched ; next, acquaint him with the saddle and the use of the bit, and then all that remains is to get on without scaring liim, and you can ride him as w^ell as any horse. HOW TO MOUNT THE COLT. First, gentle him well on both sides, about the sad- dle, and all over, until he will stand still -without hold- ing, and is not afraid to see you anywhere about him. As soon as you have him thus gentled, get a small block, about one foot or eighteen inches in height, and set it dowm by the side of him, about where you want to stand to mount him ; step up on this, raising your- self very gently ; horses notice every change of position very closely, and, if you were to step suddenly on the block, it would be very aj)t to scare him ; but, by raising yourself gradually on it, he will see you with- out being frightened, in a position very near the same as when you are on his back. As soon as he will bear this without alarm, untie the stirrup-strap next to you, and put your left foot into the stirrup, and stand square over it, holding your knee How TO Mount a Colt. 73 against the horse, and your toe out, so as not to touch him under the shoulder with the toe of your boot. Place your right hand on the front of the saddle, and on the opposite side of you, taking hold of a portion of the mane and reins, as they hang loosely over the neck, with your left hand ; then gradually bear your weight on the stirrup, and on your right hand, until the horse feels your whole weight on the saddle. Re- peat this several times, each time raising yourself a lit- tle higher from the block, until he will allow you to raise your leg over his croup and place yourself in the saddle. There are three great advantages in having a block to mount from. First, a sudden change of position is very apt to frighten a young horse who has never been handled. He will allow you to walk up to him and stand by his side without scaring at you, because you have gentled him to that position, but if you get down on your hands and knees and crawl towards him, he will be very much frightened; and upon the same 2)rinciple, he would frighten at your new position if you had the power to hold yourself over his back without touching him. Then, the first great advantage of the block is to gradually gentle him to that new position in which he will see you when you ride him. Secondly, by the process of leaning your weight in the stirrups, and on your hand, you can gradually ac- custom him to your weight, so as not to frighten him by having him feel it all at once. And, in the third place, the block elevates you so that you ^vill not have to make a spring in order to get on the horse's back, but from it you can gradually raise yourself into the 74: The Hoese Faerier. saddle. When you take these precautions, there is no horse so wild but you can mount him without making him jump. I have tried it on the worst horses that could be found, and have never failed in any case. When mounting, your horse should always stand with- out being held. A horse is never well broke when he has to be held vath a tight rein when mounting ; and a colt is never so safe to mount, as when you see that assurance of confidence and absence of fear which causes him to stand without holding. HOW TO EIDE A COLT. When you want him to start, do not touch him on the side with your heel, or do anything to frighten him and make him jump ; but speak to him kindly, and if he does not start, pull him a little to the left until he starts, and then let him walk off slowly with the reins loose. Walk him around in the stable a few times until he gets used to the bit, and you can turn him about in every direction and stop him as you please. It would be well to get on and off a good many times, untU he gets perfectly used to it, before you take him out of the stable. After you have trained him in this way, which should not take more than one or two hours, you can ride him anywhere you choose without ever having him jump or make an effort to throw you. When you first take him out of the stable, be very gentle with him, as he will feel a little more at liberty to jump or run, and be a little easier frightened than he was while in the stable. But after handling him so much in the stable, he will be pretty well broke, and How TO Rid?: A Colt. 7.-) you will be able to manage him without trouble or danger. When you first mount him, take a little the shortest hold of the left rein, so that if anything frightens liim, you can iDrevent him from jumping by pulling his head around to you. This operation of j^ulling a horse's head around against his side, will j^revent any horse from jumping ahead, rearing up, or running away. If he is stubborn and will not go, you can make him move by pulling his head around to one side, when whippmg would have no effect. And turning around a few times will make him dizzy, and then by letthig him have his head straight, and giving him a little touch with the whip, he will go along without any trouble. ISTever use martingales on a colt when you first ride him ; every movement of the hand should go right to the bit, in the direction in which it is applied to the reins, without a martingale to change the direction of the force applied. You can guide the colt much bet- ter without them, and learn him the use of the bit in much less time. Besides, martingales would prevent you from pulling his head around if he should try to jump. After the colt has been rode until he is srentle and well accustomed to the bit, you may find it an advan- tage if he carries his head too high, or his nose too far out, to put martingales on him. You should be careful not to ride your colt so far at first as to heat, worry or tire him. Get off as soon as you see he is a little fatigued ; gentle him and let him rest ; this will make him kind to you, and prevent him from getting stubborn or mad. Y6 The Horse Farrier. THE PROPER WAY TO BIT A COLT. Farmers often put a bitting harness on a colt the first thing they do with him, buckhng up the bitting as tight as they can draw it, to make him carry his head higli, and then turn him out in a lot to run a half day at a time. This is one of the worst punishments that they could inflict on a colt, and very injurious to a young horse that has been used to running in pasture ■with his head down. I have seen colts so injured in this way that they never got over it. A horse should be well accustomed to the bit before you put on the bitting harness, and when you first bit him you should only rein his head up that point where he naturally holds it, let that be high or low ; he will soon learn that he cannot lower his head, and that raising it a little will loosen the bit in his mouth. This will give him the idea of raising his head to loosen the bit, and then you can draw the bitting a little tighter every time you put it on, and he will still raise his head to loosen it; by this means you will gradually get his head and neck in the position you want him to carry it, and give him a nice graceful carriage without hurt- ing him, making him mad, or causing his mouth to get sore. If you put the bitting on very tight the first time, he cannot raise his head enough to loosen it, but will bear on it all the time, and paw, sweat, and throw himself. Many horses have been killed by falling back- ward with the bitting on ; their heads being drawn up, strike the ground with the whole weight of the body. Horses that have their heads drawn up tightly should not have the bitting on more than fifteen or twenty minutes at a time. Yicious Habits. 77 HOW TO DRIVE A HOKSE THAT IS VEEY WILD AND HAS ANY VICIOUS HABITS. Take up one fore foot and bend his knee till his hoof is bottom upwards, and nearly touching his body, then slip a loop over his knee, and up until it comes above the pastern joint to keep it up, being careful to draw the loop together between the hoof and pastern joint with a second strap of some kind, to j^revent the loop from slipping down and coming off. This will leave the horse standing on three legs ; you can now handle him as you wish, for it is utterly imj^ossible for him to kick in this position. There is something in this operation of taking up one foot that conquers a horse quicker and better than anything else you can do to him. There is no process in the world equal, to break a kicking horse, for several reasons. First, there is a principle of this kind in the nature of the horse, that by con- quering one member you conquer, to a great extent, the whole horse. You have, perhaps, seen men operate upon this prin- ciple by sewing a horse's ears together to prevent him from kicking. I once saw a plan given in a newspaper to make a bad horse stand to be shod, which was to fasten down one ear. There was no reason given why you should do so ; but I tried it several times, and thought it had a good eifect — though I would not recommend its use, especially stitching his ears togeth- er. The only banefit arising from this process is, that by disarranging his ears we draw his attention to them, and he is not so apt to resist the shoeing. By tying up one foot we operate on the same principle, to a much better effect. When you first fasten up a horse's 78 The Hoese Faeriee. foot, he will sometimes get very mad, and strike with his knee, and try every possible way to get it down ; but he cannot do that, and will soon give up. This will conquer him better than anything you could do, and without any possible danger of hurting himself, or you either, for you can tie up his foot and sit down and look at him until he gets up. When you find tliat he is conquered, go to him, let down his foot, rub his leg with your hand, and let him rest a little, then put it up again. Repeat this a few times, always putting up the same foot, and he will soon learn to travel on three legs so that you can drive him some distance. As soon as he gets a httle used to this way of travel- hng, put on your harness, and hitch him to a sulky. If he is the worst kicking horse that ever raised a foot you need not be fearful of his doing any damage while he has one foot up, for he cannot kick, neither can he run fast enough to do any harm. And if he is the wildest horse that ever had harness on, and has run away every time he has been hitched, you can now hitch him in a sulky and drive him as you please. And if he wants to run, you can let him have the lines, and whip too, with perfect safety, for he can go but a slow gait on three legs, and will soon be tired and willing to stop ; only hold him enough to guide him in the right direction, and he will soon be tired, and willing to stop at the word. Thus you will effectually cure him at once of any further notion of running oft". Kicking horses have always been the dread of everybody ; you always hear men say, when they speak about a bad horse, " I don't care what he does, so he don't kick." This new method is an elfective cure for this worst of Kicking Horses. 79 all habits. There are plenty of ways by which you can hitch a kicking horse, and force him to go, though he kicks all the time ; but this don't have any good effect towards breaking him, for we know that horses kick because they are afraid of what is behind them, and Yvdien they kick against it and it hurts them, they will only kick the harder, and this will hurt them still more, and make them remember the scrape much longer, and make it still more difficult to persuade them to have any confidence in anything dragging behind them ever after. By this new method you can hitch them to a rattling sulky, plow, wagon, or anything else in its worst shape. They m?y be frightened at first, but cannot kick, or do anything to hurt themselves, and will soon find that you do not intend to hurt them, and then they will not care anything more about it. You can then let down the leg, and drive along gently without any further trouble. By this new process a bad kicking horse can be learned to go gentle in harness in a few hours time. ox BALKING. Horses know nothing about balking, only as they are brought into it by improper management ; and when a horse balks in harness, it is generally from some mis- management, excitement, confusion, or from not know- ing how to pull, but seldom from any unwillingness to perform all that he understands. High spirited, free- going horses, are the most subject to balking, and only so because drivers do not properly imderstand how to manage this kind. A free horse in a team may be so anxious to go, that when he hears the word he will 80 The Horse Farriek. start with a jump, which will not move the load, but give him such a severe jerk on the shoulders, that he will fly back and stop the other horse ; the teamster will continue his driving without any cessation, and by the time he has the slow horse started again, he will find the free horse has made another jump, and again flew back ; and now he has them both badly balked, and so confused that neither of them knows what is the matter, or how to start the load. Next will come the slashing and crashing of the whip, and hallooing of the driver till something is broken, or he is through with his course of treatment. But what a mistake the driver commits by whipping his horse for this act ! Reason and common sense should teach him that the horse was willing and anxious to go, but did not now how to start the load. And should he whip him for that ? If so, he should whip him again for not know- ing how to talk. A man that wants to act with any rationality or reason, should not fly into a passion, but should always think before he strikes. It takes a steady pressure against the collar to move a load, and you can- not expect him to act with a steady, determined pur- pose while you are whipping him. There is hardly one balking horse in five hundred that will pull true from whipping ; it is only adding fuel to fire, and Avill make them more liable to balk another time. You always see horses that have been balked a few times, turn their heads and look back, as soon as they are a little frus- trated. This is because they have been whi23ped, and are afraid of what is behind them. This is an invari- able rule with balked horses, just as much as it is for Balking. 81 them to look around at their sides when they have the bots. In either case, they are deserving of the same sympathy, and the same kind, rational treatment. When your horse balks, or is a little excited, if he wants to start quickly, or looks around, and don't w:int to go, there is something wrong, and he needs kind treatment immediately. Caress him kindly, and if he don't understand at once what you want him to do, he will not be so much excited as to jump and break things, and do every thing wrong through fear. — As long as you are calm, and can keep down the ex- citement of the horse, there are ten chances to have him understand you, where there would not be one un- der hai'sh treatment, and then the little flare-up would not carry with it any unfavorable recollections, and he would soon forget all about it, and learn to pull true. Almost every wrong act the horse commits, is from mismanagement, fear or excitment : one harsh word will so excite a nervous horse as to increase his pulse ten beats in a minute.* *Remabks. — In the first place, never teach your horse to balk, by giving him a greater load than he can carry, or requiring him to go up too steep a hill without permitting him to stop. If you tell him to stop, in going up a steep hill, it is better than to allow him to do it of his own accord. If he finds he can stop of his own will, and start when he pleases, he' will soon learn to do it when he ought not to. If at any time he stops without your stopping him, give him a sharp cut, and make him go on, even if you think he ought to stop at that very place ; but soon yourself give him an opportunity to stop. This will teach him that he is to stop only at your will, and that you are not unreasonable in your demands. I believe that all balky horses are in the first instance taught to balk by their careless and inconsiderate owners, who overload them, and allow them to stop or go according to their own will. Once a horse finds he can stop at will without reproof, he will stop, perhaps, on a smooth road, or in the mid- dle of a village, or on the street of a city, whore you will be mortified as well aa discommoded. 82 The Horse Farkier. When we remember that we are dealing with dumb brutes, and reflect how difficult it must be for them to understand our motions, signs and language, we should never get out of patience with them, because they don't understand us, or wonder at their doing things wrong. With all our intellect, if we were placed in the horse's situation, it would be difficult for us to un- derstand the driving of some foreigner, of foreign ways and foreign language. We should always recollect that our ways and language are unknown to the horse, and should try to practice what we could understand, were we the horse, endeavoring by some simple means to work on his understanding rather than on the dif- ferent parts of his body. All balked horses can be started true and steady in a few minutes' time : they are willing to pull as soon as they know how, and I never yet found a balked horse that I could not teach to start his load in fifteen, and often less than three minutes' time. Almost any team, when first balked, will start kind- Before resorting to sttvere means the cause should be ascertained. The horse may be overtaxed, his withers may be wrung, or he may be insupportably galled or pained by the harness. These things should be examined into, and, if possible, rectified ; for, under such circumstances, cruelty may produce obstinacy and vice, but not willing obedience. A horse whose shoulders are raw, or have frequently been so, will not start with a cold collar. When the collar has acquired the warmth of the parts on which it presses, the animal will go without reluctances Some determined balkers have been reformed by constantly wearing a false col- lar, or strip of cloth round the shoulders, so that the coldness of the usual collar should never be felt; and others have been cured of balking by keeping the col- lar on night and day, for the animal is not able to lie down completely at full length, which the tired horse is always glad to do. When a horse balks, not at starting, bat while doing his work, it has sometimes been useful to line the collar with cloth instead of leather; the perspiration is readily absorbed, the substance which presses on the shoulder is softer, and it may be far more accurately cased off at a tender place. Balky Horses. 83 ly, if you let them stand five or ten minutes, as though there was nothing wrong, and then speak to them with a steady voice, and turn them a Uttle to the right or left, so as to get them both in motion before they feel the pinch of the load. But if you want to start a team that you are not driving yourself, that has been balked, fooled, and whipped for some time, go to them and hang the lines on their hames, or fasten them to the wagon, so that they will be perfectly loose : make the driver and spectators, (if there are any,) stand off some distance to one side, so as not to attract the at- tention of the horses ; loosen their check-reins, so that they can get their heads down, if they choose ; let them stand a few minutes in this condition, until you see that they are a little composed. While they are standing, you should be about their heads, gentling them : it will make them a little more kind. When you are ready to start, stand before them, and as you seldom have but one balky horse in a team, get as near in front of him as you can, and if he is too fast for But what shall we do with a horse who has thoroughly learned to balk, and whom whipping only hardens? Desperate remedies should sometimes be used for desperate ca^es, and you may in such cases either kill your horse as not be- ing worthy the oats you give him, or you may fasten him to a strong carriage, put on a strong harness and reins, and if he balks, set fire to a bunch of shavings or a newspaper at his heels, or a bunch of fire crackers ; or exciting his f pirits by the application of spirits of turpentine under his tail ; he is bound to go in such case— perhaps too fast for you— but of this you must run your risk. It is a des- perate remedy, but when kindness and good treatment do not succeed, such a remedy will succeed better, and is more humane than beating, unmerciful whip- ping, &c., which seldom succeed at all. In India when a horse can and will not draw, instead of whipping, spurring or burning him, they quietly get a rope and attaching it to one of the fore feet, one or two men take hold of it, and advancing a few paces ahead of tho horse , pull their best. No matter how stubborn the animal may be, a few doses of such treatment effects a perfect cure. 84: The Hokse Farkier. the other horse let his nose come agamst your breast : this will keep him steady, for he will go slow rather than run on you ; turn them gently to the right, with- out lettmg them j^ull on the traces, as far as the tongue will let them go ; stop them with a kind word, gentle them a little, and then turn them back to the left, by the same process. You ^\dll have them under your control by this time, and as you turn them again to the right, steady them in the collar, and you can take them where you please. There is a quicker process that wiU start a balky horse, but not so sure. Stand him a little ahead, so that his shoulders will be against the collar, and then take up one of his fore feet in your hand, and let the driver start them, and when the weight comes against his shoulders, he will try to step : then let him have his foot, and he wiU go right along. If you want to break a horse from balkmg, that has long been in that habit, you ought to set apart a half a day for that purpose. — Put him by the side of some steady horse ; have check- lines on them ; tie up all the traces and straps, so that there will be nothing to excite them ; do not rein them up, but let them have their heads loose. Walk them about together for some time as slowly and lazily as possible ; stop often and go to your balky horse and gentle liim. Do not take any whip about him, but keep him just as quiet as you can. He will soon learn to start off at the word, and stop whenever you tell him. As soon as he performs right, hitch him in an empty wagon ; have it stand in a favorable position for start- ing. It would be well to shorten the stay-chain be- Bkeaking. 