BLEEDING. 321 



F:)r every minor operation, and even for many ihat are of more impori- 

 ance, tiiis mode of restraint is sufficient; especially if the operator has 

 active and determined assistants : and we confess that we are no frifnds tc> 

 the casting of horses, if it can possibly be prevented. Whin both legs are 

 included in the hobble or rope (as in another way of using tiie side-line), 

 the horse may appear to be more secure, but there is greater danger ol" his 

 falling in his violent struggles during the operation. 



For castrating and severe firing, the animal must be thrown. The con- 

 struction of the hobbles is well known to every farrier, and almost to every 

 proprietor of horses. We will only say that the safety of the horse and of 

 the operator will require the use of the improved hobbles, by which any 

 leg may be released from confinement, and returned to it at pleasure ; and, 

 when the operation is ended, the whole of the legs may be set at liberty at 

 once without danger. The method of putting the legs as closely together 

 as possible before tiie pull, the necessity of the assistants all pulling together, 

 and the power, which one man standing at the head, and firmly holding 

 the snafile-bridle, and another at the haunch, pushing the horse when he is 

 beginning to fall, have in bringing him on the proper side, and on the verj 

 spot on which he is intended to lie, need not to be described. This, how. 

 ever, is a method of securing the horse to which we repeat that we are not 

 partial, and to which we should not resort, except necessity compelled ; for 

 in the act of falling, and in the struggles after falling, many accidents have 

 oc>.urred both to the horse and the surgeon. 



Among the minor methods of restraint, but sufficient for many purposes, 

 are the twitch and the barnacles. The former consists of a noose passed 

 through a hole at the end of a strong stick, and in which the muzzle is 

 inclosed. The stick being turned, the muzzle is securely retained, while 

 the horse suffers great pain from the pressure — sufficiently great to render 

 him comparatively inattentive to that which is produced by the operation ; 

 at the same time, he is afraid to struggle, for every motion increases the 

 agony caused by the twitch, or the assistant has power to increase it by 

 giving an additional turn to the stick. 



The barnacles are the handles of the pinchers placed over and inclosing 

 the muzzle, and which, being compressed by the assistant, give pain almost 

 equal to that of the twitch. These may appear to be barbarous modes of 

 enforcing submission, but they are absolutely indispensable. In a hw 

 instances, the blindfolding of the horse terrifies him into submission ; but 

 this is not to be depended upon. The twitch should be resorted to when 

 the least resistance is offered ; and when that, as it occasionally does, 

 renders the horse more violent, recourse must be had to the side-line or 

 the hobbles. 



In painful exami'iation of the fore-leg or foot while on the ground, the 

 other foot should be held up by an assistant; or, if his aid be required in 

 an operation, the knee may be fully bent, and the pastern tied up lo the arm. 

 When the hind-leg is to be examined in the same way, the fore-leg on that 

 side should be held or fastened up. 



BLEEDING. 



The operation of Bleeding has been already described (p. 179), but we 

 rt'ould remind our readers of the necessity, in every case of acute inflam- 

 mation, of making a large orifice, and abstracting the blood as rapidly as 

 possible, for the constitution will thus be the more speedily and beneficially 

 affected ; and also, of the propriety of never determining to take a precise 

 quantity of blood, but of keeping the finger on the artery until the pulse 



