The Eyes Have It
…eye or on the lids, you may want to gently clean out your horse’s eye with an eye wash. Eye Cleansers Put drops in from the top to slide onto…
…eye or on the lids, you may want to gently clean out your horse’s eye with an eye wash. Eye Cleansers Put drops in from the top to slide onto…
…may want to gently clean out your horse’s eye with an eye wash. Eye Cleansers. If you need to flush your horse’s eye you can use a sterile eye wash…
…that doesn’t tell the left eye what the right eye has seen. Besides all that, it has been suggested that horses have no depth perception. If any of this were…
…eye. You hope to avoid that drastic outcome. Preventing eye injuries means checking out your horse’s environment with a sharp eye (no pun intended!). Most eye injuries come from a…
Eye Injury – What to Watch For: Practical Horseman. All Rights Reserved. Excessive blinking. Tears of discharge from eye. Swollen eyelid. Reddening of the whitish tissues surrounding the eye. A…
Eye Injury – What to Watch For: Excessive blinking. Tears of discharge from eye. Swollen eyelid. Reddening of the whitish tissues surrounding the eye. A whitish or bluish tinge to…
…take a digital photo of a horse’s eyes. Once the horse’s unique eyePrint? information is securely stored in the eyeD database, horse owners can purchase access to have the most…
…naturally wants to skitter away from unfamiliar things behind him or turn to see them better. He sees most things with one eye—monocular vision–instead of with both eyes simultaneously (binocular…
Eye injuries are a genuine emergency in horses. Their corneas, the clear outer covering on the eye, are slow to heal and very prone to infections. The sooner the eye…
…that eye movement is all part of it. But no one had recorded an elite rider’s eye movement until British sports scientists attached little cameras to former Olympian Tim Stockdale….