85 hind the steady horse, so that, if it is necessary, he can take the weight of the wagon the first time you start them. Do not drive but a few rods at first : watch your balky horse closely, and if you see that he is getting excited, stop him before he stops with his own accord ; caress him a little, and start again. As soon as they go well, drive them over a small hill a few times, and then over a large one, occasionally ad- ding a little load. This process will make any horse true to pull. TO BREAK A HOESE TO HARNESS. Take him in a tight stable, as you did to ride him ; take the harness and go through the same process that you did with the saddle, until you get him familiar with them, so that you can imt them on and rattle them about without his caring for them. As soon as he will bear this, put on the lines, caress him as you draw them over him, and drive him about in the stable till he will bear them over his hips. The lines are a great aggravation to some colts, and often frighten them as much as if you were to raise a whip over them. As soon as he is familiar with the harness and fines, take him out and put him by the side of a gentle horse, and go through the same process that you did with the balking horse. Always use a bridle without blinds, when you are breaking a horse to harness, HOW TO HITCH A HORSE IN A SULKY. Lead him to and around it ; let him look at it, touch it with his nose, and stand by it till he does not care for it ; then pull the shafts a little to the left, and stand your horse in front of the off wheel. Let some one 86 The Horse Fareiek. stand on the right side of the horse, and hold him by the bit, while you stand on the left side, facing the sulky. This will keep him straight. Run your left band back, and let it rest on his hip, and lay hold of the shafts with your right, bringing them up very gently to the left hand, which still remains stationary. Do not let anything but your arm touch his back, and as soon as you have the shafts square over him, let the person on the opposite side take hold of one of them, and lower them very gently to the shaft-bearers. Be very slow and deliberate about hitchmg ; the longer time you take, the better, as a general thing. When you have the shafts placed, shake them slightly, so that he will feel them against exich side. As soon as he will bear them without scaring, fasten your biaces, etc., and start him along very slowly. Let one man lead the horse, to keep him gentle, while the other grad- ually works back with the lines till he can get behind and drive him. After you have driven him in this way a short distance, you can get into the sulky and all will go right. It is very important to have your horse go gently, when you first hitch him. After you have walked him awhile, there is not half so much danger of his scaring. Men do very wrong to jump behind a horse to drive him as soon as they have him hitched. There are too many things for him to comprehend all at once. The shafts, the lines, the harness and the ratthng of the sulky, all tend to scare him, and he must be made familiar with them by degrees. If your horse is very wild, I would advise you to put up one foot the first time you drive him. Make a House Lie Dov/n. 87 how to make a horse lie down. Every thing that we want to learn the horse must be commenced in some way to give him an idea of what you want him to do, and then be repeated till he learns it perfectly. To make a horse He down, bend his left fore leg, and slip a loop over it, so that he cannot get it down. Then put a cirsingle around his body, and fasten one end of a long strap around the other fore leg, just above the hoof. Place the other end under the cirsingle, so as to keep the strap in the right direc- tion ; take a short hold of it with your right hand ; stand on the left side of the horse ; grasp the bit in your left hand, pull steadily on the strap with your right ; bear against his shoulder till you cause him to move. As soon as he lifts his weight, your pulling will raise the other foot, and he will have to come on his other knee. Keep the strap tight in your hand, so that he cannot straighten his leg if he raises up. Hold him in this position, and turn his head towards you ; bear against his side with your shoulder, not hard, but with a steady, equal pressure, and in about ten minutes he will lie down. As soon as he lays down, he wUl be completely conquered, and you can handle him as you please. Take off the straps, and straighten out his legs ; rub him lightly about the face and neck with your hand, the way the hair lays ; handle all his legs, and after he has lain ten or twenty minutes, let him get up again. After resting him for a short time, make him lie down as before. Repeat the operation three or four times, which will be sufficient for one lesson. Give him two lessons a day, and when you have given hhn four lessons, he will lie down by taking hold of one 88 The Hoese Fareiee. foot. As soon as he is broken to lie down in this way, tap him on the opposite leg with a stick when you take hold of his foot, and in a few days he will lie down from the mere motion of the stick. HOW TO MAKE A HORSE FOLLOW YOU. Turn him into a large stable or shed, where there is no chance to get out, with a halter or bridle on. Go to him and gentle him a little, take hold of his halter, and turn him towards you, at the same time touching him lightly over the hips with a long whip. Lead him the length of the stable, rubbing him on the neck, say- ing in a steady tone of voice, as you lead him, come along boy ! or use his name instead of boy, if you choose. Every time you turn, touch him slightly with the whip, to make him step up close to you, and then caress him with your hand. He will soon learn to hurry up, to escape the whip and be caressed, and you can make him follow you around without taking hold of the halter. If he should stop and turn from you, give him a few sharp cuts about the hind legs, and he will soon turn his head towards you, when you must always caress him. A few lessons of this kind will make him run after you, when he sees the motion of the whip : in twenty or thirty minutes, he will follow you about the stable. After you have given him two or three lessons in the stable, take him out into a small lot, and train him, and from thence you can take him into the road, and make him follow you anywhere, and run af- ter you. HOW TO MAKE A HORSE STAND WITHOUT HOLDING. After you have well broken him to follow you, stand .^1 m the centre of the stable ; begm at his head to caress him, gradually working backwards. If he move, give him a cut with the whip, and put him back to the same spot from whence he started. If he stands, ca- ress him as before, and continue gentling him in this way until you can get round him without makmg him move. Keep walking around him, increasmg your pace, and only touching him occasionally. Enlarge your circle as you walk around, and if he then moves, give hira another cut with the whip, and put him back to his place. If he stands, go to him frequently, and caress him, and then walk around him again. Do not keep him in one position too long at a time, but make him come to you occasionally, and follow around in the stable. Then stand him in another place, and proceed as above. You should not train your horse more than half an hour at a time. CHAPTER IV GENERAL MANAGEMENT, ETC., OF THE HORSE. STABLING. This matter Jaas not received the attention that its importance demands. A situation should be selected which will admit of draining, sheltered from the coldest winds, and easy of access. In damp, unventilated stables, you will be the most likely to find such dis- eases as mange, coughs, bad eyes, greasy heels, swelled- legs, glanders, farcy, and rough, dry, starmg coat. — Stables should be about sixteen to eighteen feet in width, and have six feet for each stall. It is well to have a door at each end when convenient, for the purpose of ventilation, when necessary. It should be about eight by five feet. Accidents often occur from having it too narrow ; it may be double. It should be so hung as to swing back of its own accord. The edges of the posts should be rounded ; the ceiling should be at least nine feet in height. The stable should be so contrived that the urine shall quickly run oflT, and the offensive and injurious vapor from decomposing fluid and the litter will thus Am AND LlTTEE. 91 be materially lessened ; but if this is effected by means of gutters and a descending floor, the descent must Le barely sufficient to cause the fluid to escape, as, if the toes are kept higher than the heels, it will lead to lameness, and is also a frequent cause of contraction of the foot. Stalls of this kind certainly do best for mares ; but for horses we much prefer those with a grating in the centre, and a slight inclination of the floor on every side towards the middle. A short branch may communicate with a larger drain, by means of which the urine may be carried off to a reservoii- outside the stable. Traps are now contrived, and may be procured at little expense, by means of which neither any offensive smell nor current of air can pass through the grating. AIK AND LITTER. The breathing of pure air is necessary to the ex- istence and the health of man and beast. It is com- paratively lately that this has been admitted even in the management of our best stables. If the stable is close, the air will not only be hot, but foul. The breathing of every animal contaminates it ; and when, m the course of the night, with every aperture stopped, it passes again and again through the lungs, the blood cannot undergo its proper and healthy change ; digestion will not be so perfectly per- formed, and all the functions of life are injured. Every stable should possess within itself a certain degree of ventilation. The cost of this would be trifling, and its saving in the preservation of valuable animals will be immense. The appertures need not 92 The Horse Farrier. be large, and the whole may be so contrived that no direct current of air will fall on the horse. The temperature of a stable should seldom exceed VO'^ in the summer or sink below*40° or 50° in the winter. Litter should be frequently removed. The early ex- trication of gas shows the rapid putrefaction of the urine ; and the consequence of which will be the rapid putrefaction of the litter that has been moistened by it. Everything hastening to decomposition should be care- f illy removed where life and health are to be pre- served. The litter that has been much wetted or at all softened by the urine, and is beginning to decay, should be swept away every morning ; the greater part of the remamder may then be piled away under the manger ; a little being left to prevent the painful and mjurious pressure of the feet on the hard pave- ment during the day. The soiled and soaked portion of that which was left should be removed at night. In the better kind of stables, however, the stalls should be completely emptied every morning. No heap of fermenting dung should be suffered to remain during the day in the corner or in any part of the stable. GROOMING. Of this, much need not be said to the agriculturist, since custom, and apparently without ill effect, has al- lotted so little of the comb and brush to the farmer's horse. The animal that is worked all day, and turned out at night, requires little more to be done to him than to have the dirt brushed off his limbs. Regular grooming, by rendering his skin more sensible to the Geooming. 93 alternation of temperature, and the inclemency of the weather, would be prejudicial. The horse that is alto- gether turned out, needs no grooming. The dandruff, or scurf, which accumulates at the roots of the hair, is a provision of nature to defend him from the wind and the cold. The stable horse, however, should be dressed regular- ly every day, in addition to the grooming that is neces- sary after work. Whoever would be convinced of the benefit of friction to the horse's skin, and to the horse generally, needs only to observe the effects produced by well hand-rubbing the legs of a tired horse. While every enlargement subsides, and the painful stiffness disap- pears, and the legs attain their natural warmth, and become fine, the animal is evidently and rapidly re- viving ; he attacks his food with appetite, and then quietly lies down to rest. When, however, the horse is changing his coat, both the curry-comb and the brush should be used as Hght- ly as possible. Boiled barley, boUed or raw linseed, raw carrots, and boiled turnips, are among the articles of food that lay the hair, and soften the skin. Grooming should be conducted out of the stable, whenever practicable. Mud should never be allowed to dry on the legs or feet. They should be got cool, dry and clean, by washing, scraping, rubbing and walk- ing a heated horse ; and they should never be left in a cold draft, when warm. Cleanliness is indispensable to the health of a horse. 94 The Horse Faerier. dressing vicious horses. Many horses are rendered vicious to clean, by the awkwardness, timidity, and folly of the keeper. An awkward man gives the horse more pain than ought to attend the operation. A timid man allows the horse to master him, and a mischievous fellow is always learn- ing him tricks. Biting may be prevented by putting on a muzzle, or by tying the head to the rack, or to the ring outside of the stable. When reversed in the stall, the head may be secured by the pillar-reins. A muzzle often deters a horse from attempting to bite, but some will strike a man to the ground, though they cannot seize him. These must be tied up. Many harness-horses are perfectly quiet while they are bridled, and it is suf- ficient to let the bridle remain on, or to put it on, till they be dressed. -Others, again, are quite safe when blindfolded. Kicking horses are more dangerous than biters. A great many strike out, and are apt to injure an awkward groom ; yet they are not so bad but an expert fellow may manage them, without using any restraint. A switch held always in the hand, in view of the horse, and lightly applied, or threatened when he attempts to strike, will render others comparatively docile. A few permit their hind quarters to be cleaned while their clothes are on. Some there are, however, that cannot be managed so easily. They strike out ; those especially that lead idle lives, so quickly and so mahciously, that the groom is in great danger, and cannot get his work properly performed. There are two remedies — the arm-strap and the twitch.* Where * Bee page 78. T) i::.ssTXG Viciou- IIuKSKS. 95 ■Tinather man cannot be spared to assist, one of the fore legs is tied up ; the knee is bent till the foot almost touches the elbow, and a broad buckling-strap is ap- plied over the fore-arm and the pastern. The horse then stands upon three legs, and the groom is in no danger of a kick. Until the horse is accustomed to stand in this way, he is apt to throw himself down ; For the first two or three times, the leg should be held up by a man, rather than tied with a strap. The horse should stand on a thick bed of litter, so that he may not be injured, should he fall. In course of time, he may perhaps become quieter, and the arm-strap may be thrown aside. It should not be applied always to the same leg, for it produces a tendency to knuckling over of the pastern, which, in a great measure, is avoided by tying up each leg alternately. Even the arm-strap will not prevent some horses from kicking. Some can stand on two legs, and some will throw them- selves do-WTi. The man must just coax the horse, and get over the operation with as little irritation as pos- sible. Upon extraordinary occasions, the twitch may be employed, but it must not be applied every day, otherwise the lip upon which it is placed becomes in- flamed or palsied. When restraint must be resorted to, the man should be doubly active in getting through his work, that the horse may not be kept for a need- less length of time in pain. He may, in some cases, give the horse a very complete dressing when he is fatigued, and not disposed to offer much resistance. EXERCISE. Our observations on this important branch of sta- ble-management must have only a slight reference to 96 The Horse Fakrier. the agricultural horse. His work is usually regular, and not exhausting. He is neither predisposed to dis- ease by idleness, nor worn out by excessive exertion. He, like his master, has enough to do to keep him in health, and not enough to distress or injure him : on the contrary, the regularity of his work prolongs hfe to an extent rarely witnessed in the stable. Our re- marks on exercise, then, must have a general bearing. The first rule we would lay down is, that every horse should have daily exercise. The animal that, with the usual stable-feeding, stands idle for three or four days, as is the case in many establishments, must suffer. He is predisposed to fever, or to grease, or most of all, diseases of the foot ; and if, after three or four days of inactivity, he is ridden far and fast, he is almost sure to have inflammation of the lungs or of the feet. A stable-fed horse should have two hours' exercise every day, if he is to be kept free from disease. Noth- ing of extraordinary, or even of ordinary labor, can be effected on the road or in the field, without sufficient and regular exercise. It is this alone which can give energy to the system, or develope the powers of any animal. Exercise should be somewhat proportioned to the age of the horse. A young horse requires more than an old one. Nature has given to young animals of every kind a disposition to activity ; but the exercise must not be violent. A great deal depends upon the manner in which it is given. To preserve the temper, and to promote health, it should be moderate, at least at the beginning and the termination. The rapid trot, or even the gallop, may be resorted to in the middle of the exercise, but the horse should be brought in cool. Feeding. 97 FOOD. The system of manger-feeding is becoming general among farmers. There are few horses that do not habitually waste a portion of their hay ; and by some the greater part is pulled down and trampled under foot, in order first to cull the sweetest and best locks, and which could not be done while the hay was en- closed in the rack. A good feeder will afterwards pick up much of that which was thrown down ; but some of it must be soiled and rendered disgusting, and, in many cases, one-third of this division of their food is wasted. Some of the oats and feed are imperfectly chewed by all horses, and scarcely at all by hungry and greedy ones. The appearance of the dung will suffi- ciently evince this. The observation of this induced the adoption of manger-feeding, or of mixing a portion of cut feed with the grain. By this means the animal is compelled to chew his food. He cannot, to any great degree, waste the straw or hay ; the feed is too hard and too sharp to be swallowed without sufficient mastication, and, while he is forced to grind that down, the oats are ground with it, and yield more nourishment ; the stomach is more slowly ^filled, and therefore acts better on its contents, and is not so likely to be overloaded ; and the increased quantity of saliva thrown out in the lengthened maceration of the food, softens it, and makes it more fit for digestion. Many farmers very properly grind the oats or corn. The whole oat is apt to slip out of the feed and be lost ; but when it is bruised, and especially if the feed is a little wetted, it will not readily separate ; or, should a 98 The Hokse Farkiee. portion of it escape the grinders, it will be partly pre- pared for digestion by the act of bruising. Horses of quicker draught, except they are naturally disposed to scour, will thrive better with bruised than with whole oats ; for a greater quantity of nutriment wUl be ex- tracted from the food. For the agricultural and cart-horse, eight pounds of oats should be added to every twenty pounds of cut feed. Thirty-four or thirty-six poimds of the mixture will be sufficient for any moderate-sized horse, with fair, or even hard work. The dray and wagon-horse may require forty pounds. Hay in the rack at night is, in this case, supposed to be omitted altogether. The rack, however, may remain, as occasionally useful for the sick horse, or to contain tares or other green feed. Horses are very fond of this provender. The major- ity of them, after having been accustomed to it, will leave the best oats given to them alone, for the sake of the mingled cut feed and grain. We would, how- ever, caution the farmer not to set apart too much damaged hay for the manufacture of the feed. The horse may thus be induced to eat that which he would otherwise refuse ; but il' the nourishing property of the hay has been impaired, or it has acquired an mjurious prmciple, the annual will either lose condition, or be- come diseased. For old horses, and for those with de- fective teeth, cut feed is pecuHarly useful, and for them should be broken down as well as the fodder. While the mixture of chaff with the grain prevents it from being too rajddly devoured, and a portion of it swallowed whole, and therefore the stomach is not Cdt Feed. 90 too loaded with that on which, as containing the most nutriment, its chief digestive power should be exerted, yet, on the whole, a great deal of time is gained by this mode of feeding, and more is left for rest. When a horse comes in wearied at the close of the day, it oc- cupies, after he has eaten his grain, two or three hours to clear his rack. On the system of manger-feeding, the feed being already cut into small pieces, and the corn and oats ground, he is able fiilly to satisfy his appetite in an hour and a half. Two additional hours are therefore devoted to rest. This is a circumstance deserving of much consideration, even in the farmer's stable, and of immense consequence to stage-coach proprietors, and the owner of every hard-worked horse. Manger-food will be the usual support of the farmer's horse during the v/mter, and while at constant or oc- casional hard work ; but from the middle of April to the end of July, he may be fed with this mixture in the day, and turned out at night, or he may remain out during every rest day. A team in constant employ should not, however, be suffered to be out at night after the end of July. The farmer should take care that the pasture is thick and good. Every barn should be supplied with a feed-cutter, and it should be kept in daily use ; and experience has proved that eight ears of corn crushed, is better feed, and will keep a horse in a better condition than twelve fed to him without crushing. Thirty or forty per cent, is saved by grinding the grain and mixing it with cut feed. They should be fed at regular intervals, their diet often changed, and no more given at a time than they will eat. 100 TuE IToESE Farkiek. Carkots. — The virtues of this root are not sufficient- ly known, whether as contributing to the strength and endurance of the sound horse, or the rapid recovery of the sick one. To the healthy horse, they should be given sliced in his feed. Half a bushel will be a fair daily allowance. There is little provender of which the horse is fonder. The following account of the val- ue of the carrot is not exaggerated. " This root is held in much esteem. There is none better, nor perhaps so good. When first given, it is slightly diuretic and laxative ; but as the horse becomes accustomed to it, these efiects cease to be produced. They also improve the state of the skin. They form a good substitute for grass, and an excellent alterative for horses out of con- dition. To sick and idle horses, they render grain un- necessary. They are beneficial in all chronic diseases connected with breathing, and have a marked influence upon chronic cough and broken wind. They are ser- viceable in diseases of the skin, and in combination with oats they restore a worn horse much sooner than oats alone. Potatoes have been given, and with advantage, in their raw state, sliced with the chaff"; but, where it has been convenient to boil or steam them, the benefit has been far more evident. Purging has then rarely ensued. Some have given boiled potatoes, alone, and horses, instead of rejecting them, have soon preferred them even to oats ; but it is better to mix them with the usual manger-feed, in the proportion of one pound of potatoes to two and a half pounds of the other in- gredients. The use of the potatoe must depend on its cheapness, and the facility for boiling it. Half a dozen horses would soon repay the expense of a steaming- Water. 