Cross Creek Farms

Cross Creek Farms

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Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Cross Creek Farms, Equestrian Center, 1906 Landrum Road, Columbus, NC.

05/29/2026
05/25/2026

“Anxiety Threshold” or “Nervousness Trigger Point”

Whatever we call it, it’s that moment when a horse begins to go from being calm and unafraid to becoming some version of a “flight” species, and we all know---or should know---that an afraid horse can’t learn as well as a horse that isn’t afraid.

This doesn’t get talked about enough. Horses are constantly being “trained” with forceful means, whether that means hard hands, sharp spurring, leverage devices, harsh bits, tack nosebands, tie downs, whatever else.

Many of the better trainers and riders who seem not to “get into it” with horses may have started out using stronger techniques, may have been taught to do that, but have learned over time that quieter teaching works better than being rough.

Knowing how to train horses without taking them beyond their anxiety threshold is not a sign of weakness, rather one of being pragmatic. It simply creates better and more responsive horses.

But getting a tough trainer to be a calm trainer is one of the harder sells in the riding world. The person has to be open to new ideas, and many never get there.

(Photo---HLM Van Schaik)

05/24/2026

Phenylbutazone—nicknamed “bute”—is one of the most widely used painkillers in horses. It’s cheap, effective, and commonly given for everything from arthritis to post-competition soreness. But there’s a well-known catch: bute can potentially cause gastrointestinal ulceration, and by the time a horse shows obvious signs of stomach or gut trouble, significant damage may already have occurred. This study set out to find early warning signals in the body — measurable proteins that could flag the problem before it gets serious.

The researchers used a cutting-edge technique called proteomics, which is essentially a large-scale scan of all the proteins present in a biological sample. They compared protein expression in the blood and f***s of seven horses treated with a standard clinical dose of bute (4.4 mg/kg) against seven horses given a placebo. Think of it like running a detailed ingredient check on the body’s chemistry before and after the drug — looking for anything that changed in meaningful ways.

The results were striking in scope. The analysis identified over 5,000 proteins in blood and over 3,500 in f***l samples, ultimately finding 226 significant proteins in blood and 181 in f***l samples that were notably different between the bute-treated and control groups.

One protein stood out from the crowd: fatty acid-binding protein 6 (FABP6). This protein, found in the intestinal lining, is normally involved in absorbing fats, but it leaks into the bloodstream and stool when the gut wall is damaged. The researchers validated FABP6 as a potential biomarker using a standard lab test called an ELISA — an important step toward making any future diagnostic test practical and affordable for veterinary clinics.

Why does this matter for horse owners? Early detection of bute-induced gut injury would be useful for the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of bute toxicity. Right now, vets often have to rely on scoping the stomach or watching for clinical deterioration. A simple blood or f***l test that could catch gut damage in its earliest stages would allow vets to intervene sooner — adjusting doses, switching medications, or adding gut-protecting treatments before a horse ends up seriously ill.

📎 Continue reading this article at https://www.theplaidhorse.com/2026/05/14/can-a-blood-or-stool-protein-warn-us-when-a-common-horse-painkiller-is-damaging-the-gut/

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1906 Landrum Road
Columbus, NC
28722