Vaccines do not give horses energy.
If your horse is not performing well, then you need to have a veterinarian examine him for health issues and review your overall management (feeding, exercise, etc) to ensure that he is getting appropriate nutrition and that you are using an appropriate conditioning plan.
Typically a vet will need to administer the rabies vaccine so that you can get a current and legal rabies certificate, though this can vary by state. You can administer it yourself if the horse will absolutely never leave your property, but it is best to have a current rabies certificate, which will require you to have a vet give the shot.As well as Rabies, horses should also receive the Tetanus vaccine. Tetanus lives everywhere and can be fatal.
At least annually, which is the recommended schedule posted by the vaccine manufacturer. However, if your horse was vaccinated in April and then has a nasty deep gouge in February, your veterinarian will likely give a booster vaccine at this time just to make sure.At least annually, which is the recommended schedule posted by the vaccine manufacturer. However, if your horse was vaccinated in April and then has a nasty deep gouge in February, your veterinarian will likely give a booster vaccine at this time just to make sure.
No. No vaccine should be given in gluteal region. You may give the vaccine in fatty tissue, which will make it useless.
Stroke it, give it an enregy mash, give it turnips and carrots, feed it, water it and give it a saltstone. As long as you get the energy above 10%, your horse will survive, but be very sick tomorrow. The ideal energy is 20%.
You can give them the shot on the large muscle that runs down the neck or one of the large muscles on the horse's hindquarters. Always inject the strangles vaccine on the butt. It can make the horse's neck or face swell.
oats will give your horse lots of energy, but, if you give your horse to much he could colic. you should talk to your vet to design a feeding plan for your horse. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Yeah oats gives your horse a lot of energy.............. even though horse can not digest oats nor gain any nutritional value from them. That's why oats are a "filler feed" usually given to over weight horses since it will make the horse feel full and not hungry but not give the horse any nutritional value to add on to the weight problem. Maybe the person who answered this question should learn what they are talking about instead of giving out wrong advice. There is a old saying "It's better to be thought of as a fool then to open your mouth and remove all doubts".
For Howrse : Give them anti-inflammatory medications In real life, you should first of all call the vet and he/she will give you intructions and medicine to give your horse to help him. Give the horse that medicine exactly the way the vet tells you to, and your horse will be just fine.
you should give it a food poisoning tabletthat should help
Give it peptobismol.. that should do the trick!
no
Can you give rubella vaccine to positive rubella patient?
winter