101 boiler, in the saving of provender, without taking into the account their improved condition and capability for work. A horse fed on potatoes should have his quantity of water materially curtailed. Prof. Low says that fifteen pounds of potatoes yield as much nourishment as four pounds and ahalf of oats. Yon Thayer asserts that three bushels are equal to 112 pounds of hay ; and Cur wen, who tried potatoes ex- tensively in the feeding of horses, says that an acre goes as far as four acres of hay. Water. — This is a part of stable management little regarded by the farmer. He lets his horses loose morning and night, and they go to the nearest pond or brook, and drink their fill, and no harm results, for they obtain that kind of water which nature designed them to have, in a manner prepared for them by some unknown influence of the atmosphere, as well as by the deposition of many saline admixtures. The difier- ence between hard and soft water is known to every •one. In soft water, soap will curdle, vegetables will not boil soft, and the saccharine matter of the malt can- not be fully obtained in the process of brewing. There is nothing in which the difierent effect of hard and soft water is so evident as in the stomach and digestive or- gans of the horse. Hard water, drawn fresh from the well, will assuredly make the coat of a horse unaccus- tomed to it stare, and it will not unfrequently gripe and otherwise injure him. Instinct or experience has made even the horse himself conscious of this, for he will never drink hard Vv'ater if he has access to soft ; and he will leave the most transparent and pure water of the well for a river, although the stream may be 102 The Horse Fakriek. turbid, and even for the muddiest pool. He is injured, however, not so much by the hardness of the well-wa- ter, as by its coldness — particularly by its coldness in summer, and when it is in many degrees below the temperature of the atmosphere. The water m the brook and the pond being warmed by long exposure to the air, as well as having become soft, the horse drinks freely of it without danger. If the horse were watered three times a day, and es- pecially in summer, he would often be saved from the sad torture of thirst, and from many a disease. AGE. To be able to ascertain the age of a horse, with tol- erable certainty, is a subject of considerable unportance to every person who may have occasion to purchase. The following rules will enable any man to ascertain with tolerable certainty the age of any horse. Every horse has six teeth above and below : before he arrives at the age of three, he sheds his two middle teeth, by the young teeth rising and shoving the old ones out of their place. When he arrives at the age of three, he sheds one more on each side of the middle teeth ; when four years old, he sheds two corner and the last of his fore teeth ; between four and five, he cuts his under tusks, and when five, will cut his upper tusks, and have a mouth full and complete ; his teeth appearing to have their full growth, except the tusks, and will be even, regularly placed, and pretty much grooved on the in- side, with hollows of a very dark brown color. There is also a very plain difference between colt's and horse's teeth ; the colt's being without grooves and hollows, and never so large and strong. Some horses are with- Age of Horses. 103 out upper tusks, even to the end of their lives ; but this is not common. The appearance of the lower tusks, and them fully grown, is the most certain proof that the horse is five years old, even if one of his colt's teeth remains unshed. At six years old, the grooves and hollows in a horse's mouth begin to 1111 up a little, and their tusks have their full growth, Vv^ith their points sharp, and a little concave, or hollow on the inside. At seven years old, the grooves and hollows will be pretty well filled below, except the corner teeth, leav- ing, where the dark brown hollov\'S formerly v>xre, lit- tle brown spots. At eight, the whole of the hoUov^^s and grooves are filled up, and you see the appearance of Vv^hat is termed smooth below. At nine years old there very often appears a small bill to the outside corner teeth ; the point of the tusk is worn off", and the part that vv\as concave begins to fill up and become rounding ; the squares of the middle teeth begin to disappear, and the gums leave them small and narrow at the top. Dealers in horses sometimes drill or hol- low the teeth with a graver, and black the hollows by using a hot iron, for the purpose of passing an old horse for a young one, upon those who have but little or no experience upon the subject. But a discerning eye will readily discover the cheat, by the unnatural shape and blackness of the hollows, the dullness and round- ness of tlie tusks, together vrith the want of squares to the front, and by many other visible marks, which de- note the advanced age of a horse. Betvv'een nine and ten years of age, a horse general- ly loses the marks of the mouth, though there are a few exceptions; as some horses retain good mouths un- 104 The Horse Farrier. til they are fourteen or fifteen years old, with their teeth white, even, and regular, and many other marks of freshness and vigor. But when a horse grows old, it may be discovered by these indications, which com- monly attend old age, viz: The gums wear away and leave the roots of the teeth long and slender ; the roots grow yellow, and often brownish ; the bars of the mouth (which are alw:iys fleshy, plump, and dry, in a young horse, and form so many distinct, firm ridges,) in an old horse are lean, smooth, and are covered with saliva, with few or no ridges. The eyes of a young horse appear plump, full, and lively ; the lids with few wrmk- les, the hollows above' the ball small, and no gray hairs upon the brow, unless they proceed from the color or marks of the horse. The eyes of an old horse appear sleepy, dim and sunk, and the hds loose and very much shriveled, Avith large hollows, and the brow gray. The countenance of a young horse is bold, gay, and lively; while that of an old one is sad, dejected, and melan- choly, unless mounted, and artificial means used to give him spirit. The age can be ascertained by a wrinkle over the eye after they are nine years old. A wrinkle comes on the eyelid at the upper corner of the lower lid, and every year thereafter he has one well-defined wrinkle for each year over nine. If, for instance, a horse has three wrinkles, he is twelve ; if four, he is thirteen. And add the number of wrinkles to nine, and you will always get it. TO SAVE HORSES FROM FIRE. The difficulty of getting horses from burning stables is well known. The remedy is to blind-fold them per- fectly, and by gentle usage, they may easily be led out. Scalded Shorts. 105 method of administerii^^g medicines. We know of no improvement to the common custom of administering medicine in the form of a drench, using a common champagne bottle, and stand a little elevated on the right side of the horse, your back turned tovr.irds his body ; then take a firm hold of the lower jaw with the left hand, at the same time moderately elevating the head, (not too high,) while with the right introduce the bottle between the canine teeth and grinders, keep it in that position, and gradually pour down the contents of the bottle. Time should be taken. If it is poured down in small quantities, so much the better ; the horse will be more likely to swallow it, especially if it shall be made palatable by the addition of a few caraway seeds or a little honey. Medicme given in the fluid form is readily taken up by the lacteals, and operates, for good or evil, in much less time than balls. Horses, like chil- dren, must be handled in the most gentle manner. They will generally refuse to drink even a little gruel, when any unnecessary severity is resorted to in its administra- tion. They may be coaxed, but not forced. SCALDED SHOETS. Shorts, as they are familiarly termed, when scalded make an excellent diet for sick animals. The usual method of preparation is, to turn two or three quarts of shorts into a bucket, to which add boiling water, so that the mixture, when stirred, shall be about the consistence of a soft poultice ; it is then to be covered with a cloth, and not given to the horse until sufiiciently cool. When a horse has taken cold, and labors under a discharge from the nostrils, the mash may be put into the manger while hot, with a view of steaming the nasal passages, and fa- 106 The Hoese Faeeiee. voring the discharge of morbid accumulations. This is good for all acute diseases; in fever and all inflamma- tory complaints; it is useful also as a preparative to physic, serving to remove any indurated foeces there may be in tlie bowels, whereby the operation of the medicine is rendered more safe and affectual. When a horse has been fed high for some time, a change to a diet of mash- es for two or three days will often do a great deal of good. During the active stage of acute diseases of the alimentar ry canal — inflammation of the bowels for example — food of this description is inadmissible, and such articles as are mucilaginous, or lubricating, are used. The best we know of, are flaxseed, marshmallows, and slippery elm. It is customary in England, in large stables, to set a boiler^ in which hot water is continually kept for the purposes of the stable, and more particularly for makuig bran 'inashes^ and at night, if any of the horses look dinnpish^ (fatigued,) a bran mash and a good Avarm bed of straw generally re- store them. JUDGING THE CHARACTER OF HORSES BY THEIR COLOR. The following conclusions are the result of long exper- ience and observation : Sorrel or chestnut with white feet and head are marks of kindness, if broad and full between the eyes, can be depended on as a horse of good sense, and capable of be- ing trained to anything ; they will not stand the whip, if well fed. A dish-faced horse indicates too much go-head, and is not safe for every body. .A deep bay, without a white hair, indicates one of great bottom, but rather tricky and unsafe, or what some would Wakeantees. 107 call a fool of a horse. If you want one that will never give out, never tiy a large, overgrown horse. A black horse cannot stand heat, nor a white one cold. White about the head — the more the better — indicates docility. Some suppose the parti-colored horses belong- mg to circuses, shows, &g., were selected for their oddi- ty, but the selection is made on account of their great docility and gentleness. WARRANTEES. A few remarks on this subject may be serviceable often to the farmers, and we cannot do the subject better jus- tice than to insert the following, taken from the JVIodern Horse-Doctor, by Dr. Dadd : " Warrantees, by which is meant an idemnity against any unsoundness, or a pledge given — commonly in tori- ting — by the vender to the purchaser, that the horse is sound and quiet, and possesses such and such qualifica- tions. Without such idemnification or pledge, the law says, Caveat emptor — let the , purchaser take the conse- quences ; the rule at law being, that every body who purchases a horse takes him at his own judgment, and has no remedy against the seller, supposing the horse to turn out, upon a future trial, or a more considerate inspection after the purchase, to be worth less than the sum given ; unless he (the purchaser,) can prove he was induced to purchase by representations false within the knowledge of the seller ; to fasten a fraud of which nature upon an experienced dealer in horses is, however, a difficult mat- ter. Warrantees are of different kinds — expressed or im- plied^ general or special. An express warranty speaks for itself. And as for an implied warranty, such a thing is hardly known, or at least, rarely taken advantage of in horse dealing^ the price paid, however high, not being legally held to be any guaranty of the soundness of the animal ; and any thing that might transpire between sel- ler and buyer, implying warranty, being worth nothing 108 The Hoese Faekier. without proofs which, heing procured, would render the transaction, in law, tantamount to an express warranty. A general warranty extends to all defects and faults known and unknown to the seller ; but a special warran- ty is confined in its operation to the parts or particulars specifically pointed out. A horse may be v>"arranted of such an age ; or, having some defect visible upon his limbs, such as a spavin, or a curb, or a fired leg, of which he does not go lame at the time, that defect may be spe- cified, and the horse warranted not (within any reasona- ble or prescribed period) to become lame in consequence of it. A general warranty, however, afibrds no protec- tion against such defects as are ' plain and obvious' to every body, and, consequently, to the purchaser; no more than a special warranty does against any which are not included or named in the specification. ' But if, on the sale of a horse, the seller agree to deliver it sound and free from blemish at the expiratio7i of a specified 'period^ the warranty is broken by a fault in the horse when delivered, although such defect 'was obvious at the time of sale ; and as some splints cause lameness and others do not, a splint is not one of those plain defects against which a warranty will not idemnify ; and when a seller warrants a horse sound at the time of sale,, and the horse afterwards becomes lame from the eftects of a splint, visible when the horse was bought, it is certain that war- ranty is broken.' This rule will apply to spavin, or to curb, or to windgall, or, in fact, to any other defect ' visi- ble at the time of sale.' For all warrantees can only un- dertake for the animal's qualifications at the time of sale / none can extend to any subsequent period unless tliere be a special clause ' to deliver the horse free from blemish,' and that dehvery be by mutual agreement delayed. "The form in which a receipt including warranty is generally written : — "'Received, the 1st of January, 1858, of J. P., the sum of two hundred dollars for a bay mare, warranted sound and quiet to ride and drive.' " Or, ' Warranted fice from vice and blemish, except — ,' " Or, ' Warranted in every respect, except .' Warrantees. 109 " Or, ' Warranted to have been constantly driven both in single and double harness, to have carried a lady, to have been regularly hunted, to be a good hunter or hack- ney, &c., &c.' " Folio v,'ing the word ' except' there being opportunity afforded the (honest) vender of stating what he may know invalidating the warranty, and thereby saving his reputation as well as screening himself from the proba- bility of litigation afterwards. " ' With respect to what (oral) declarations of the seller will amount to a warranty, the primary rule for the inter- pretation of contracts in general is applicable. It depends upon the intention of the parties. A simple affirmation of the goodness of an article is a warranty, provided it (a warranty) appear to have been intended ; whereas the sublimest epithets that a seller ever employed to recom- mend his goods to a credulous buyer u'ill be regarded as the idle phraseology of the market, unless an intended to warranty actually appear.' In line, ' it is from the inten^ Hon of the parties, as collected from the wdiole transac- tion, and from the meaning they appear to have attached to particular expressions, that the existence or non-exis- tence of a warranty is to be inferred.' " ' Let us now^ consider how the rights of parties are affected by the horse being unsound at the -time of the w^arranty. The contract being thus broken on the part of the seller, it is at the buyer's oj^tion either to treat it as a nullity, and return the horse, or to retain him, not- withstandmg, and bring an action on the warranty. In the ibrmer case, the price paid is the measure of the damages he will be entitled to recover in an action ; in the latter, the difference between that price and his real value. K he offer to rescind the contract and return the horse, he may also recover the expenses of his keep ; but in order to do this, a positive tender is said to be neces- sary, No notice of the unsoundness need be given to the vender to entitle the vendee to maintain the action ; nor is it necessary to bring the action immediately on discovering the unsoundness.' — ' But although such a no- tice be not essential, yet it is always advisable to give it, 110 The Hokse Pakkiek. as the omitting to do so will furnish cd the trial strong presumption that the horse, at the time of sale, vras free from the defect complained of; thus rendering the proof of a breach of warranty more diiiicult. Common justice and honesty require that the commodity should be re- turned at the earliest period, and before it has been so changed by lapse of time as to make it impossible to as- certain, by proper tests, what Vfere its original proper- ties.' " SNOW BELLS ON HOESES' FEET. Clean the hoofs and feet and rub them v/ell with soft soap ; on a journey, to soap them tv»4ce a day may be best in some cases, but once a day, in ordinary time, will be found sufficient. TO MANAGE A HORSE WHEN FALLEN DOWN. If the horse is in harness, it is seldom that he can rise until he is freed from the shafts and traces. The first thing is to secure the head, and to keep it do^^m, that he may not beat himself against the ground, ^ext, the parts of the harness connected with the carriage must be unbuckled — the carriage must then be backed a little way, so that he may have room to rise. If necessary, the traces must be taken off; and after the horse gets up, he must be steadied a little, until he collects himself. GETTING THE CHEEK OF THE BIT INTO THE MOUTH. Harsh treatment is here completely out of the question. All that can be done, is, by some mechanical contrivance, to render the thing difficult or impossible, and this may be managed by fastening a round piece of leather on the inside of the cheek of the bit. COLTS CHEWING HALTERS. Take scab from the v»'ort on the inside of the leg, rub the halter thoroughly with that, and they will not be found chewmg their halters very soon. CHAPTER V. THE VICES AND DISAGSEEABLE OR DANGEROUS HABITS OF THE HORSE.* The horse has many excellent qualities, but he has, like- wise, defects, and these often amount to vices. Some are attributable to natural disposition, but the majority are attributable to bad education and wrong management. BITING. This is either the consequence of natural ferocity, or a habit acquired from the foolish and teasing play of grooms and stable-boys. Prevention, however, is in the power of every proprietor of horses. While he insists on gentle and hum_ane treatment of cattle, he should systematically forbid this horse- play. It is seldom that anything can be done in the way of cure. Kindness will aggravate the evil, and no degree of severity will correct it. " I have seen," says Professor Stewart, " biters punished until they tremble in every joint, and were ready to drop, but have never in any case known them cured by this treatment, or by any other. * We would refer the reader to the third chapter of this book, as exceptions are taken to some of the statements in this chapter connected with the vicious habits of horses. 112 The Horse Farriek. The lash is forgotten in an hour, and the horse is as ready and determined to repeat the oflence as before. He ap- pears unable to resist the temptation, and in its worst form, biting is a species of insanity." Constant and laborious work is often beneficial. Some horses may be over-awed by being very bold. He may be warned by speaking to him. On approaching the horse, hold a whip in his view, ready to let it fall. If you can get hold of his head, you are safe ; he may then be muzzled, or his head tied to the manger, a long rope may be fastened to the halter and run through a ring at the head of the stall, and proceed backward to the heel post ; this enables a man to draw the head close up to the ring, and keep it there till the grain or water is delivered, and till the horse can be bridled, muzzled, harnessed or dressed as the case may be. He is, of course, to be released af- ter you leave the stall, but the rope remains in place ready for use. If you can obtain something that is exceedingly disa- greeable to the taste of a horse — some bitter herb — sat- urate a piece of cloth, and wind it around a stick for him to bite ; it will often, in connection with kind treatment, have a tendency to break him. A single short cut across the mouth on the instant will sometimes do good. KICKING. This, as a vice, is another consequence of the culpable habit of teasing the horse. There is no cure for this vice when it is inveterately established, and he cannot be jus- tified who keeps a kicking horse in his stable. He is never safe, or relied on as being safe. It is foremost in the point of danger, and no treatment will always con- quer. An awkward man is always sure to receive injury Kicking. 113 from a confirmed kicker, and a timid man is never safe. Before the habit is established, a thorn-bush fastened against the partition or post will sometimes effect a cure. A chain about 20 inches long, strapped in the centre to the horse's foot, is the most effectual remedy known to us. A much more serious vice is kicking in harness. From the least annoyance about the rump or quarters, some horses will kick at a most violent rate, and destroy the bottom of the chaise, and endanger the limbs of the driv- er. Those that are fidgety in the stable are most apt to do this. If the reins should perchance get under the tail, the violence of the kicker will often be most out- rageous ; and while the animal presses down his tail so tightly that it is almost impossible to extricate the reins, he continues to plunge until he has demolished every- thing behind. We know of no treatment better than to put on a head- stall or bridle, with twisted W, or twisted straight bitts in the mouth of the horse to be cured ; then put on a common back-saddle, with thill lugs, or any strap or girth with loops on either side of the horse, is equally good ; then buckle a pair of long reins, open in the middle, into the bitts, and pass them through the thill lugs or loops ; one to each hind leg, above the fetlock joint ; there make each rein fast to the leg, allowing sufficient length of rein for your horse to walk or trot, as the operator may think proper. Everything complete, you will have the animal commence the operation of kicking ; the first will be a smart kick, and the second lighter, and so on till your horse cannot be made to kick any niore. Or the followmg : Take a forked stick, about two feet long, varying a little according to the size of the horses, tie the ends of the fork firmly to each end of the bridle 114 The Hokse Fakkiee. bit, and the other end of the stick to the lower end of the collar so as to keep the head up, A few days work- ing in this manner will commonly suffice for a cure. The man, however, who must come Avithin reach of a kicker should come as close to him as possible. The blow may thus become a push, and seldom is injurious. RUNNING AWAY. The only method which affords any probability of success is to have him alvv^ays firmly in hand ; and, if he will run away, and the place will admit of it, to give him (sparing neither curb, whip, nor spur,) a great deal more running than he likes. If you wish to stop the horse, if on horse- back throw your bridle reins around his neck, if possi- ble, to choke him, or choke him with your arm. If in a wagon, and running away is feared, provide a strong cord with a shpping-noose placed around his neck, if he runs, draw the cord forcibly. CRIB-BITING. The causes of crib-biting are various, it is often the re- sult of imitation, idleness, and sometimes by partial star- vation. The high fed and spirited horse must be mis- chievous, if not usefully employed. The crib-biting horse is more subject to colic than other horses, and to a species difficult of treatment and frequently dangerous. This is a bad habit, and very annoying to the owner of a horse. Various remedies have been tried, such as ironing the manger, petitions, etc. I know of no certain cure but an iron muzzle, with bars just wide enough apart to allow the horse to pick up his grain and draw out his hay with his tongue, but not to get hold of any thing v.dth his teeth. Common bar soap is a preventive, which is to be rubbed on the edge and outside of the crib, and renewed WiND-StJCKING. 