Well we are off to a rocky start...
At the end of March I got another nasty flu so Bliss had a week off.
Then when I went to feed Bliss last Wednesday morning he had zero interest in his feed, had gross green stuff oozing copiously from his left nostril, and he was super lethargic. He spent most of the day Wednesday lying down out in his paddock looking miserable. He didn't seem to have a temperature (but my thermometer was broken so I couldn't be sure) and his vitals were otherwise normal.
The vet came out late Wednesday afternoon and did a very thorough exam including using the speculum to check his mouth and tubing his nose down to his stomach. She also took blood because his gums were yellow. Then that night she called me to tell me that his white blood count was super low, he was anaemic, and he had banded neutrophils in his blood, all of which indicated that he had a raging infection that required IV antibiotics, so she recommended we bring him into her clinic. So we did... She has a lovely setup so he got the best of care including daily turnout. While there, she X-rayed his head and scoped his nose with a camera.
Everything indicated that he had received trauma to the head which (somehow) caused sinusitis... so the official diagnosis was 'idiopathic sinusitis'. He has a broken incisor, a laceration in his gum (neither of which show any sign of infection), and separated cartilage in the left side of his nose, which is where the infection set in. I suspect he got kicked in the head, but there are no outward signs of this other than the broken incisor.
Anyway, his blood work came back better yesterday, so we took him home this morning. He's still got copious amounts of green goo, and is still off his feed although he seems to be a bit perkier. He's on a whopping dose of antibiotics for two weeks, plus bute.
So he'll be off for another week at least I would say, for a total of almost 4 weeks off...
But for what's left of the 2 month challenge after he's better, I just plan to ride 4+ times a week, and continue to improve his straightness and balance.
