Founder is the rotation of the horse's coffin bone (the bone inside the foot) downward to the sole of the foot. There are several causes, but usually due to excessive protein IE overfeeding). I once had a mare absorb her colt (fetus) and this caused her to founder.
Any hay can founder a horse, it is not what the horse eats but how much it eats. Some feed can founder a horse faster than others. Peanut hay is one of those.
Horses don't get flounder, they get founder.
The word you want is FOUNDER (No L in it). Founder is when the sensitive laminae of the hoof begins or completely seperate. Mild founder will lay a horse up for awhile, but severe founder can take a year or more to heal (if it ever does) Many times the cause is illness, high fever and sometimes injury. A lot of horses will founder after colic. Flounder is a FISH
Founder can be either a verb or a noun. Founder as a verb is to sink, as a ship founders, or to stumble or go lame, as a horse founders. Founder as a noun is a person who establishes or begins something, as the founder of a university or the founder of a nation.
This is an ailment of the feet. A horse can get it if it eats too much. This is a common ailment basically because horse owners are really not aware of it.
Colic or founder. Depending on the symptoms. In horse isles case the answer is founder.
If you mean a foundie (foundation horse), a foundation horse is a horse that is the son/daughter of Gaea and Ouranous (not sure if I spelled that right). It is a first generation horse. ~eventinglover (my howrse username)
The British Horse Society was founded in 1947 from combining The Institute of the Horse and Pony Club and National Horse Association of Great Britian. There was no single person that founded the club.
A horse can founder on just about any kind of grass. But spring grass is particularly rich and green. It can actually make your horse's body temperature rise a little. With the occasional exception, most horses need to be monitored closely when on rich pasture of feed.
yes. just make sure you treat it quickly!
I think you mean foundie - either Newfoundland ponies or foundation horses - someone's first horse, a horse of which parents are gaia and ouranos
Don't worry, your horse will be able to run again. I have a Quarter horse/Racking horse named Silky. He had founder once before I owned him. Let the horse rest for a while and slowly work up into riding your horse. DO NOT RUSH HIM/HER! When you think he/she is ready to be ridden again, just walk and trot your horse for at least 5 weeks or so. Just slowly work up into running again. In a few months your horse should be good as new, just as my horse Silky is right now. I hope my advise helps you and your horse.