115 as often as necessary. If this habit is not broken, it will soon be imitated by every horse in the stable. WIN"D-SUCKING. This bears a close analogy to crib-biting. It arises from the same causes ; the same purpose is accomplished ; and the same results follow. The horse stands with his neck bent ; his lips alternately a little opened and then closed, and a noise is heard as if he were sucking. If we may judge from the same comparative want o:' condi- tion and the flatulence which we have described under the last head, either some portion of wind enters the stomach, or there is an injurious loss of saliva. This di- minishes the value of the horse almost as much as crib- biting ; it is as contagious, and it is as inveterate. The only remedies, and they will seldom avail, are tying the head up, except when the horse is feeding, or putting on a muzzle with sharp spikes towards the neck, and which will prick him whenever he attempts to rein his head in for the purpose of wind-sucking. — Youatt, CUTTIXG. There are some defects in the natural form of the horse, which are the causes of cutting, and which no contiivance will remedy ; as when the legs are placed too near to each other, or when the feet are turned inward or outward. Some horses will cut only when they are fatigued or lame, and old ; many colts will cut before they arrive, at their full strength. The inside of the fetlock is often bruised by the shoe or the hoof of the opposite foot. Many ex- pedients used to be tried to remove this ; the inside heel has been raised and lowered, and the outside raised and lowered ; and sometimes one o2)eration has succeeded, and Bometimes the contrary ; and thei*e was no point so 116 TiiE Horse Fabrieb. involved in obscurity, or so destitute of principles to guide the practitioner. The most successful remedy, and that which in the great majority of cases supersedes all others, is a shoe of equal thickness from heel to toe, and having but one nail, and that near the toe on the inside of the shoe; care being taken that the shoe shall not extend be- yond the edge of the crust, and that the crust shall be rasped a little at the quarters. NOT LYING DOWN. It not uncommonly happens that a horse will seldom or never lie down in the stable. He sometimes continues in apparent good health, and feeds and works well ; but generally his legs swell, or he becomes fatigued sooner than another horse. They perhaps are afraid of being caught by the halter, or they have already been cast in the night, and do not like to try it again. Such horses should be let loose in a stable at night, or in a large stall without being tied, and furnished with a tempting bed, until the habit of lying down is acquired. TO PREVENT ROLLING IN THE STALL. This is a very dangerous habit, and can be prevented only by tying the horse so that he can lie down, but not touch his head to the floor. This is very tiresome to the horse, and hence, if you care enough for his comfort and health, build a narrow j^latform, eighteen to tv/enty-four inches in width, slanting at an angle of thirty to forty degrees, so that it will form a pillow for his head and neck ; then adjust a rope so that as he Hes down his head will naturally rest on the platform, or pillow. He will not roll unless he can get his head as low as the floor of the stable. OnERRE ACHING OR ClINEING. 117 OVERREACHING OR CLINKING. An over-reach is a tread upon the heel of the coronet of the fore foot by the shoe of the correspondmg hind foot, and is either inflicted by the toe, or by the inner edge of the inside of the shoe. The preventive treatment is the beveling, or rounding off of the inside edge or rim of the hind shoes. The cure is the cutting away of the loose parts, the application of Friar's balsam, and pro- tection from the dirt. Some horses, particularly young ones, overreach so as to strike the toes of the hind shoes against the fore ones, which is termed clinking. KeeiDing up the head of the horse does something to prevent this ; but the smith may do more by shortening the toe of the hind shoes, and having the web broad. "When they are too long, they are apt to be torn off — when too narrow, the hind foot may bruise the sole of the fore one, or may be locked fast between the branches of the fore shoe. PAWING. Some hot and iritatible horses are restless, even in the stable, and paw frequently and violently ; shackles are the only remedy, with a chain snfficiently long to enable the horse to shift his position, but they must be taken off at night to enable the horse to lie down. — Youatt. SHYING. This arises from various causes, sometimes from defec- tive sight, some from cowardness or playfulness, or want of Avork, but oftener from bad education. In the treat- ment of shying it is of great importance to distinguish between that which is the consequence of defective sight, and what results from fear, or newness of objects, or 118 The Horse Farrier. mere auectation or skittislmess. For the first, every al- lowance must be made, and care must be taken that the fear of correction is not associated with the imagined ex- istence of some terrifying object. The severe use of the v/hip and the spur cannot do good here, and are likely to acy(Travate the vice ten-fold. A word, half encouraging and half scolding, with a slight pressure of the heel, or a slight touch of the spur, will tell the horse that there was nothing to fear, and will give him confidence in his rider on a future occasion. The shying from skittishness or afi*ectation is quite a diiferent afijiir, and must be conquered : but how ? Se- verity is altogether out of place. If he is forced into contact with the object by dint of correction, the dread of punishment will afterwards be associated with that ob- ject, and, on the next occasion, his startings will be more frequent and more dangerous. The way to cure him is to go on, turning as little as possible out of the road, giving a harsh word or two, and a gentle touch with the spur, and then taking no more notice of the matter. Af- ter a few times, whatever may have been the object which he chose to select as the pretended cause of aflfright, he will pass it almost without notice. In colts, from fear or playfulness, a considerable degree of starting and shying may be exhibited. As little no- tice as possible should be taken of it. The same or a similar object should be soon passed again, but at a gi-eater distance. If the colt still shies, let the distance be still farther increased until he takes no notice of the ob- ject. Then he may be gradually brought nearer to it, and this will be usually affected without the slightest dif- ficulty : vrhereas, had there been an attempt to force him Slipping the IIaltp^r. 119 close to it in the first instance, the remeiTibrance of the contest Av^ould have been associated with every appear- ance of the object, and the habit of shying wou'd have been established. If this method is adopted, he will not possess the annoying will, v»dien he grows to mature age. Nothing is gained by harsh treatment, nor is the foolish practice of patting the horse, and making much of him, advisable, either just before or during the time he evinces shyness. The former is bad, because it draws the atten- tion of the animal to the object he dreads ; the latter is worse, because it fills him with the impression either that the object itself is really terrific, or that he has acted right in shying at it, and ought to do so again. Whether we are approaching the frightful object, or the horse is actually shying, " we should let him alone" — " w^e should take no notice whatever of him" — neither letting him j^erceive that we are aware that we are ad- vancing towards anything he dishkes ; nor do more with him, while in the act of shying, than is necessary for due restraint with a steady hand ivpon the rein. A horse that is in the habit of shying in coming out of the stable, should be bridled when led out or in, and held short and tight by the hand. — Youatt, SLIPPING THE UA1.TEK. This is a trick at which many horses are so clever, that scarcely a night passes without their getting loose. It is a very serious habit, for it enables the horse some- times to gorge himself with food, to the imminent dan- ger of staggers ; or it exposes him, as ho vranders about, to be kicked and mjured by the other horses, while his restlesness will often keep the v>'hole team awake. If 120 The Horse Farrier. the web of the halter, being first accurately fitted to his neck, is suffered to slip only one way, or a strap is at- tached to the halter and buckled round the neck, but not sufiiciently tight to be of serious inconvenience, the pow- er of slipping the halter will be taken away. — Youatt. TRIPPING. He must be a skillful practitioner or a mere pretender who promises to remedy this habit. If it arises from a heavy fore-hand, and the fore-legs being too much under the horse, no one can alter the natural frame of the ani- mal ; if it proceeds from tenderness of the foot, groggi- ness, or old lameness, these ailments are seldom cured. Also if it is to be traced to habitual carelessness and idle- ness, no whipping will rouse the drone. A known stum- bler should never be ridden, or driven by any one who values his safety or his life. A tight hand or a strong- bearing rein are precautions that should not be neglected. If the stumbler has the foot kept as short, and the toe pared as close as safety will permit, and the shoe is round- ed at the toe, or has that shape given to it which it nat- urally acquires in a fortnight, from the peculiar action of such a horse, the animal may not stumble quite so much ; or if the disease which produced the habit can be allevia- ted, some trifling good may be done, but in almost every case a stumbler should be got rid of, or put to slow and heavy work — Youatt. HORSES JUMPING FENCES. Pass a small and strong cord around his body, just be- hind his shoulders, and tie the halter to this cord betv>^een his fore-legs so as to leave the distance about two feet from the cord to his head, if then he attempt to jump, he is compelled to throw his head forward, which draws hard on the cord and causes it to cut into his back and he mstantly desists. The cord should not be rpore than a quarter of an inch in diameter. CHAPTER YI OPERATIONS, ETC., ETC. SETOXS. Setons are useful in various cases in abscesses, such as occur in poll evil ; in deep fistulous wounds they are in- dispensable. They promote discharge in the neighbor- hood of an inflammation. They are made of tow and horse hair, braided together, or a small cord or a strap of leather may be used ; they are inserted by means of an instrument resembling a large needle, either through abscesses, or the base of ulcers with deep sinuses, or be- tween the skin and the muscular or other substances be- neath. They are retained there by the ends being tied together, or by a knot at each end. The tape is movec in the wound twice or thrice in the day, and occasionally wetted with spirits of turpentine, or some acrid fluid, in order to increase the inflammation which it produces, or the discharge which is intended to be established. In inflammation of the chest or intestines, a rowel is preferable to a seton, where the inflammation has long continued, but not intense. Rowels will be serviceable by producing an irritation and discharge. The action of rowels is slower than setons or blistering. 122 The Hokse Faekiek. bleeding. This operation is performed with a fleam or a lancet. Tlie first is the common instrmneiit, except in skillful hands. The lancet, however, has a more surgical appear- ance, and will be adopted by the veterinary practitioner. A bloodstick is used to strike the fleam into the vein. This is sometimes done with too great violence, and the opposite side of the coat of the vein is wounded. Bad cases of inflammation have resulted from this. If the fist is doubled, and the fleam is sharp and is struck with sufficient force with the lower part of the hand, the blood- stick may be dispensed with. ' For general bleeding the jugular vein is selected. The horse is blindfolded on the side on wdiich he is to be bled, or his head turned well away. The hair is smoothed along the course of the vein with the moistened finger ; then, with the third and little finger of the left hand, which holds the fleam, pressure is made on the vein suf- ficient to bring it fairly into vievv, but not to swell it too mucli, for then presenting a rounded surface, it would be apt to roU or slip under the blow. The point to be selected is about two inches below the union of the two portions of the jugular at the angle of the jaw. The lieam is to be placed in a direct Ime with the course of the vein, and over the precise centre of the vein, as close to it as possible, but its point not absolutely touching the vein. A sharp rap with the hand on that part of the back of the fleam immediately over the blade, will cut through the vein, and the blood wall flow. A fleam v/ith a large blade should always be preferred. A quantity of blood drawn speedily will also have far more efi'ect on the system than double the weight slowiy taken, while Bleeding. 123 the wouiicl ™1 Ileal just as readily as if made by a smaller instrument. A slight pressure, if the incision has been large enough and straight, and in the middle of the vein, will cause the blood to flow sufficiently fast ; or, the lin- ger being introduced into the mouth between the tush"'S and the grinders, and gently moved about, will keep the mouth in motion, and hasten the rapidity of the stream by the action and pressure of the neighboring muscles. When sufficient blood has been taken, the edges of the wound should be brought closely and exactly together, and kept together by a small sharp pin being passed through them. Round this a little tow should be wrap- ped, so as to cover the whole of the incision ; and the head of the horse should be tied up for several hours to pre- vent his rubbing the part against the manger. In brino-- ing the edges of the wound together, and introducing the pin, care should be taken not to draw the skin too much from the neck, otlierwise blood will insinuate itself between it and the muscles beneath, and cause an unsightly and sometimes troublesome swelling. The blood should be received into a vessel, the dimen- sions of which are exactly known, so that the operator may be able to calculate at every period of the bleeding the quantity that is subtracted. Care likewise should be taken that the blood flows in a regular stream into the centre of the vessel, for if it is suffered to trickle down the sides, it will not afterwards undergo those changes hy which we partially judge of the extent of inflamma- tion. The pulse, hovv^ever, and the symptoms of the case collectively, will form a better criterion than any change in the blood. Twenty-four hours after the oper- ation, the edges of the womid will have united, and the 124 The Hokse Fareiee. pin should be withdrawn. When the bleeding is to be repeated, if more than three or four hours have elapsed, it will be better to make a fresh incision rather than to open the old wound. In local inflammation, blood may be taken from any of the superficial veins. In supposed affection of the shoul- der, or of the fore-leg or foot, the 'plate vein, which comes from the inside of the arm, and runs upwards directly in front of it toAvards the jugular, may be opened. In af- fections of the hind extremity, blood is sometimes ex- tracted from the saphcena., or thigh-vein, which runs across the inside of the thigh. In foot cases it may be taken from the coronet, or, much more safely, from the toe ; not by cutting out a piece of the sole at the toe of the frog, w^hich somtimes causes a wound difficult to heal, and followed by festering, and even by canker ; but cut- ting down wdth a fine drawing-knife, called a searcher, at the union between the crust and the sole at the very toe until the blood flows, and, if necessary, encouraging its discharge by dipping the foot in warm water. The mesh- work of both arteries and veins w ill be here divided, and blood is generally obtained in any quantity that may be needed. The bleeding may be stopped w^ith the greatest ease, by placing a bit of tow^ in the little groove that has been cut, and tacking the shoe over it.* — Youatt. * A great improvement has lately been introduced in the method of arresting arterial hemorrhage. The operation is very simple, and, with common care successful. The instrument is a pair of artery forceps, with rather sharper teeth, tlian the common forceps, and the blades held close by a slide. The vessel is laid bare, detached from the cellular substance around it, and the artery then grasp- ed by the forcei)S, the instrument deviating a very little from the line of the artery. The vessel is now divided close to the forceps, and behind them, and the forceps are twisted f.uror five times round. The forceps are then loosened, and, gene-rally speaking, not more than a drop or two of blood will have been lost. This method The Pulse. 125 the pulse. The piilse is a very useful assistant to the veterinary surgeon, whose patients cannot describe either the seat or degree of ailment or pain. In a state of health, the heart beats in a horse about thirty-six times a minute. This is said to be the standard pulse — the pulse of health. Where it beats naturally, there can be little materially wrong. The most convenient place to feel the pulse, is at the lower jaw, a little behind the spot where the sub- maxillary artery and vein, and the parotid duct, come from under the jaw. There the number of pulsations will be easily counted, and the character of the pulse, a matter of fully equal importance, will be clearly ascer- tained. When the pulse reaches fifty or fifty-five, some degree of fever may be apprehended, and proper precaution should be taken. Seventy or seventy-five will indicate a dangerous state, and put the owner and the surgeon a little on the alert. Few horses long survive a pulse of one hundred, for, by this excessive action the energies of nature are speedily worn out. Some things should be taken into account in forming our conclusion of the pulse. Exercise, a warm stable, and fear, will wonderfuly increase the number of pulsa- tions. If a qidclc pulse indicate irritation and fever, a sloio of arresting bleeding lias been applied by several scientific and benevolent men M-ith almost constant success. It has been readily and eftVctiially practised in docking, and patients have escaped much torture, and tetanus lost many a victim. The for- ceps have been introduced, and with much success, in castration, and thus the prin- cipal danger of that operation, as well as the most painful part of it, is removed. The colt wi;l be a fair subject for this experiment. On the sheep and the calf it may be readily performed, and the operator will liave the pleasing consciousness of res- cuing many a poor animal from the uanecossary infliction of torture.— /iS/)007wr. 126 The Horse Faeeier. pulse will likewise characterize diseases of an opposite descriptioD. It accompanies the sleepy stage of staggers, and every malady connected with deficiency of nervous energy. The heart may be excited to more frequent and more violent action. It may contract more pov>'erfuily upon the hlood, which will be diiven with greater force through the arteries, and the expansion of the vessels will be greater and more sudden. Then we have the hard pulse — the sure indicator of considerable fever, and calluig for the immediate and free use of the lancet. Sometimes the pulse may be hard and jerking, and yet small. The stream though forcible is not great. The practitioner knows that this indicates a dangerous state of disease. It is an almost invariable accompaniment of inflammation of the bowels. A weak pulse, vrhen the arterial stream flows slowly, is caused by the feeble action of the heart. It is the re- verse of fever, and expressive of debility. The ojy/yressed pulse is when the arteries seem to be fully distended with blood. There is obstruction some- where, and the action of the heart can hardly force the stream along, or communicate pulsation to the current. The state of the pulse should be carefully regarded during bleeding. The most experienced practitioner can- not tell what quantity of blood must be abstracted in or- der to produce the desired efi*ect. The change of the 23ulse can alone indicate Vvdien the object is accomplished ; therefore, the operator should have his finger on the ar- tery during the act of bleeding, and, comparatively re- gardless of the quantity, continue to take blood, until, in inflammation of the iuiigs, the oppressed pulse, becomes Clysters. 127 fuller and more distinct, or the strong pulse of considera- ble fever is evidently softer, or the animal exhibits sjmip- toms of faintness. It is important to distinguish between the pulse of fe- ver and that of inilammation. We may have a pulse of the greatest rapidity, as in influenza, and yet no one part of the body much inflamed. We have known the pulse of the horse more than tripled, and the animal still re- cover ; and, on the other hand, in cases of inflammation, a pulse of 60 has betokened great danger, and, in some ca- ses, has been succeeded by death. CLYSTERS. The principal art of administermg a clyster consists in not frightening the horse. The pipe, well oiled, should be very gently introduced, and the fluid not too hastily thrown into the intestine; its heat being as nearly as possible that of the intestine, or about 96*^ of Fahren- heit's thermometer. These are useful in hastening the evacuation of the bowels when the disease requires their speedy action. Two ounces of soft or yellov/ soap, dissolved in a gal- lon of warm water, will form a useful aperient clyster. For a more active aperient, half a pound of Epsom salts, or even of common salt, may be dissolved in the same quan- ty of water. A stronger injection, but not to be used if much purgative medicine has been previously given, may be composed of an ounce of Barbadoes aloes, dissolved in two or three quarts of warm water. If nothing else can be procured, warm water may be employed. In cases of over-purging or inflammation of the bowels, the injection must be of a soothing nature. It may con- sist of gruel alone, or, if the purging is considerable, and 128 The Horse Farrier. difficult to stop, the gruel must be tHcker, and four oun- ces of prepared or powdered chalk, well mixed with or suspended in it, with two scruples or a drachm of pow- dered opium. No oil should enter into the composition of a clyster, except that Unseed oil may be used for the expulsion of the ascarides, or needle-worms. In epidemic catarrh, when the horse sometimes obsti- nately refuses to eat or to drink, his strengh may be sup- ported by nourishing clysters ; but they should consist of thick gruel only, and not more than a quart should be administered at once. TRACHEOTOMY. "This operation consists in making an opening into the windpipe to admit air to the lungs, when the natural passage is obstructed by foreign bodies, or when its cali- bre is lessened by tumefaction occasioned by disease. In severe cases of laryngitis, strangles, and their kindred diseases, when the patient seems almost suflbcated, trach- eotomy should be immediately performed. In perform- ing the operation, we select a spot about six inches be- low the throat, in front of the neck, and over the region of the windpipe ; an incision is to be made with a com- mon penknife, (in lieu of a better instrument,) to the ex- tent of two or three inches, in a downward direction, so as to lay bare the trachea ; having exposed space suffi- cient, a circular piece between two rings, corresponding to the size of the tube, is to be cut out, and a short tube inserted, which can be confined in position by means of tape passed around the neck. When the obstruction is removed, or the fauces restored to their natural state, remove the tube, bring the edges of the integuments to- gether, and sew them up." — Dr, Dadd, Fhysicing. 