Usually a horse should have his teeth looked at every six months.
Yes. Horses should have regular dentist visits (the dentist comes to them) lol and their teeth are floated. They are grinned down slightly and they are checked for any abnormalities.
About every 6 months, unless something serious happens.
Patients should visit their dentist every six months for oral examination and professional cleaning.
As soon as you feel like you need to or your teeth go black and rotten or when you get a letter
once every 3 month
More often than not it will be caused by gum disease and should be seen by a dentist.
a orthodonist perferabily a very good one that you trust.
The exact age really depends on the child. Pediatric dentists have advanced training in behavior management, as well as unique conditions seen mainly in younger patients. If your child does not have a unique condition that requires the care of a pediatric dentist, and if they do not exhibit a great deal of dental anxiety, then they are probably fine to be seen by a regular family dentist. I would recommend discussing this with your family dentist and your pediatric dentist in order to make an informed decision.
They had seen nothing like it before and were very curious. How should they know it was not only a giant wooden horse?
Depending upon what the horse does for a living (racing, showing, pasture ornament) and where you live at (Minnesota vs. Florida), your vet should take a look at your horse and administer vaccines once or twice a year. This changes significantly if you have a pregnant mare - your vet should vaccinate her several times throughout her pregnancy.
Every horse I've seen with ringbone has not seen very many more days to it's life
A hard lump on the wall of your gum can be a gum abscess. It could also be a non-cancerous growth due to an irritation. Any lumps found on the gum or mouth should be seen by a dentist or your doctor.
This will vary depending upon how irregularly your horse's teeth are worn, the horse's temperament (will it let the veterinarian or equine dentist float the teeth without sedation), who is doing the procedure (veterinarian or lay equine dentist) and what type of equipment the person has. A veterinarian floating a horse's teeth with manual equipment and no sedation on a horse with fairly level teeth may only charge $40-$75. Use of sedation, power equipment or complicated wear patterns including waves, hooks and points may cost up to several hundred dollars to straighten out. If your horse's mouth has any of these problems, you should really use a veterinarian to get the teeth leveled out properly and safely. An equine dentist is a person who is not a veterinarian, and may have little to no training on how to perform a float properly. This person will also not have access to sedation and should never been seen using power float equipment (for the safety of the horse, power float equipment should only be used on horses that have been heavily sedated). They tend to cost less per procedure, but some veterinarians have raised concerns about some equine dentists causing more damage and problems than were present before they worked on the teeth.
I have mistakenly fed this to my horse and have seen no adverse affects docdnsdvm
not seen or found often = scarce
From my experience, barrel racing horses are often crazy, poorly trained horses that know only one thing: Run. They are often ridden with harsh bits because that's the only thing that can control them because again, they only know to run and that is all they've been trained to do. Not saying that all barrel racing horses are like that, but all that I've seen are. Not at all what you want for a first horse. You want an easy-going well-trained horse. I would advise a horse trained in reining. Horses trained for reining are super broke, calm, responsive well-trained horses. Not saying reining is the only way to get a horse like that, but any good reining horse is.
the answerr is 20