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.
I'm no vet, but I'd say your horse is having a reaction to the vaccine. Contact your local vet before it gets more serious.
Anyone can give their own injections if they know how. If not your vet will have to do it. With the exception of the rabies vaccine. In some states it is illegal for anyone but a vet to administer the rabies vaccine.
Colic is an emergency and you should call a vet. The vet will give the horse medication to relieve the pain and pressure.
You should only give a horse antibiotics if your equine vet tells you to, otherwise you could do more harm than good to the horse.
Nothing. The horse gives birth normally so long as you have the necessary money to pay the vet, even in the horse is in an EC that doesn't have a vet. It is more expensive to give birth when the EC that the horse in boarded in does not have a vet.
the vet does it through an injection!
A visit by a vet or a farrier.
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.
Just go to the local vet or the nearest to find out
You'r vet should give them to you.
Not without the sanction and authority of a vet.
Yes but your vet can give them a shot so they can't get it.