129 phtsicing. This is often necessary — but it has injured the consti- tution and destroyed thousands of animals, when unneces- sarily or improperly resorted to. When the horse comes from grass to dry feed, or from the open air to the heat- ed stable, and is becoming too fat, or has surfeit, or grease, or mange, or is out of condition from inactivity of the digestive organs, a dose of physic is serviceable ; but the physicing of all horses, and the too frequent method of exercising the animal when under the operation of physic, cannot be too strongly condemned. A horse should be carefully prepared for the action of physic. Mashes should be given until the dung becomes Boftened. Five drachms of aloes, given when the dung has thus been softened, will act much more effectually and much more safely than seven drachms, when the lower intestines are obstructed by hardened dung. On the day on which the physic is given, the horse should have exercise, but after the physic begins to work, he should not be moved from his stall. A little hay may be put into the rack. As much mash should be given as the horse will eat, and as much water, with the coldness of it taken off, as he will drink. If he refuses to drink warm water, it is better that he should have it cold, than to continue without taking any fluid ; but in such case he should not be suffered to take more than a quart at a time, with an interval of at least an hour between each draught. The cleansing powder will be found an excellent physic. The Barbadoes aloes, although sometimes very dear, should alone be used. The dose, with a horse properly prepared, will vary from four to seven drachms. 130 The Hoese Farriek. DOCKIXG. The horse's tail is regarded by some as a useless appen- dage, and fashion requires it should be shortened. The tail was given to the horse to fight the blood-sucking flies. There can be no question of its utility to the horse. To dock it, deprives him of a portion of his strength, and he has no protection from flies, which for two months of the year are exceedingly annoying. "The animal should be cast, and brought under the influence of chloroform ; the point of amputation having been selected, the operator feels for a joint or articula- tion, just posterior to which he commences a circular in- cision, carrying the knife right round the tail to the point of commencement, cutting down to the fascia. The in- teguments are then to be forcibly drawn upwards, while the operator disarticulates the joint by making an incis- ion right through it. The coccygeal arteries are to be drawn out mth a pair of forceps, and secured by liga- ture. The integuments, instead of being retracted above the lower end of the bone, are now below it, and thus can be made to protect it from mjuries. Two or three stitches are now needed to approximate the edges of the wound, and the operation is finished, without much loss of blood, and with httle if any pain to the subject. The after treatment is very simple ; cold water, or some tinc- ture of aloes, will complete the cure. If they should not, owing to profuse suppuration, use pyroligneous acid, and give a dose of medicme." mCKIXG. Nicking is another fashionable barbarism that very few horses escape. The world of horsemen have decided, no Blaze or Stae. 131 tail no horse ; and if an animal does not describe an an- gle of forty-five with his tail, he is said to carry none. The usual mode of operating, is to make a sub-cuta- neous section of the muscles, the use of which is to de- press the tail. The knife is introduced as near to the an- us as possible on one side of the tail, between the bone and muscle ; then, with a sort of sawing motion — the back of the knife being towards the bones — the muscle is divided, which may be known by the edge of the knife coming in contact with the integuments. This is repeat- ed on the other side, and the operation is finished. The horse is generally fettered by a rope from the neck, se- cured to each hind leg ; he has also a twitch on the nose. It not unfrequently happens that horses lose an enor- mous quantity of blood after the operation ; but that re- sults from want of anatomical knowledge. The coccy- geal arteries are severed, which the surgeon knows how to avoid. Amateur operators often find that the subject of their experiment is seized with locked-jaw ; and in other cases the tail curves laterally towards the body. In the former, some unnecessary mangling has been per- formed, and in the latter case, one of the curvatores coc- cygis has been partly or wholly severed, which allows the associate muscle on the other side to draw the tail that way. Hence the necessity for skillful operators. BLAZE OR STAR. When we have a pair of horses that match well in every respect, except that one has a blaze or star in the face, it becomes very interesting and important to know how to make their faces match. Take a piece of oznaburgs the size you want the blaze or star : spread it with warm pith and apply it to the 132 The Horse Farrier. horse's face : let it remain two or three days, by which time it will hr'mg off the hair clean, and make the part a little tender ; then take of elixir vitriol a small quantity ; then anoint the part two or three times ; or, of a very common weed called asmart, a small handful, bruise it and add to it about a gill of water, use it as a wash until the face gets well, when the hair will grow out entirely white. TO SPOT A WHITE HORSE WITH BLACK SPOTS. Take Htharage, three ounces ; quick lime, six ounces ; beat it fine and mix it together ; put it into a pan and pour a sharp ley over it ; then boil it and you will have a fat substance swim on top, with which anoint the horse in such places as you design to have black, and it will turn to the color immediately. DESCRIPTION OF A SKELETON OF A HORSE. A The Head, a The posterior maxillary or under jaw. b The superior maxillary or upper jaw. A little lower down than the letter Is a foramen, through which pass the nerves and blood-vessels which chiefly sup- ply the lower part of the face, c The orbit, or cavity containing the eye. d The nasal bones, or bones of the nose. e The suture dividing the parietal bones below from the occipital bones above. / The inferior maxillary bone, containing the upper incisior teeth, B The Seven Cervical Vertebrae, or bones of the neck. The Eighteen Dorsal Vertebrae, or bones of the back. D The Six Lumbar Vertebra;, or bones of the loins. E The Five Sacral Vertebrae, or bones of the haunch. F The Caudal Vertebrte, or bones of the tail, generally about fifteen. G The Scapula, or Shoulder-Blade. H The Sternum, or fore part of the chest. 1 The Costae, or ribs, seven or eight articulating with the sternum, and called the tniA ribs, and ten or eleven united together by cartilage, called the/alse ribs. J The Humerus, or upper bone of the arm. K The lladius, or upper bone of the arm, L The Ulna, or elbow. The point of the elbow is called the Olecranon. M The Carpus, or knee, consisting of seven bones, N The Metacarpal bones. The larger metacarpal, or cannon, or shank in front, and the smaller metacarpal, or splint bone behind. Skeleton of a Horse. 133 g The fore pastern and foot, consisting of the Os Suffraginis, or the upper and larger pastern bone, with the sesamoid bones behind, articulating with the cannon and greater pastern ; the Os Coronae, or lesser pastern ; the Os Pedis, or coffin bone ; and the Os Naviculare, or Navicular, or shuttle-bone, not seen, and articulating with the smaller pastern and coffin bones. h The corresponding bones of the hind feet. O The Haunch, consisting of three portions, the Ilium, the Ischium, and the Pubis. P The Femur, or Thigh. Q The Stifle-joint with the Patella. E The Tibia, or proper leg bone— behind is a small bone called the fibula. 8 The Tarsus, or Hock, composed of six bones. The prominent part is the Os Oalcis, or point of the hock. T The Metatarsals of the hind leg. CHAPTER VII. DISEASES OF THE BEAIN, EESPIEATOEY ORGANS &KD Am PASSAGES. STAGGERS AND APOPLEXY. A want of balance In the circulation of the blood, an unnatural quantity going to the brain, so overcomes its energies that the diseases mentioned at the head of this chapter follow. They differ only in degree, and may arise from different conditions. Where the animal is vig- orous, well fed, and full of fluids, active congestion will be present, but when poorly fed, and reduced in flesh; a loss of energy of the brain may be followed by passive congestion. Violent exercise, such as heavy loads and hard drives, tight collars, too tight curb reins, any cause that forces too much blood to the head or prevents its return by the viens, may be causes of this disease, also after long fasting; too much food unnaturally distending the stomach, sym- pathetically afiecting the brain, will produce it. STAGGERS. Megrims is the mildest of these affections. Symptoms. — Y7hen the horse is dravvm quickly, he will stop suddenly, shake the head and show symptoms of Apoplexy. 135 giddiness. This may soon pass over and he may go on as if nothing had occurred. If more serious, he may fall to the ground or suddenly turn several times around first; he may lie quiet, or struggle violently. If it be a horse of full habit, well fed, three or four quarts of blood better be drawn at once. Tbeatment — Cease using him for a time, give mild physic, such as physic ball, powdered aloes, 6 drachms, a little honey to make the powder tenacious enough to ad- minister, physic or drench pulverized aloes, 6 drachms, syrup of bucthorn, 1 ounce, tincture ginger, 1 ounce, or cro- ton oil from 20 to 30 drops. Give an occasional laxitive ball, powdered aloes, 3 drachms, powdered sulphur, 1 do., powdered mandrake 2 do. To be formed into a bolus with honey or mucilage. Stop hearty and dry feed, and let mashes and green feed be substituted. If not cured at first, the animal will be useless, as the diseased action will become fixed. Severe cold weather in winter, by determining the blood to the brain, predisposes to this disease. APOPLSXT. Apoplexy is a serious form of the diseases we have mentioned. The S>ymptoins which mark its approach are loss of appetite, dullness, stupidity, a somewhat staggering gait, he stands vvdth his head down, or rests it on his manger and seems balancing and ready as often he does to sud- denly fall, he is sleepy, eye duU, he chews his lock of hay for a moment and relapses into a stupor ; as the dis- ease advances his breathing becomes slow, loud and labored, the pulse is slow, the veins in the neck full, the mouth cold, and death closes the scene. Post mortem examination of the brain reveals a highly congested condition of the blood vessels of the brain. The Treatment. — Bleed very copiously, if the horse be strong and vigorous, followed by active purging, with such articles as we have indicated in megrims or staggers, together with rest and light food. If the ani- 136 The Horse Farrier. mal be naturally feeble, if bled it had better be sparingly and be content with physic and laxatives. One grain of strychnine, 3 times a day, might give tone to the nervous system combined with 12 grains of flowers of zinc. The animal probably will never be fit for hard service. PHRENTIS OR INFLAMMATION OF THE BRAIN. By Phrentis we understand inflammation of the sub- stance of the brain and its investing membranes. Symptoms. — Hanging of the head, dullness, watery eyes, and sleepiness ; he is letharic, droops his head ; if aroused, he stares around and then slumbers again. This state does not ordinarily last but a few hours, or at most afew days. A new train of symptoms manifest themselves. He is wide awake, to sound his ears are up and his eyes glare, he is restless, paws and moves about, whinners, dashes, plunges, bites and kicks; thus he continues until water compresses the brain or its substance. Sufier lesion, when exhaustion, stupor and sleep, show a tendency to a fatal issue. Treatment. — Bleed freely, purge freely. There is no disease that will bear copious purging with so much benefit as the one of which we are treating. HYDROPHOBIA OR MADNESS. This alarming and fatal disease results from the bite of a rabid animal, as the dog, cat, or wolf. Symptoms. — The horse stops, looks round, staggers and falls. He rises soon again, staggers and falls, soon he becomes furious, stamping and biting, and endeav- oring to demohsh everything around him. Like the human being, the horse has a dread of water — the dread seems to arise from the severe spasms of the muscles called into action in the act of diglutition, and not from any dread of the water by itself considered. When fully established, this disease is considered incurable. When it is known that the animal has been bitten, cauterize the wound freely and deeply with nitrate of silver, wash it out with chloride of soda. Influenza or Horse- Ail. 137 The disease may remain latent for weeks or months before showing itself, hence the necessity of closely watching the animal, if bitten or sui^posed to be bitten, for some time. Scullcap has won some reputation as a preventive, when an animal was bitten, but it has lost its reputation. IXFLUENZA OR HORSE-AIL. This disease is most prevalent in cold, ungenial weath- er, and is most frequent in the spring — a cold, wet spring — and especially among young horses, and those in high condition, or made up for sale, or that have been kept in hot stables ; more generally in cities where a large number are kept. If a horse can pass through this disease and come out right side up, he can be safely recommended as one having been through the mill. It is, beyond doubt, contagious — sometimes raging over large districts, so that scarcely a stable escapes, and at others, being confined to a neighborhood. Symptoms. — Of these there is a great variety at its commencement. The first symptom is, debility. The horse appears dumpish, refuses to eat, mouth hot, pulse quick ; in the course of six or twelve hours, the pulse in- creases, appetite diminishes, legs and eye-lids swell, (usu- ally increase to about the third day.) This disease may end in distemper, chronic cough, a bad discharge from the nose, and inveterate cases in glanders. Treatment. — Give the animal the benefit of a pure at- mosphere. If the limbs are cold, give them a good rub- bing. If the pulse is full and strong, (not otherwise,) bleed with care. In some cases, it would be advisable to bleed from the eye, or mouth. Strict attention should be paid to the diet. No grain but mashes, gruel substi- tuted for water ; scalded shorts, green grass, and carrots, if they can be procured, if not, hay, offered with the hand, dipped in water salted. In some cases, it is necessary to force them to eat, or give them an injection of gruel. 138 The Horse Fareiek. A plethoric horse should be half starved. If the throat is sore, rub it with warm vinegar and salt, or blister ; steam the nostrils, to encourage the discharge ; walk the horse a little, for exercise ; administer the following : Oil of Croton, five drops ; Nitrate of potassa, 4 to 6 drachms ; Potassio-tartrate of antimony, 1 drachm ; spir- it of nitric ether, 4 drachms to 1 ounce ; solution of acetate of ammonia, 2 to 4 ounces; warm water suf- ficient to make a draught. Sometimes four drachms of bi-tartrate of potassa may- be added to the above ; and, when the head appeared much affected, a drachm of camphor. This draught may generally be administered once, but sometimes twice a day, the croton oil being omitted after the first dose : after the first day, two drachms of powdered gentian may be added ; and after the second or third day, a ball may be substituted for the draught, consisting of : nitrate or potassa, 3 drachms ; potassio-tartrate of antimony, 1 drachm ; powdered gentian root, 2 drachms ; powdered pimento berries, 1 drachm ; treacle sufficient to form a ball. SPASMS OF THE LARYNX AND LARYNGITIS. The larynx is an irregular cartilaginous tube, forming the upper extremity of the wind pipe, and is the organ which produces that peculiar sound called neighing. It aff'ords free j^assage in its normal state for respiration, and also attachment for numerous muscles. Its internal cavities are protected by the common membrane termed mucous^ which at times become the seat of a disease known as laryngitis. The disease appears to be analogous to croup (in the human family.) Spasm of the larynx may result from a mucous affection, induced by indigestion. Symtoms of Spasm of the Larnyx. — Sometimes the disease manifests itself in a moment, as it were, with a most terrible severity ; the animal begins to gasp for Spasms of the Larynx and Lakyngitis. 139 breath ; the eyeballs protrude, and the neck is carried ill a line with the back ; the flanks heave with most excessive violence, and every tune the poor beast msprres air, a sound is emitted, which will vary in its character and intensity according to the vigor of tlie spasm. As the disease proceeds, the general symptoms become more violent — the mucous membrane of the mouth assumes a purple color ; the animal becomes partially unconscious ; he rushes wildly from place to place, as though seeking in vain for aid ; the body becomes suffused with streamy perspiration. Youatt says, in acute Jaryngitis the blood must be abstracted, fi'om the jugular vein, copiously, depending on the degree of inflammation, and not for- getting that he has to do with inflammation of the mu- cous membrane, and that what he does he must do quickly ; bleed, until the pulse flutters or the coustitution is evidently affected. 'Next must be given the fever medicine, the digitalis, nitre, and emetic tartar, with aloes. Aloes may here be safely given, because the chest is not yet implicated. To this must be added, and immediately, a blister, and a sharp one. The surgeon is sure of the part, and he can bring his counter-irritant almost into contact with it. Treat2.ient. — Nauseants, counter-irritants and trach- eotomy are the principal agents, in view of immediate relief. When the patient is attacked suddenly, and shows all the v/orst features of the disease, he can only be relieved by a surgical operation called tracheotomy. The operation is not considered a dangerous one, yet the services of a qualified person are indispensable; as also in cases which result from the presence of morbid grov/ths in the vicinity of the larynx, surgical skill must be sought. Lobelia is considered a very good relaxant ; it is extolled very highly by some physicians for the cure of asthmatical complaints, and for relaxing rigid parts ; it has been used for a number of years on all classes of do- mestic animals, and we consider it a valuable anti-spasmodic. A strong infusion of lobeha can be brought m contact with the horse's nostrils by means of a sponge, and perhaps 140 The Horse Farrier. prove as beneficial as ether. Counter irritants, applied externally in the region of the throat and chest, are gen- erally recommended; the common hartshorn liniment, essence of mustard, or a mixture composed of equal parts of olive oil, tincture of capsicum, and lobelia, are among the most efficient remedies for this purpose. The rectum must be kept empty, by stimulating clysters ; all food to be withheld until the worst symptoms are past, when some thin gruel, sweetened with honey, may be allowed, cold or warm, as the season permits, very good for re- lieving larjTigitis, applied by means of sponges to the throat. In chronic cases, when the glandular organs around the throat are swollen, a stimulating liniment will be in- dicated, which should be rubbed in, night and morning, the animal to have a nutritious diet, and to be drenched as follows : Balsam of fir, 1 ounce, sweet spirits of nitre, 2 ounces, syrup of garlic, 4 ounces, mix. Dose. — One sixth part to be given every night in a pint of thin gruel. PNEUMONIA OR INFLAMMATION OF THE LUNGS. In this disease there are three well marked stages. 1st. That of congestion. 2d. When inflammation is fully developed. 3d. That of suppuration or formation of matter. In the 1st stage the vessels are merely engorged with blood and the air-cells partly filled with a sero-mucus bloody efiusion. In the 2d stage the disease in the lungs has advanced and a plastic extravasation has taken place in the air- cells, and the tissue connecting them are filled with a bloody concrete lymph. In the 3d stage the place of the plastic secretion has been supplied by a purulent fluid. The disease may afiect one lung or both, being much more grave in the latter case. PNEUMONIA OR INFLAMMATION OF THE LUNGS. 141 The causes of pneumonia, are sudden transitions from heat to cold, a change from a warm stable to a colder one; the most frequent is leaving the horse to stand in a brisk wind, after hard driving, or being in a free perspiration. This sudden check to perspiration causes the blood to recede from the surface and crowds it hurtfuUy on inter- nal parts, producing bronchitis, pneumonia or pleurisy. Symptoms. — It is usually ushered in by a shivering fit, the horse is cold all over, reaction after a time takes place and the body becomes warmer than natural, but the extremities remain intensely cold ; this condition peculiarly marks the disease ; it is an early symptom com- mencing in its incipient or forming stage. The pulse at first is often oppressed and obscure, without much acceleration in its motion. The breathing is quick ; he feels the need of pure air, for the air cells being more or less obstructed, the atmospheric air is not brought in contact with the blood, to efi*ect in the latter that change so essential to life ; the animal refuses to lie down because every muscle that aids in respiration is called into action, and those of the spine and shoulders can be used more advantageously as he stands. If when wearied out he lies down, it is but for a mo- ment. It may be regarded as a favorable symptom to find in the morning that the horse was down during the night. It may not be an easy matter to distinguish pneu- monia fi'om pleurisy, and in fact they are often united. Pleurisy is a more acutely painful disease ; auscultation here would be valuable. In pneumonia healthy murmur is changed to a crepita- ting or crackling sound, and wherever heard will indicate the extent of the disease. As the disease advances and lympth is poured out, the lung becomes hepatized or hard like liver, and over such points no respiratory murmur will be heard, for no air permeates such portions. By a careful comparison of res- ltl:2 The Horse Farrier. piration on each side of the horse, you may know very sat- isfactorily whether one or both hnigs are diseased. If the disease still progresses, those inflamed and heap- atized portions sappiirate, an abscess forms, and matter may be discharged by coughing. In pleurisy, the air cells are not implicated, and the res- piratory murmur will be heard at first over the whole of the lungs. (The reader will bear in mhid that the thin membrane which covers the lungs and lines the in- side of the chest is called the pleura, and that in- flammation of this membrane is pleurisy.) A dry friction sound will ha heard in the commencement of pleurisy. Plastic lympth may exude from the inflamed surface, or the vessels may relieve themselves by j^ouring out water between the lung and side, the respiratory murmur disap- pearing in proportion as the water accumulates. Treatment. — This may be commenced by a good bleeding, but to be of much service it should be done at the commencement of the disease, followed by emetic tartar and nitre. A drachm of the former and three of the latter every eight hours, equalize the circulation, by rub- bing the extremities, giving light laxitive food, as bran mashes ; thr(5w warm blankets over the animal, hanging down to the floor, and place vessels of hot water in which put hot stones or bricks, and sweat freely, also opium and calomel, one scruple of the former and two of the latter twice a day. The sides of the chest may be thoroughly blistered, the irritation on the surface divertmg the in- flammation from the lungs. There is another article very efiicient in this disease in the human subject, and I think it must operate equally favorable on animals. I refer to the Veratrum Virid^. The tmcture, as prepared by Dr. W. C. Norwood, or the extract, as prepared by Tilden & Co., N. Y. This medicine may confidently be relied on to control the actions of the heart and arteries, reducing the pulse in the human subject from 120 beats in a minute to 60 or even 40. In giving this remedy, the pulse should be closely Pleurisy. 143 watched, and when down to the natural standard, discon- tinued until it begins to arise again ; probably from twenty to sixty drops every four hours, until it produces slow- ness of pulse, would be an appropriate dose ; should much weakness follow an over dose, a dose or two of spirits would overcome the prostration. It must be observed here that cathartic medicine in this disease must be used with great caution, and a com- mon fault is to do too much ; the restoring powers of na- ture are ignored, dose follows dose in unjustifiable rapid- ity ; blood is shed with fearful profusion, and the suifering animal sinks under the combined attack of disease and injudicious treatment. In regard to blood letting, as we said at the commence- ment, one judicious abstraction of blood would be advi- sable ; its repetition would depend upon the strength of the pulse and appearance of the blood first drawn ; if this is free from a sizy thick buffy coat, its repetition is uncalled for, neither will the opposite condition always war- rant it. Rowels and setons are too slow in their opera- tion to meet the urgent symptoms, and are only beneficial when the disease becomes chronic. PLEUP.IST. The treatment proper for pneumonia, as a general rule, will be applicable to pleurisy. Bleeding is called for more urgently in the latter disease, and will be better borne than in pure inflammation of the lungs ; if water accumu- late in the chest, the case is not hopeless ; a povf der, com- posed of squill, calomel, and nitre, repeated three or four times a day, will accelerate the absorption of the fluid ; blisters also to the chest Avill be appropriate. After recovery from either of these diseases, the patient should be treated with care and great tenderness for some time ; all hard exercises, fast drives and exposures to wet or cold, should be sedulously guarded against, by giving the parts diseased time to heal and become sound; 144 The Horse Farrier. chronic irritations indicated by short breathing and troublesome coughs, will be avoided. coNSU]yrPTioN. This malady extends alike to horses as to human sub- jects. It is not hereditary, but the conformations which lead to this disease are, and thus far the disease. If a narrow-chested, flat-sided horse is attacked by in- flammation of the lungs, or severe catarrhal fever, ex- perience tells us that we shall have more difliculty in sub- duing the disease in him, than in one deeper in the girth or rounder in the chest. If such animals, however, are used in the comitry where they have the advantage of pure air, simple yet nutri- tious food, and judicious management, they may live to the average age of horses generally. There are locations that are favorable to the development of consumption, such as low, wet lands, where the humid atmosphere pre- vents a full and free evaporation of the insensible per- spiration ; such an atmosphere is no less injurious than that of a crowded, unventilated stable. The principal cause of this disease will be found in the evils of domestication. Numerous instances have been known where the horse and cattle that have been subject to these and kindred diseases have entirely recovered by their removal from low, damp stables to dry, warm and airy ones. Symptoms. — The horse is sadly emaciated — he long continues so — his coat stares — his skin clings to his ribs — his belly is tucked up, notwithstanding that he may have plenty of mashes, and carrots, and green meat, and medicine — his former gaiety and spirit do not return, or if he is willing to work, he is easily tired, sweating on the least exertion, and the sweat most profuse about the chest and sides — his appetite is not restored, or, perhaps, Strangles ob Horse Distemper. 145 never has been good, and the slightest exertion puts him completely off his feet. The flanks heave a little more laboriously — heaving is painfully quickened when sudden exertion is required — he coughs sorely, and discharges from the nose a mucus tinged with blood, or a fluid de- cidedly purulent — the breath becomes offensive — the pulse is always above 40, and strangely increased by the slightest exertion. Treatment. — If in the spring of the year, a run of grass may be tried — invigorate the system by good nu- tritious food — gentle exercise, pure air, and if the weath- er be cold, warm clothing, with the addition of oat-meal, pea-meal, linseed-meal, wheat flour, mixed with a liberal quantity of salt — this will aid digestion, and abstract fluids from the body. Should the excrements be voided wtth difficulty or knotty, an injection of soap and water will be advisable. Milk should be given about one quart per day. In case of great prostration, milk should be given with care. The digestive apparatus may be involved in the deterioration of the system, and be unable to digest the fatty constituent, (butter ;) hence, in the exhibition of a daily allowance of milk, attention must be paid to the nutritive function, or such a simple article as milk may prove a barrier to affecting a cure. In such a case, to one pint of milk add two ounces of lime water — give twice a day. For the medical treatment of this disease use phosphate of lime — powdered bloodroot — powdered pleurisy root — powdered Indian turnip — powdered goldenseal, 2 ounces of each — powdered slippery elm, 1 pound — mix, and di- vide the mass into twenty-four powders ; one to be given in the food every night. STRANGLES OR HORSE DISTEMPER. This disease is principally incident to young horses — usually appearing between the fourth and fifth year, and oftenerinthe spring than at any other time — it occasionally attacks old animals. Few horses escape its attack ; but, the disease having passed over, the animal is free from it 146 TiiK lIoKrii: Farhier. for the remainder of his life. This disease is usually con- sidered contagious, but we are not clear on this point, but it will be Yv^ell to separate the patient from healthy ani- mals. This we would recommend in aH cases of catarrhal affection. Symptoms. — It is is generally preceded by cough with a discharge from the nostrils of a yellowish color, mixed with pus, generally without smell, the membrane of the nose intensely red, a swelling under the throat which in- creases, accompanied by a fever — a disinclination to eat — a considerable thirst, but after a gulp or two the horse ceases to drink. In attempting to swallow, a convulsive cough comes on, which threatens to suffocate the animal, mouth hot ; tongue coated with white fur. The tumor under the jaw and about the centre of the channel soon tills the whole space, and is evidently one uniform body, and may thus be distinguished from glanders, or the en- larged glands of catarrh. In a few days it becomes more prominent and soft, and evidently contains a fluid. This rapidly increases ; the tumor bursts, and a great quan- tity of pus is discharged. As soon as the tumor has bro- ken, the cough subsides, and the horse speedily mends, although some degree of weakness may hang about him for considerable time. Teeatmext. — As soon as the tumor under the jaw is decidedly apparent, the part should be actively blistered. It should be waslied off as soon as it rises, and if rej^eated in a day or two, this will abate the internal inflammation and soreness of the throat aud promote the suppurative process ; (when the glands remain hard and do not suppu- rate, it may lead to glanders, in which case the use of lodme Ointment as an outward ai^i^Hcationandhydriodate of potash in daily doses of ten to forty grains, combined with tonics will be fomid useful as an internal application.) As soon as the swelling is soft on its summit, and evi- dently contams matter, it should be freely and deeply lanced, after which aj>ply a Imseed poultice. If the in- cision is deep and large enough, no second collection of Bkonchitis. 147 matter will be formed : and that which is already there may be suffered to run out slovvdy, all pressure with the fingers being avoided. The part should be kept clean. The appetite will return with the opening of the abscess. Bran-mashes, or fresh cut grass should be liberally sup- plied, which will not only afford sufficient nourishment to recruit the strength of the animal, but keep the bowels gently open. If the weakness is not great, no farther medicine will be wanted, except a dose of mild physic, in order to prevent the swellings or eruptions which some- times succeed to strangles. In cases of debility, a small quantity of tonic medicine, as camomile, gentian, or ginger may be administered. ISTo. 2. Bleed and physic ; if it does not break, apply the General Liniment, or the White Ointment ; after it has broke, give the Cleansing Powder for ten or twelve days in mashes. No. 3. Give one half pound of gland salts for six days, dissolved m hot water, and mix with meal. If the disease is very bad, bleed, 3 or 4 quarts. No. 4. Homoepathic treatment. Fever symptoms, Aconite, 10 to 15 drops, once an hour, when allayed, arsenicum, 12 to 15 drops. BRONCHITIS. Veterinarians recognize this disease under three as- pects, viz : 1. Acute, as when the horse is suddenly attacked with an irritable cough and sore throat ; a quick, wiry pulse ; membranes of the nose and mouth redder than usual ; accelerated respiration ; great anxiety of countenance, &c., &c. 2. Chronic bronchitis, which sets in after the acute has subsided; this stage is marked by a discharge of watery and sometimes mucous fluid from the nose ; the act of respiration is jDerformed with a sort of wheezing noise, of which they are somewhat reh'eved in the act of coughing. 148 The Horse Farrier. 3. The third variety has been named epidemic bron- chitis. This variety is remarkable for the emission of copious discharges from the nose, at one time turning yellow, at another green, and then again white. In this form the disorder is exceedingly apt to assume the chronic type, and, after continuing for a length of time, to leave the animal reduced in flesh, and much debilitated. Heaves may be the result of bronchitis, which leaves the upper air passages in a contracted state, or else thick- ens their lining membrane. The natural termination of this disease, if unchecked, is in pneumonia. Treatment, in the active stage, may be the same as in pneumonia or drachm doses of powdered lobelia seeds twice a day, with warmth and moisture to the external surface until we know that it has taken effect from the soft- ness of the pulse, by demulcent, such as slippery elm. Counter irritants applied in the vicinity of the throat or chest will afford relief; when a relaxing effect is desired, use one pint of vinegar to 2 ounces of powdered lobelia ; let it warm over a slow fire, and apply to the throat two or three times a day ; encircle the throat with a piece of soft flannel. Keep the bowels loose by sloppy diet, sea- soned with salt. Fine feed scalded and given to the animal while warm, is beneficial, or instead of the above a blis- ter applied over the brisket and sides, and up the trached to the larynx, will afford relief. The use of setons in the brisket near the termination of the windpipe are of ma- terial service. CATARRH. Catarrh frequently arises from exposures, or changes so trifling, that they would not be supposed of the least importance by one unaccustomed to horses. Some sup- pose that cold and exposure are the sole causes of catarrh ; yet it is a well-known fact, that many horses take cold, even though they have not, mthin several days, some Nasal Gleet. 149 times weeks, been in a situation where cold could be taken after this fashion ; in short, have not left their warm, comfortable stables. But we must remember that a high temperature is just as likely to bring on a cold as any other cause, especially when the subject has been liberally fed ; catarrh, in general, oftener arises from heat than cold. But an insalubrious atmosphere may be set down as the chief cause of common colds. Syjiptoms. — A discharge from the nostrils, increased redness of the membrane, lining the nostrils ; oozing of tears from the corners of the eyes ; swellings underneath the jaws; snorting; cough, with or without febrile disorder. Treatment. — If the patient is in good flesh and the weather is favorable, he may be turned out on green food in the day time, and taken up at night, and a brand mash given. If the weather be cold, let the patient have com- fortable quarters, a good bed blanket, legs rubbed and then bandaged with flannel ; for diet, scalded shorts. The soreness of the throat may be removed by the following : Olive oil, 8 ounces, oil of cedar, 1 ounce, appUed twice a day, a blistering, a fever ball or two, with a drachm of aloes in each, and a little antimony, will generally, set right ; keep the rectum open by an injection of warm water and soap ; physic should not be given without con- sideration ; blood letting in some cases may be resorted to with success. NASAL GLEET. Symptoms. — A discharge of thick, yellow mucus ; if at grass, it assumes a green color. At times it becomes purulent, tinged with blood, and if not arrested at this Btage, it may end in glanders. The discharge fluctuates vrith the weather : in dry, it sometimes subsides, and in- creases in wet and cold weather. If confined to the left nostril, it becomes tenacious, elastic, and accumulates 150 TiiE Horse Fakriek. around the edges of the nasal ca^-ities, and is accompa- nied by enlargement of the gland, and drooping of the ear, we may be prepared for the worst ; for ten chances to one, if it does not terminate in glanders. Teeatmext. — >To 1. Take of alumn, one pound, rosin, one half pound, one half blue vitriol, grind and mix Yv-ith one half of ginger. Give one large spoonful every night and morning ; in some cases bleed. EOARING. Symptoms. — An unnatural, loud, grunting sound made by the animal in breathing, after a short gallop, pro- duced in the act of inspiration, caused by obstructions in the respiratory canal. Thickening of the membrane sometimes is the result of strangles, chronic cough, ca- tarrh, but more frequently is the result of tight reining, by keeping the windpipe m one position, or in the absorp- tion and paralyzation of the muscles, on one side, which assist in opening and enlarging the entrance to the larynx, by pulling back the arytenoid cartilages, as they are termed. The consequence of this is, that an obstruction takes place ; and, although the air can enter with suffi- cient rapidity when the animal is at rest, yet when respiration is hurried by exertion, a great noise is occa- sioned by the air passing through the narrow aperture with great rapidity. Teeat^ient. — Remember that, in every chronic case like this, the only hope of success depends on perseve- rance. Whatever means is adopted, give it a fair trial. Confirmed cases may be incurable. Those of recent date may be cured where the obstruction can be detected. It will be well to bleed, purge, and bhster over the affected parts ; when the physic acts, commence a course of fever medicine ; if no relief is afforded, in two or three weeks, change the treatment. If it arise from atrophy of the mus- cles, let them be stimulated daily with hartshorn hniment, or some such application, and frequent hard rubbing. If from tumors, let them l>j Vemoved. If the thyroid glands are enlarged, they should be rubbed daily with stimula- Common Cough. 151 ting liniment, or ointment of iodine. The horse should at all times have the free nse of his head and neck, or the best treatment might fail. Should the cause of roaring evidently exist (below the fauces) either in the bronchii, trachea, or lungs, the operation of trachetomy may be preferred, which consists in making an opening into the trachea, and through it inserting a tube, which may be worn for any length of time, by taking the precaution to cleanse it occasionally. See Tracheotomy. COMMON COUGH. Cough is present, and often causes annoyance, in ca- tarrh, laryngitis, bronchitis, strangles, horse ail, &c. Is present also in cases of deranged digestive organs, aid when a quantity of worms are present in the digestive cavity. A common cough may attend various forms of disease. In cases of a catarrhal cliaracter, when a quan- tity of mucus accumulates in the respiratory passages, the act of coughing ejects it, and thus relieves the ani- mal ; therefore, a cough of this kind may be salutary rather than otherwise, and in that event needs no treat- ment. A sympathetic cough can only be cured by directing our remedies to the seat of the malady ; that cured, the cough ceases. It does not interfere with the treatment of any disease to use simple remedies to mitigate a cough, if it cause the patient some annoyance ; in this view I use powdered slippery elm, Indian turnip, powdered skunk cabbage, caraway seeds, of each 4 ounces. Dose, one half ounce twice a day in gruel. If the cough continues after the disappearance of pul- monary diseases, dissolve 1 ounce of balsam of fir in 2 ounces of the sweet spirits of nitre, add 4 ounces of the syrup of garlic. Dose, one ounce, night and morn- ing, given in gruel. CHRONIC COUGH. Chronic cough is generally caused by long continued or neglected catarrh, or sore throat. 162 The IIokse Farriek. thick wind. It is sometimes comiected with worms, sometimes glanders; is the necessary attendant of thick or broken wind. If a harsh hollow cough is accompanied by a staring coat, and the appearance of worms, — a few worm-balls may expel the worms, and remove the irritation of the intestinal canal. If it proceeds from irritability of the air passages, which will be discovered by the horse coughing after drinking, or when he first goes out of the stable in the morning, or by his occasionally snort- ing out thick mucus from the nose, medicines may be given, and sometimes with advantage, to diminish irrita- tion generally. Small doses of digitalis, emetic tartar, and nitre, administered every night, frequently have a beneficial effect, especially when mixed with tar. These balls should be regularly given for a considerable time. A blister, extending from the root of one ear to that of the other, and reaching six or eight inches down the windpipe, has been tried, and often with good efiect, on the supposition that the irritation may exist at the roots of the tongue. Feeding has much influence. Too much dry feed, and especially chaff, increases it. It is aggra- vated when the horse is suffered to eat his litter. One of the best remedies for an obstinate cough that bids fair to become chronic, is a seton under the throat, which should be kept seven or eight weeks. Carrots afford decided relief. When chronic cough chiefly occurs after eating, the seat of the disease is evidently in the substance of the lungs. In the violent effort of the lungs to discharge their functions, when laboring under congestion, irrita- tion is produced, and the act of coughing is the conse- quence. HEAVES OR BROIvEN WIND. A troublesome cough, and sometimes of long contin- uance, is the foundation of the disease, or indicates that irritable state of the bronchial membrane with which Heaves orw Broken Wind. 153 broken wind is almost necessarily associated. Horses that are greedy feeders, or devour large quantities of slightly nutritious food, or are worked with a stomach distended by this food, are very subject to broken wind. The agricultural horse is too often fed on the very re- fuse of the farm, and his hours of feeding, and his hours of work, are frequently irregular. A rapid gallop on a full stomach has often produced broken wind. Flatulence, and a depraved appetite, is the consequence as well as the cause of broken- wind ; and there is no pathological fact of more frequent occurrence than the co-existence of in- digestion and flatulence with broken wind. The narrow chested horse is more subject to broken-wind than the broader and deeper chested one. Treatment. — Confirmed cases are incurable, but the disease may in some degree be palliated. We must res- tore digestion in order to cure indigestion. Attend carefully to the feeding. The food should lie in very small compass, plenty of oats, soaked 4 hours, with one pint of flax seed, and little hay, and this of the best quality ; if moistened with fresh chamberley, it improves it. Musty hay should never be given to a horse that has the heaves, and water should be given in moderate quantities. The horse should not be sufilered to drink as much as he likes until the day's work is over. Green feed will always be serviceable. Carrots are particularly useful. They are readily digested, and appear to have a peculiarly benefi- cial effect on the respiratory system. A broken-winded horse should always be watered from a bucket, regularly, three times a day ; and if he be a foul feeder, arm him with a muzzle, and only remove it at meal time. We oc- casionally allow a small quantity of garlic, say a couple of heads every other day, chopped fine, and mixed in the food. One drachm of tincture of aromatic sulphuric acid in a pint of water, night and morning, will be at- tended with good results, "in the mean time we put the 154 The Hoiisi: Fakfji-.r. animal on a course of the following alterative medicine Powdered ginger, gentian, sulphur, salt, cream of tartar charcoal, licorice, elecampane, caraway seeds, and balm of Gilead buds, (chopped fine,) equal parts. Dose, one ounce every night in the food. No. 2. Take the young shoots or buds of white pine, say in May or June, boil them, when the liquor is cold, give the horse one pint a day for 10 days. No. 3. Take 180 grains of tartar emetic and divide into 3 equal doses, mix in wet brand, give once in two days ; this will alleviate, if not perfectly cure. No. 4. To 20 gallons of water, add one half pint of unslacked lime, give the horse no other drink ; to his grain, add 1 gill of vinegar, or one spoonful of ginger ; apples are excellent for a horse that has the heaves ; good cured corn stalk will generally relieve the disease. No. 5. Take 1 pint of alcohol and put in all the tar it will cut, give two table spoonsfull, every morning one hour before feeding, for 10 or 11 days. Another rem- edy is to put tar on the grmders once a day. BLISTERING. The principle on which they cut is, that too intense in- flammation cannot exist in neighboring parts, and like- wise increase the activity of the neighboring vessels. In- flammations should be met promptly, with blistering. Old enlargements and swellings can be removed by mild- er stimulants, such as sweating down the part to be blis- tered. The hair should be shaved, and the ointment thoroughly rubbed in. Care should be taken that the horse cannot hurt himself. After twenty-four hours, a little olive or neat's foot oil should be applied over the bhster. Apply the oil, morning and night, until the scab peels off. Where there is a tendency to grease, blister- ing is dangerous. In the whiter, care should be used that the horse does not take cold in the part blistered. CHAPTER VIII DISEASES OF THE URINARY ORGANS, AND DIGESTIVE CAVITY. INFLA3OIATI0N OF THE KIDNEYS. Symptoms. — A constant desire to void urine, although only passed in small quantities, highly colored, and some- times tinged with blood, though more generally quite natural. There is usually a peculiar stiffness in the hind extremities, especially when the horse is made to describe a circle. Pressure on the loins elicit symptoms of pain, and the pulse and respirations denote febrile symptoms. The Treatment will only vary from that of inflamma- tion of other parts by a consideration of the peculiarity of the organ affected. Bleeding may be promptly re- sorted to. An active purge should next be administered, and a counter-inflammation excited as nearly as possible to the seat of disease. For this purpose, the loins should be fomented with hot water, or covered with a mustard- poultice — the horse should be warmly clothed ; no di- uretic should be given internally. One of the best ap- plications to the loins is a fresh sheep skin, the skin side inwards. This will very soon cause and keep up a con- siderable perspiration, which may be continued by means of a fresh skin in the course of twelve hours. With re- gard to internal medicines, one of the best sedatives is the white hellebore, in doses of a scruple twice a day. The bowels should be opened by means of an aperient 156 The Horse Farrier. draught, and abundance of linseed tea should be given, so as to sheath the irritated parts. The patient should be warmly clothed ; his legs well bandaged, and plenty of water offered to him. The food should be carefully examined, and anything that could have excited, or that may prolong the irritation, carefully removed. INFLAMMATION OF THE BLADDER. This is a very rare but exceedingly dangerous disease. There are two varieties of this disease, inflammation of the body of the bladder, and of its neck. The symptoms are nearly the same with those of inflammation of the kidney, except that there is rarely a total suppression of urine, and there is heat felt in the rectum over the situa- tion of the bladder. The causes are, the presence of some acrid or irritant matter in the urine, or of calculus or stone in the bladder. In inflammation of the neck of the bladder, there is the same frequent voiding of urine in small quantities, generally appearing in an advanced stage of the disease, and often ending in almost total suppres- sion. There is this circumstance which can never be mis- taken : the bladder is distended with urine, and can be distinctly felt under the rectum. It is spasm of the part, closing the neck of the bladder so powerfully that the contraction of the bladder and the pressure of the mus- cles are unable to force out the urine. The Treatment in this case will be the same as in in- flammation of the kidneys, except that it is of more con- sequence that the animal should drink freely of water or thin gruel. The irritation being great, it is almost impossible to keep any soothing application in the bladder, the contents of which are being continually ejected. Recourse, there- fore, must be had to very copious bleeding, so as to en- deavor to check the inflammation which exists, as well as to assuage the irritation, which forbids local measures. It will assist, to administer calomel, combined with opium and tartarized antimony, two scruples of each being given three times a day. The same means may be Lfl«XAMMATION OF StOMACH AND BoWELS. 157 adopted when inflammation attacks the neck of the blad- der, and the spasm prevents its evacuation. The bladder of a mare may be readily evacuated by means of a cath- eter ; and, by the aid of the elastic and flexible catheter, the bladder of the gelding can also be discharged, though the operation requires some tact and skill, IN-FLAM:SfATION OF THE STOMACH AND BOWELS. There are two varieties of this malady. The first is inflammation of the external coats of the intestines, called peritonitis accompanied by considerable fever, and usually costiveness. The second is that of the internal or mu- cous coat, called enteritis. The muscular coat is that which is oftenest aflbcted. Inflammation of the external coats of the stomach, whether the peritoneal or muscular, or both, is a very frequent and fatal disease. It speedily runs its course, and it is of great consequence that its early symptoms should be known. The causes o^jyeritonitis are both numerous and various. We have seen that colic may give rise to it. Constipa- tion may be viewed in the light, both of cause and efiect, in its relation to it. Collected hardened faeces must nat- urally not only of themselves be irritative, but obstruct- tive and subversive of the functions of the bowels, and in either one or the other way may lay the foundation for an attack of inflammation. Certain kinds of indigestible food, calculous bodies, irritathig matter of any sort, with- in the bowels, may cause an inflammation of them. Ob- struction of any of their passages — whether it be from the lodgment and immovableness of the matters they con- tain, or from entanglement of the intestines, or intus-sus- cejition — must in the end occasion inflammation. Over-fa- tigue, and consequent excessive irritation in the bowels, will bring it on. Symptoms. — There is some analogy between the symp- toms of this disease and colic ; there is, however, one marked feature of the case which enables us to diagnose 158 TilK IIOKSE Fai:i;[KI;. the disease with some degree of certaint)^, for when in- flammation has fairly set in, there is little, if any, remission of pain ; whereas, in colic, the pains are of a spasmodic character, so that the animal at times is quite easy. The pulse, in inflammation of the bowels, is small, Arm, and quick increasing in beat as the disease increases in in- tensity. " The next stage borders on delirium. The eye acquires a wild, haggard, unnatural stare — the pupil dilates — his heedless and dreadful throes render approach to him quite perilous. He is an object not only of compassion but of apprehension, and seems fast hurrying to his end ; when, all at once, in the midst of agonizing torments, he stands quiet, as though every pain had left him, and he were go- ing to recover. His breathing becomes tranquilized — his pulse sunk beyond all perception — his body bedewed with a cold, clammy sweat — he is in a tremor from head to foot, and about the legs and ears has even a death-like feel. The mouth feels deadly chill ; the lips drop pendu- lous; and the eye seems unconscious of objects. In fine, death, not recovery, is at hand. Mortification has seized the mflamed bowel — pain can no longer be felt in that which, a few minutes ago, was the seat of exquisite suf- fering. He again becomes convulsed, and in a few more struggles, less violent than the former, he expires. Treatment. — The treatment should be prompt and energetic. The first and most powerful means of cure will be bleeding. From six to eight quarts of blood should be abstracted as soon as possible ; and the bleed- ing repeated, if the pain is not relieved and the pulse has not become rounder and fuller. Weakness is the conse- quence of violent inflammation of these parts ; and if that inflammation is subdued by the loss of blood, the weakness will disappear. The bleeding should be elfected on the first appearance of the disease. A strong solution of aloes should immediately follow the bleeding, but guarded by opium. Tliis should be quickly followed by back-raking, and injections consisting of warm water, or very thm gruel, hi ^vhich Epsom salts BoTS. 159 or aloes have been dissolved ; and too much fluid can scarcely be thrown up. If the common ox-bladder and pipe is used, it should be frequently replenished. The horse should likewise be encouraged to drink plentifully of warm water or thin gruel ; and draughts, each con taining a couple of drachms of dissolved aloes, with a little opium, should be given every six hours, until the bowels are freely opened. Dr. Dodd recommends a method of treatment quite different from the above. He is very much opposed to blood-letting in all cases. That bleeding is efficacious in this and other diseases, is certain, but we are not certain that the same results cannot be attained by other and mild- er remedies. There has been a reform, of late years, in the human practice with good results, and why can- not the same ends be accomplished in the veterinary prac- tice ? We would recommend a careful perusal of Dr. Dodd, in " Modern Horse Doctor," on this disease. BOTS. This disease is frequently confounded with cholic, or other diseases. Generally speaking, bots are not so trouble- some to horses as people seem to suppose ; for it is very rare, in making a post mortem examination, that we do not find more or less in the stomach. This history is curious and is as follows : A species of gad-fly is in the latter part of the summer exceedingly busy about the horse. It is observed to be darting with great rapidity towards the knees and sides of the animal. The females are depositing their eggs on the hair, and which adhere to it by means of a glutinous fluid with which they are surrounded. In a few days the eggs are ready to be hatched, and the slightest applica- tion of warmth and moisture will liberate the little ani- mals which they contain. The horse in licking himself touches the egg; it bursts, and a small worm escapes, 160 The Horse Farrier. which adheres to the tongue, and is conveyed with the food into the stomach. There it clings to the cuticular portion of the stomach, by means of a hook on either side of its mouth ; and its hold is so firm and so obsti- nate, that it most be broken before it can be detached. It remains there feeding on the mucus of the stomach during the whole of the winter, and until the end of the ensuing spring ; when, having attained a considerable size, and being destined to undergo a certain transforma- tion, it disengages itself from the cuticular coat, is car- ried into the villous portion of the stomach with the food, passes out of it with the chyme, and is evacuated with the dung. Treatment. — In most cases, if the horse be allowed to run for a short time at grass, when the bots has at- tained their full growth, and exercise an independent life, they will pass off with the excrement. The compound for the expulsion of the bots will be found useful, when they are found at neck of the throat : No. 2. Drench freely with sweet milk and molasses, (sugar or honey will do,) well shaken together. Contin- ue it, a bottle full every fifteen or twenty minutes, accord- ing to the severity of the attack, until the animal becomes easy ; then give a quart bottle full of strong salt and wa- ter, followed soon after with a quart bottle of Castor Oil. It is worse than idle to give anything with the view of killing the bots in a horse. The only plan is to coax them off. No. 3. Make a tea of sage, sweeten it well, when about milk warm drench your horse with it. If it turns out to be colic and not bots, the sage will be good for that. No. 4. As soon as it is discovered that a horse has symptoms of bots, give a half pint of warm, sweet milk, just drawn from a cow, and a half pint of molasses. In 15 minutes after, give a strong tea made of elder bark, and sage, to which add a half an ounce of alum. This is given as a drench. In half an hour after, give the horse a portion of physic. No. 5. A half pint vinegar, half pint soft soap, half Colic. 161 pint molasses ; shake well together, and pour it down while foaming. We have but little faith in medicine expelling bots ; we can get the medicine into the horse's stomach, but we cannot get it down the throat of the worm when the food does not suit him. The nit or egg can easily be got rid of by greasing the horse's hair, and then rubbing it with a coarse cloth, or by applying warm water, which loosens their hold on the hair. COLIC. In nine cases out of ten, coUc is the result of impaired di gestive organs. The drmking of cold water when the horse is heated, is a very sure origin of violent spasm in the horse. Hard water is very apt to produce this effect. Colic will sometimes follow the exposure of a horse to the cold air or a cold wind, after strong exercise. Green feed, although, generally speaking, most beneficial to the horse, yet, given in too large a quantity, or when he is hot, will frequently produce gripes. Doses of aloes, both large and small, are not unfrequent causes of colic. Symptoms. — It is of much importance to distinguish between spasmodic colic and inflammation of the bowels, for the symptoms have considerable resemblance, although the mode of treatment should be very different. The attack of colic is usually very sudden. The horse begins to shift his posture, look around at his flanks, paw violently, strike his belly with his feet, and crouch in a peculiar manner, advancing his hind limbs under him ; he will then suddenly lie, or rather fall down, and balance himself upon his back, with his feet resting on his belly. The pain now seems to cease for a little while, and he gets up, and shakes himself, and begins to feed ; the respite, however, is but short — the spasm returns more violently — every indication of pain is increased — he heaves at the flanks, breaks out into a profuse perspiration, and throws 162 TiiK IToKSE Fakriee. himself more recklessly about. In the space of an hour or two, either the spasms begin to relax, and the remis- sions are of longer duration, or the torture is augmented at every paroxysm ; the intervals of ease are fewer and less marked, and inflammation and death supervene. The pulse is but little affected at the commencement, but it soon becomes frequent and contracted, and at length is scarcely tangible. Tkeatment. — ^Take powdered grains of paradise, 1 tea' spoonful; powdered caraway, 1-2 tea-spoonful; oil of peppermint, 20 drops ; powdered slippery elm, 1 table- spoonful ; hot water, 1 j^int ; mixed together and given from a bottle. An injection of common soap suds thrown into the rectum. Peppermint tea alone will sometimes af- ford relief and a perfect cure. Saleratus is a favorite remedy with many, but it should not be mixed with milk or molasses, as is often done. If the animal labors under pyloric obstruction, the fol- lowing is the preparation : — Carbonate ammonia, 1 drachm ; tincture of ginger, 1 ounce ; water, 1 pint. M^x, and drench the horse. If the acid or gas exist in the bowels, substitute lime water, and add half an ounce of tincture of gentian. SCOUKS AND CONSTIPATION IN YOUNG COLTS. The principal cause of this disease is the want of prop- er management of the mother. It is a law of nature that whatever effects the bowels of the mother, will also ef- fect the colt through the milk it derives, though more seriously. For the colt must now, and, until it be able to masticate food, depend altogether on the parent's milk, and the latter cannot furnish it in sufficient quantities, un- less kept on generous food. Treatment. — Our first duty is to attend to the wants of the mother — establish her health if it be impaired. Stock raisers might learn a lesson from nurses who at- tend human parturients ; they give the old-fashioned dose ScouES AND Constipation in Colts. 163 of castor oil understandingly, knowing from long experi- ence that it operates both on the mother and child. The milk of the mother, immediately after parturition, is the best kind of medicine to regulate the secretions and excretions of the offspring, and it generally has the de- sired effect. There may, however, be cases where, in consequence of exposure, the foal may have diarrhoea ; if so, he must be placed in a warm situation. Perhaps all that will now be needed for the cure is some warm gin- ger, or caraway tea ; and a little of either of these simple articles, pulverized, may, with advantage, be given to the mother in her food. If the mother is fat, and has not had sufficient exercise previous to parturition, vv^e are not to be in a hurry to stop the discharge, but merely to hold it in check. If, in poor condition, and still losing flesh, then, in addition, give of tonic, and give freely of gruel made of wheat flour, and as long, the foal should not de- pend altogether on its dam for sustenance, but might have a daily allowance of boiled cow's milk, cooled to about the temperature of milk when drawn. Ilay tea, to which a small quantity of cow's milk may be added, is an excel- lent drmk for the young foal in the absence of its mother's milk. Try it, reader, on your calves, also, if you have occasion. The following astringent drink for colts is efficacious, viz : Angelica root, one ounce ; Cranesbill, 2 ounces ; hayberry bark, 1-4 ounce ; African ginger, 1-2 ounce. Pour on the above ingredients two quarts of boiling wa- ter ; set them aside for a few hours. Dose — Half a pint every four hours until the disease is checked. If the dis- charges are fetid, add to each dose half a table-spoonful of finely-pulverized charcoal, and if the foal be weak and in poor condition, allow it hay tea, thickened with oat- meal. As regards costiveness, green food and scalded shorts are the antidotes^ and the mother will partake of either with relish ; some of the former, if the season permits, should be cut and placed before her soon after labor. If the articles fail to have the desired effect, a dose of ap- erient medicine — castor oil, or salts— should be given. 164 The Hoese Farrier. diarrhcea. This is quite a common disease among horses. There is a kind, however, among grass eaters, that is beneficial rather than otherwise, if it does not continue for any length of time. Diarrhoea is the eifect of an irritable or congested state of the mucous membrane of the intes- tines, often produced by improper articles, or over doses of physic, by over exertion and perspiration, suddenly checked by exposure to cold winds, &c. Symptoms. — The symptoms are, he frequently looks round at his flanks ; his breathing is laborious, and the pulse is quick and small — the mouth is hot and the legs and ears are warm. Treatment. — If it proceeds from the feed, change of diet will generally be sufficient. Unless the purging is excessive, and the pain and distress great, the surgeon should hesitate at giving any astringent medicine at first ; but administer gruel or thin starch, or arrow-root, by the mouth and by clyster, removing all hay and corn, and par- ticularly green feed. If, however, twelve hours have passed, and the purging and the pain are undiminished, continue the gruel, adding to it chalk, catechu, and opium, repeated every six hours. As soon as the purging begins to subside, the stringent medicme should be lessened in quantity, and gradually discontinued. The horse should be warmly clothed, and placed in a comfortable stable, and his legs should be hand-rubbed and bandaged. Bay- berry bark and charcoal are powerful astringents. If the disease depends on deranged digestive function, the liver included, give a few doses of the following : Powdered goldenseal, 2 ounces ; powdered ginger, 1 Dunce ; salt, 1 ounce. Dose, half an ounce twice a day. INDIGESTION. The causes of indigestion are numerous : too little or too much of food, water, or work ; bad ventilation ; ex- posure ; poisons ; damaged or highly nutritious food ; working the animal on a full stomach — are all operative in producing indigestion in acute or chronic forms. Inflammation of the Eye. 165 Sy^iptoms. — The excrement is very variable in color and consistence, often hard and covered with slime ; at other times soft, when the presence of intestinal parasites can be detected. The urine is scanty, and either colored or thickened with foreign material. The animal is gen- erally cross and irritable, and leaves the stable, at work- ing time, very unwillingly ; he requires considerable urg- ing while travelling, and, of course, is incapacitated to perform his usual work. Treatment. — First, if possible, remove the cause. If the animal has been fed on dry food, let him have a mixture of boiled oats, shorts, and carrots, well seasoned with salt, to which add daily half a table-spoonful of white mustard seed ; one pint of pale brandy to four ounces of fine salt ; dose, a wine glass, in oatmeal gruel, night and morning, just before meals. The animal must not be permitted to spend half his time eating. Atten- tion must also be paid to the water which the animal drinks : throw a handful of pulverized charcoal, daily, into the water trough. This will improve the very worst kind. INFLAMMATION OF THE EYE. This disease is so familiar to every one, that a descrip- tion of it seems unnecessary. Its seat is in the membrane which lines the inside of the eyelids and covers the white of the eye ; when treated in the early stage, it generally yields to very simple treatment. From this primary form of disease others of a more alarming nature supervene. As prevention is much cheaper than cure, it is of great importance to practice that system of management, with respect to feeding, exercise, cleanliness and ventilation, Avhich is most likely to prevent it. It may be considered under two forms — the common and manageable, and the specific and fatal. The common inflammation is gener- ally sudden in its attack. Symptoms. — The lids will be found swelled and the eyes partially closed, and some weeping. The inside of the lid will be red, some red streaks visible on the white 166 Tfik HoKsic Fakf;ii<:i:. of the eye, nnd tlic coniwi slii^litly dim. Tliis is occasion- Jilly coTiiKH'ted with Home dej^ree of cat;irrh or cold; but it iH as olU'M uniu'comp.'iiiied by this, and (h^pends on ex- ternal irritation, as a blow, or the presence of a bit of hay-seed or oat-husk within the lid, towards the outer corner where the iiay camiot reach it; therefore the lids should always be carefully examined as to this possible source of tlie complaint. 'ruicATMKNT. — C-ooIiuu^ apj)lications to the eye, as tlie cy(^ lotion or tiiu'turc; of opiun», with ujcntle physic, will usually abate the evil ; or the inlhunmation will subside without medical treatment. A cool shed, rather darken- ed, will be l\\v. most desii'able ])lace ; a very lim "proud flesh," the parts may be sprmkied daily with burnt alum. Put on a good coating; cover the sore with dry hnt, and apply a ban- dage over all. Bandages should always be dispensed with, if possible. POULTRY LOUSINESS. Horses frequently become infected with lice from poul- try, having the roosting place adjoinmg the stalls. When this is discovered, the preventive will be to remove the roosting place, and scald and whitewash the stable. Symptom. — The horse is seized with violent itching, shows a disposition to rub and bite himself, strike his belly, is not easy for a moment, at night his torment in- creases, after this his skin loosens, his haii* and main some- times break out with eruptions. Treatment. — In order to destroy the vermin, and at 183 The Horse Fakrieb. the same time to cure the cutaneous eruptions, and res- tore the hair, take linseed oil, one ounce, pyroligneous acid, 3 ounces, spirits of turpentine, 1 ounce. Two or three appUcations of this compound will generally suffice. The parts to which the application has been made must be washed with soap and water. The vermin can also be destroyed by sponging the body with an infusion of lobeha. HIDE BOUND. This term is applied to horses whose coat are staring^ and skin tight on the ribs and otherwise out of condition. It is not so much of a disease as a symptom of a disease, particularly of the digestive organs. Every disease that can effect the general system may produce this. Glan- ders, scratches, chronic cough, farcy founder, are accom- panied by hide bound. Diet too sparing, or want of change in diet, is an unfailing source of it ; if the cause is removed, the effect will follow. Treatment. — If no disease appears about the horse, change the diet, clothe the body warmly, give a few mashes, and a mild physic, or give alteratives, and there is none better than that which is in common use, pulver- ized antimony, nitre and sulphur. Should the horse not feed well, and there is no fever, a slight tonic may be given of gmger. Friction may be used to advantage. GLANDERS. This is the most formidable of all the diseases to which the horse is subject. This disease is spontanous with the horse only. In other animals, it is the result of con- tagion. In the horse, it is the result of injuries of some kind, acting upon and weakening the vital energies of the lining membrane of the nose. It is often the conse- quence of catarrh, mliuenza, distemper, and long-continu- ed discharge from the nose. They have been produced by the mjection of stunula- ting and acrid substance up the nostril. No disease will run on to glanders which has not, to a considerable and palpable degree, impaired and broken down the constitu Glanders. 183 tion ; and every di,sease that does this will run on to glan- ders. Glanders are highly contagious. If the discharge from the nostrils of a glandered horse is rubbed on a wound, or on a mucus surface, like the nostrils, it will produce a similar disease. If some persons underrate the danger, it is because the disease may remain unrecognized in the infected horse for some months, or even years, and therefore, when it ap- pears, it is attributed to other causes. No glandered horse should be employed on any farm, nor should a glan- dered horse be permitted to work on any road, or even to pasture on any field. He should be destroyed. It is capable of being communicated to the human be- ing, and, indeed, there have been very many deaths from this cause, and most horrible deaths they are. It is gen- erally by means of some cut or abrasion, which comes in contact with the glandered matter, that the infection is communicated. The utmost caution should, therefore, be exercised by the attendants. The stall and fences may receive the glanderous mat- ter ; and hardening on them, it may months afterwards communicate the disease to horses, sheep and cattle. The earhest symptom of glanders is an increased dis- charge from the nostril, small in quantity, constantly flow- ing, of a watery character, and a little mucus mingling with it. It is a common and very mischievous error to suppose that this discharge is sticky, when it first makes its ap- pearance. It is mucus, but small and constant discharge, and is thus distinguished from catarrh, or nasal gleet, or any other discharge from the nostril. The peculiar stickiness and gluiness supposed to dis- tinguish the discharge of glanders from all other mucus and prevalent secretions belongs to the second stage of the disease, and, for many months before this, glanders may have existed in an insidious and highly contagious form. It must be acknowledged, however, that, in the majority of cases, some degree of stickiness does charac- 184: The Horse Farriek. terize the discharge of glanders from a very early pe- riod. It is a singular circumstance, that when one nostril alone is attacked, it is, in a great majority of cases, the left. This discharge may continue in so slight a degree as to be scarcely perceptible, for many months, or even two or three j^ears, unattended by any other disease, even ul- ceration of the nostril, and yet the horse being decided- ly glandered from the beginning, and capable of propa- gating the malady. In process of time, however, it ming- les with the discharge, and then another and a charac- teristic symptom appears. Some of this is absorbed, and the neighboring glands become affected. If there is discharge from both nostrils, the glands within the under jaw will be on both sides enlarged. If the discharge is from one nostril only, the swelled gland will be found on that side alone. Glanders, however, will frequently ex- ist at an early stage, without these swelled glands, and some other diseases, as catarrh, will produce them. Then we must look out for some peculiarity about these glands, and we shall readily find it. The swelling may be at first somewhat large and diffused, but the surround- ing enlargement soon goes off, and one or two small, dis- tinct glands remain ; and they are not in the centre of the channel, but adhere closely to the jaw on the affected side. The membrane of the nose should now be examined, and will materially guide our opinion. It will either be of a dark purplish hue, or almost of a leaden color, or of any shade between the two ; or if there is some redness of inflammation, it will have a purple tinge. Spots of ul- ceration will probably appear on the membrane cover- the cartilage of the nose — small ulcers, usually aping proaching to a circular form, deep, and mth the edges abrupt and prominent. When these appearances are ob- served, there can be no doubt about the matter. When ulcers begin to appear on the membrane of the nose, the constitution of the horse is soon evidently af- fected. The patient loses flesh — his belly is tucked up, his coat unthrifty, and readily coming off — the appetite Farcy. 185 is impaired — the strength fails — cough, more or less ur- gent, may be heard — the discharge from the nose will in- crease in quantity ; it will be discolored, bloody, offensive to the smell — the ulcers in the nose will become larger and more numerous, and the air-passages being obstruct- ed, a grating, clioking noise will be heard at every act of breathmg. There is now a |;Gcu]iar tenderness about the forehead. Farcy is now superadded to glanders, or glan- ders has degenerated into farcy, and more of the absorb- ents are involved. At or before this time little tumors appear about the muscles, and face, and neck, following the course of the veins and the absorbents, for they run side by side ; and these the tumors soon ulcerate. Tumors or buds, still pursuing the path of the absorbents, soon appear on the inside of the thighs. They are connected together by a corded substance, and ulceration quickly follows the ap- pearance of these buds. The deeper seated absorbents are next affected ; and one or both of the hind-legs swell to a great size, and become stiff, and hot, and tender. The loss of flesh and strength is more marked every day. The membrane of the nose becomes of a dirty livid col- or. The membrane of the mouth is strangely pallid. The eye is infiltrated wdth a yellow fluid ; and the dis- charge from the nose becomes more profuse, and insuffera- bly offensive. The animal presents one mass of putre- faction, and at last dies, exhausted. Treatment. — The treatment of this diserse and farcy in well settled cases is not worth while to attempt any remedies. The chances of cure are too remote, and the danger of infection too great. The horse should be dis- patched at once. If, however, remedial measures are resorted to, a pure atmosphere should be tried ; and if practicable, keep on green food. If this cannot be had, substitute it by boiled carrots, beets, and turnips, thickened with shorts or fine feed. Give all the salt the horse will eat. See receipts. FARCY. Authorities define farcy to be a disease of the lym- 186 The Horse Farrier. phatic vessels, making its appearance in the form of circular swellings, termed farcy buds^ which terminate in a discharge and ulceration. The causes of farcy exist in any thing that deranges the lymphatic system; and probably the same causes that operate, either by contagion or otherwise, to pro- duce glanders, will produce farcy. "By inoculation, farcy has been produced by the matter of glanders, and glanders by the matter of farcy; and, consequently, there is every reason to infer a similarity, or rather an identity, in the virtues of the two diseases ; one disease, or form of disease, almost invariably terminates in the other, prior to dissolution. There can be no question but that the same contaminated atmosphere of the stable or elsewhere, which prouces glanddrs, may occasion far- cy, and vice versa.'''' Bymptoms. — The horse is not in his usual spirits, ap- pears dull and does not partake of food with his accus- tomed relish. Some horse's pulse will be quicker than natural, mouth hot, urine high-colored, &c. ; others are suddenly attacked with a swollen leg. So sudden, sharp, and severe are attacks of farcy in some instances, that in the course of one night, the horse's limb Avill be swollen to a frightful size, so as to incapacitate him almost from turning in his stall and walking out of the stable. " Viewing the aifected limb from behind, we perceive a fulness on the inside of the thigh, along the course of the femoral vein ; and the application of our finger to this will immediately detect a corded, nodous swelling, which has been hapj^ily enough, in the sensation it con- veys to our feel, compared to a '•cord with so many knots tied in it. ' This is at once evidence of the presence of farcy. "Tracing the cord upward from its place of origin, which commonly is above the hock, the hand is carried into the groin, and there discovers a lobulated tumor, a swelling of the ingumal glands, called a bubo ; some- times, however, the bubo does not make its appearance until after the full developement of the cord." FoLL Evil. 187 The first stage of farcy is tumification of the lym- phatics — " development of the farcy bud." The second stage is commonly a suppurative one, ter- minating m a farcy ulcer. After passing through these two stages, the disease may, and frequently does, termi- nate in glanders. When it attacks horses in good condi- tion, some hopes may be entertained of a cure. " ^"o swelHng of a hind limb (or any other part) constitutes a case of farcy apart from the unequivocal signs of lym- phatic disease ; there must be present corded, nodulated swellings, — huds in some form or other, — together with actual or approaching tumefacation of the lymphatic glands, or the case is not farcy." POLL EVIL AND FISTULA ^VITHERS. Poll evil generally makes its appearance about the nape of the neck in the form of a swelling, and if not arrested, ends in abscess and fistula. It generally proceeds from blows and bruises, striking the poll against the ceiling or beams, jerking the head upwards, and coming in contact with the head-stalls. Excessive friction, the bungling and cruel manner of putting on small collars, &c., are the principal causes of this comjjlaint. It results either from neglect or abuse. Poll evil is first noticed in the form of an oval tumor, hot and tender, situated directly in the region of the nape, mostly inclining to one side ; in the suppurative stage, and when the matter is deep-seated, scarcely any fluctua- tion can be felt ; when, however, the matter lies directly beneath the skin, or in the cellular tissues, the reverse is the case. The suppurative finally runs into the ulcerative stage ; we then observe chasms and sinuses, similar to those observed in fistula of the withers, and finally the bones become involved in the disease. Fistula of the withers does not differ from poll evil- except m location, but is more frequent. It arises in con. sequence of the withers being more exposed to injury- Fistula is the more formidable ; for the sinuses often bur- row deep between the shoulder blade and spinous pro- cesses, in various directions, so that it becomes both dif- ficult and dangerous to search for them. For the treat- ment 6f fistula and poll evil, see receipts. 188 Medicines: A LIST OF THE MEDICINES AND KECIPES USED IN THE TREAT- MENT OF THE DISEASES OF THE HORSE. Vinegar is a very useful ap- plication for sprains and bruises. Equal parts of boiling water and cold vinegar will form a good fomentation. Spirit of Salt. — This acid is formed by distilling corrosive sublimate with antimony-. It is decidedly the best liquid caustic we have. J'or corns, canker, in- disposition in the sole to secrete good horn, wounds in the foot not attended by healthy action. Nitric Acid. — This is a valua- ble external application. It is both a caustic and an anti-septic. Itdestro^^s fungous excrescences. Sulphuric Acid, or Oil of Vit- riol. — When mixed with tar, an ounce to ihe pound, it is a good application for the thrush and canker ; a snialler quantity, mix- ed with olive oil, makes a good stimulating liniment. Aloes. — There are two kinds used in horse practice, the Bar- badoes and the Cape. The Bar- badoes aloes have a greater pur- gative power than the Cape, ex- clusive of griping less and being safer, and the action of the bow- els is kept up longer. Alum, — is used internally in cases of over-purging, in the form of alum-whey, two drachms of the powder being added to a pint of hot milk. Its principal use is external. A solution of t.vo drachms to a pint of water forms alone, or with the addition of a small quantity of white vitriol, a very useful wash for cracked heels, and for grease generally; and also for those forms of swel- led legs attended with exudation df mbistare throngh the ekin. Anodynes.— Opium is the only drug that will lull pain. It may be given as an anodyne, but it will also be an astringent in doses of 1, 2, or 3 drachms. Camphor. — It diminishes the frequency of the pulse, and sof- tens its tone. When long ex- hibited, it acts on the kidnej^s. Externally applied, it is said to be a discutient and an anodyne for chronic sprains, bruises and tumors. Spanish Flies, — are the basis of the most approved and useful veterinary blisters. An infusion of two ounces of the flies in a pint of oil of turpentine, for sev- eral da3's, is occasionally used as a liquid blister; and, when sufficiently lowered with com- mon oil, it is called a sweating oil. They have been recom- mended for the cure of glanders. The dose is from five to eight grains given daily, but withheld for a day or two when diuresis supervenes. Guinea -Pepper. — They are val- uable as stimulants. Their bene- ficial effect in cases of cold has seldom been properl}^ estimated. The dose is from a scruple to half a drachm. Caraway Seeds. — These and ginger, alone or combined, are the best stimulants used in horso practice. Castor Oil — is an expensive medicine. It must be given in large doses. Japan Earth — is a very useful astringent. It is given in over- purging, in doses of one or two drachms, with opium. CnARckJAL— ie cieifl^lOnally «ee<4 Medicines. 189 as an antiseptic, being made into a poultice with linseed meal, and applied to foul and offensive ul- cers, and to cracked heels. VERmoRis is usefully applied externally as a mild caustic. Either alone, in the form of fine powder, or mixed witli an equal quantity of the sugar of lead, it eats down proud flesh, or stiijiu- lates old ulcers to healthy action. When boiled with honey and vinegar, it constitutes the far- rier's Egyptiacum, certainly of benefit in cankered or ulcerated mouth, and no bad application for thrushes. Blue Vitriol. — It is a favorite tonic with many practitioners. It is principally valuable as an external application, dissolved in water in the proportion of two drachms to a pint, and acting as a gentle stimulant. If an ounce is dissolved in the same quanti- ty of water, it becomes a mild caustic. In the former propor- tion, it rouses old ulcers to a healthy action, and disposes even recent wounds to heal more quickly than they otherwise would do; and in the latter it removes fungous granulations or proud flesh. It is also a good application for canker in the foot. Creosote — is much valued on account of its antiseptic proper- ties and stopping hemorrhages. It is both a stimulant and a ton- ic. In an undiluted state, it acts as a caustic. In the form of a lotion, a liniment, or an ointment, it has been useful in farcy and glanders, also in foot-rot, canker and thrush. As a caustic, it acts as a powerful stimulant. Digitalis — Fox-Glove. — The leaves of the comiaoQ fox-glove, gathered about the flowering time, dried carefully in a dark place, and powdered, and kept in a close black bottle, form one of the most valuable medicines in veterinary practice. It is a direct and powerful sedative, di- minishing the frequency of the pulse, and the general irritabil- ty of the system, and acting also as a mild diuretic : it is, there- fore, useful in every inflamma- tory and febrile complaint, and particularly in inflammation of the chest. It is usually given in combination with emetic tartar and nitre. The average dose is one drachm of digitalis, one and a half of emetic tartar, and three of nitre, repeated twice or thrice in a day. Diuretics — constitute a useful class of medicines. They stimu- late the kidneys to secrete more than the usual quantity of urine, or to separate a greater than or- dinary proportion of the watery parts of the blood. In swelled legs, cracks, grease, or accumulation of fluid in any part, and in those superficial erup- tions and inflammations which are said to be produced by hu- mors floating in the blood, diuret ics are evidently benefifial ; but they should be as mild as possi- ble, and not oftener given or con- tinued longer than the case re- quires. Gentian stands at the head of the vegetable tonics, and is a stomachic, as well as a tonic. — Four drachms of gentian, two of chamomile, one of carbonate of iron, and one of ginger, will make an excellent tonic ball. An infusion of gentian is one of the best applications to putrid ulcers. 190 Medicines. Ginger — is as valuable as a cordial, as srentian is as a tonic. It is the basis of the cordial ball, and it is indispensable in tlie tonic ball. Helebore, bJacJc. — This is used mostly as a local application, and as such it is a very powerful stimulant. Injections. — See Clysters. Iodine. — This is one of the most valuable drugs used in the veterinar}' practice. It is used in reducing ever}' species of tu- mors. It is used in various forms. Iodine of potassium is best ad- ministered internally, as a pro- moter of absorfition. Combined with the sulphate of copper, it forms a powerful and useful ton- ic ; whilst in the form of iodine of mercury, and combined with lard or palm oil, it becomes a powerful blister, and a useful promoter of absorption. Chloride of Lime is exceeding- ly valuable. Diluted with twen- ty times its quantity of water, it helps to form the poultice ap- plied to offensive discharges. — The foetid smell of fistulous with- ers, poll-evil, canker, and ill- conditioned wounds, is imme- diately removed, and the ulcers are mor* disposed to heal. Linseed is often used instead of water, for the drink of the horse with sore throat or catarrh, or disease of the urinary organs, or of the bowels. Mashes, — constitute a very im- portant part of horse-provender, whether in sickness or health. Mustard Sinapis. — This will be found useful, if, in inflammation of the chest or bowels, it is well rubbed on the chest or abdomen. Nitrous Ether, Spirit of, — is a very useful medicine in the ad- vanced stages of fever. Opium, — However underrated by some, is a valuable drug; but it is a powerful antispasmodic, sedative and astringent. Palm Oil, — is the ver}' best substance that can be used for making masses and balls. ^^iTCH. — The best plaster for sand-crack consists of one pound of pitch and an ounce of yellow beeswax melted together. Nitrate of Potash (Nitre) is a valuable cooling medicine and a mild diuretic, and therefore" it should enter into the composition of every fever-ball. Dose is from two to four drachms. Poultices. — Few horsemen are aware of the value of these sim- ple applications in abating inflam- mation, relieving pain, cleansing wounds, and disposing them to to heal. Linseed meal forms the best general poultice, because it longest retains the moisture. Sedatives, — are medicines that subdue irritation, repress spas- modic action, or deaden pain. — Digitalis, hellebore, opium, tur- pentine, are medicines of this kind. Sugar of Lead, — See under Lead . Sulphur. — It is an excellent alterative, combined usually with antimony and nitre, and particu- larly for mange, surfeit, grease, hide-bound, or want of condition; and it is a useful ingredient ia the cough and fever ball. Tar, — melted with an equal quantity of grease, forms a good stopping of the farrier. But its principal virtue seems to consist in preventing the penetration of dirt and water to the wounded Receipts. 191 part ; and is used with the usnal cough medicine, and in doses of two or three drachms for chronic cough. Turpentine — is one of the best diuretics, in doses of half an ounce, and made into a ball with linseed meal and powdered gin- ger. The oil of turpentine is an excellent antispasmodic. For the removal of colic, it stands unri- valled. Zinc — Calamine. Powder. — Five parts of lard and one of resin are melted together, and when these begin to get cool, two parts of the calamine, reduced to an im- palpable powder, are stirred in. If the wound is not health^'-, a small quantity of common tur- pentine may be added. Tiiis salve justly deserves tlie name which it has gained, "The Heal- ing Ointment." The calamine is sometimes sprinkled with ad- vantage on cracked heels and su- perficial sores. EECEIPTS. Wonderful Liniment. — 2 oun- ces oil of spike, 2 do organum, 2 do hemlock, 2 do wormwood, 4 do sweet oil, 2 do spts. ammonia, 2 do gum camphor, 2 do spts. tur- pentine, and one quart of proof spts. 95 per cent, mix well to- gether, and bottle tight. For sprains, bruises, lameness, &c., &c., the above liniment can- not be equalled, and is actually worth SlOO to any person keep- ing valuable horses. Omit the turpentine and you have the best liniment ever made for human ails, such as rheumatism ^sprains ; and whenever an outward ap. plication is required, try it and prove its virtues. It acts like magic. Rheumatic Liniment. — Take alcohol^ pt., oil of origanum ^ oz., cayenne ^ oz., gum myrrh .^ oz., 1 tea spoonful lobelia., and let all stand one day, then bathe the part affected. I paid $5 for this recipe. Relief Liniment. — Take h pt. linseed oil, add .^ pt. spts. turpen- tine, 1 ounce origanum, and one ounce oil of vitriol ; an excellent liniment for rheumatism, sprains, bruises, tfec, try and pi-ove it. CnLOROFORM Liniment. — For re- lieving suffering in case of burns, (fee, mix chloroform and cod- liver oil. Soap Liniment. — Take 1 oz. organum, 1 oz. castecl soap, 1 pt. alcohol, for swellings, &c. General Liniment. — Turpen- tine one-half pint, linseed oil one half pint, aquamonia 4 oz., tr. of iodine 1 — shake it all well. This is used for different things spoken of in the different receipts, sores or swellings, sprains, ', 'riiKo ol ««nnll>tnl«l(>n V, o#,, no>r»MU'li>l olnliuont ovi liKo l-'ollow llio »lii'.>olioiiP« lioro ^iv.oi ir loi' rinw Itoiio Ol" l>oiio npii\ in, o\tt olVllio luilr iVoiu lh(> pni'l itl' 1\m«Io»I, luol uioi'oly m'0«i«o tlio liintp willt llto oliiltuonl. U\\\\ il in woll willt llto nnUod Iwntil In I wo «ln\ rt, n''*^""!" Ih»> purl Willi l(U'«l. mol III loni'.lnv" w«>li il oil Willi floup niol wolor. itml nppl,\ tloi oinlnoMkI HMiiin, So i'iMl il ovoi'v I'oui' «> olnlnionl ovio'v wis »li»V», TMk IWlpO IU\M IXMMI ,.oM l\.| Si'AVlN. rmiiplKM .li>i,.lv .'.I in opln. ol' h»rp«>u(in.\ nppli.sl until lln» linlr wlurU No. SJ. Oil vilriol, ori^inumi, ooiliO' oil, Mpitninh Uioi*, otpittl parli* ; il or. tiupotitino. ToOv'ttK IviNo lUiNK wnh'N v\\\w\' ooMiNO, lhi»«olv«> ono «|UiU'l*>r poiiinl of mtll potro in ono tpiitrt ol Boll wulor, niol \v«i«h wilU il I wi«'«' i» ,» of oil viliiol, hiiili I ho (linoitooti p(»i'l woll for lliioo >ln\ n, iiiol »oi>o nhonhl ho n"oiUo nill onvo llio tli«o««o If nol of loo hnif^ Htlllulil4l\ I'ou l'',vu.. Tiiio lioloio it. Im.)oiiiniil, ihon innUi) Iho following lotion. TitKo of niiliinioniito \^ o« , Miitl Inrponlino npti tU hitll pini, I or, linnooil oil, mill I on ol Mpn Km of lar ; nhnl(« nil woll, Kiiil itpply il all ovorlho NWollin^ ovory (illior r Inoo. mil (low II a nolon Ihronuh Iho hollotn of Iho pipo, anvrvy «lay nntii Il rniiM a hlooolod, aflor iho nil ro of nil v or hao hoon u«od. Apply lhi>» ovory low dayn, nnlil it hoali» up, Tho oloanor yon K.-op llo' piiil Iho hollor l\n \. Va \\. \M> I'lvti I I \ rh'im Iho »oro lhroutiho\it willv woup* Hinirt ; no»»nd Iho pipo or nipo*' lind Ihoir duo. lion and doplh IlKOIOfM'rt. 105 ilinii tdlco «l,in' \}i\\>(>r, roll it, in a linl'ti mIiiiIik itlxillt (,lin Nl/d *>i (I liTMOHc (jiiil ; (ill wil.li lirnciiic oc puliiHii ; <|iii|lil<' «*v<'i' t lin oinU ; itiHci'l, I.Im^ |ii|Mi iiinl |mihIi im' ilrivd it to Uki lioMoin, M*u'v*^ nil lJi« pij'OM ii, |,|i (,, iipply onro n (lay. To hldVir, OKK j'ol.r, i'>ri. IIKKOHK n MiticAMH. — TiiKn 4 o/. oil of npikc, I of Uriliwli oil, oim' nMly, put a rowel (»r neton of p«»lk root lM'tw»!en tlin Jaw iind IneaMt, in Nert tar np tlio noMtiilM twi<;o a day tlioron^^lily. IMo. li —Tiike i Ih. tine eiit to Uticc.i), add lii (|t. waini water^ let Hoak a /'ew ininnteK, watili lilx tlir<»at, eaiH, neck, to IiIh le^M, re peal, onc,(! in t.liree, honrM. Honm n;(ioinnM!nd It ^'von Inlornally. Watkk Kaiu,'V, — 'I'liin in a »wreax.t and all alon|{ the »W(!llin(^, nix inchen apart, iip- |»ly the general lininuMit to tho Mwellini^, niov«) tho row«dt4 every day ; let theni htay in ii/itil the MW«'llin>^ (^ocK down, (iivn Hoft food - -inaHhoH, with theeJe.afMinj^- '.>owde,r ill i(, - t.liiti m ny. 'Vixf Kiucir, ])tnivi(;ii, on Via,- i,<»w W'au.;u. (iive the followini^ liall i^vi^vy nM.rnin>/ until it op' erate« upon the l.nweU, Take 7 draehnmof aloeM, and I drachm of c/iloiiM I, 1 draehniH of ^intrer, and inolanHen enough to nmke it into a hall, wrap it in paper and «ive it; jrive Kcaldcd hran and oal.M, t^idHH ifitean he j/ot ; when liin howeU have niov«"d, wtop tlie phynie, and j/ive I o/,. npiiitn of e.amphor in a half |Mnt of wattir t^Viiry mornintr lor twelve , /- .2k ^^.♦. ^«. ^?lf A A /^ A A A,i:^^A ^»«i^-^ ^mTM ^mm^'^^fh LIBRARY OF CONGRESS iiiiii"ir'ii'!l11'PI111!l111lllll ¥■■ ^%K I III iiiiniiiiiiiiiiii 002 844 932 A I .-'"^'fNf- mm '. ^ ^ «« X^u M^ ^\^M