Learn how to fix ulcers in horses forever.
From: (McClure et al. 1999, Mitchell 2001), endurance (Nieto et al. 2004), and western performance (Bertone, 2000) while the incidence in race horses is reported to be as high as 80-90% (Murray, 1996-2000 and Vatistas, 1999).
Dear Horse Owner,
I’ve been searching for answers to horse ulcers for a long time. For nearly 20 years I’ve tried all kinds of treatments and therapies.I’m happy to tell you that after two decades of searching, I’ve found the answers.
The solutions are put together in a simple, 5-step system that works every time to cure and prevent ulcers in horses.
Over the years, I’ve seen way too many people affected by their horse’s ulcers.
And, if you’re like most horse owners who are struggling with horse ulcers, then you’ll recognize what I’m about to describe…
Well, I’ve got news for you…
By the time your horse starts to show classic ulcer symptoms, the ulcers are bad. Gastric ulcers at the “black poop” point can be life threatening.
But, I can tell you what’s going to happen next. You’ll be prescribed some medication and hopefully it will work. It does for many. And while your horse will be relieved of pain in the near present, in the long term things are most likely not going to get better.
Not by a long shot.
Here’s why: the regular ulcer symptoms you read about online and in horse magazines are ulcers in late stages. If you’re seeing these symptoms, your horse has been in serious discomfort for quite some time.
And if you’ve been reading and searching for answers then I hate to break it to you but…
Yes, set up.
You’ve been taught to recognize ulcers only when the symptoms were bad enough that they warranted medical and drug treatment. And, by the way, on top of the drugs you’ll be giving your horse is a big, fat bill from the vet for the treatments and procedures (approx $250-$400 for each endoscopy).
Just in case you didn’t know, a one month treatment of Gastrogard typically costs more than $1000.00 USD. No, that’s not a typo. One thousand dollars for 30 days of treatment. And many times, you need more than one month.
But there is hope.
One sunny day in California, I went to see a gorgeous brown gelding named “Odin”. Odin was ten years old.
Dan, Odin’s owner, told me this, “Odin will not go forward. At all! We can go sideways, backwards, and circles both directions. Even his trainer, who has been riding him for six years, cannot get him to go forward anymore.”
Dan continued, “He was always difficult, but now he has become impossible.”
Odin had NONE of the typical ulcer symptoms that his owner would have recognized. No depression, rough hair coat, history of colic, not eating well, and no black feces. But he did have ulcers.
How did I know?
First of all, poor Odin was just crawling out of his skin. He hated being touched. Dan had purchased “boatloads” of brushes trying to get one that Odin would tolerate. No luck. It was ulcers, not the brushes, that made him so sensitive.
Next, when I looked at Odin, I saw “stress” all over his body. His eye was stressed, his muscles were stressed, his whole being oozed stress. Dan hadn’t noticed it, because Odin had come to him that way. He thought it was normal behavior for Odin, because he had been a stallion until he was six years old.
Yet that “stress” indicates ulcers. Especially “stress lines” under the eye. Here is an example of a horse with “stress-lines”:
The eye stress-lines and the sensitive skin sign are just two of over 55 HIDDEN ulcer symptoms detailed for you in my Fix Ulcers Forever PDF Report.
Odin was what I call an “emergency” case of ulcers. His were bad enough that colic was definitely a possibility. So Odin did 30 days of omeprazole. He was immediately better—and would go forward again.
However, you can’t keep horses on omeprazole (or any other acid blocker or neutralizer) forever. Why? Because there are many problems with traditional drugs such as:
These problems are completely explained (with no gobblydegook medical terms) so that you can understand why these products are not good for your horse long term.
Odin and his owner continued with the 5-Step Fix Ulcers Forever System. Over the next few months, he successfully got off omeprazole, and went on to have a great career without the ulcers returning. And this is in a high-stress show barn!
Now each horse will have a different timeline, but every horse can be ulcer free—no matter what kind of environment they’re in.
Many of my clients had their horses on preventative ulcer medications because:
They had no idea that they could heal their horses ulcers permanently.
They had no idea they could prevent any recurring ulcers naturally.
Yes, this report costs money. And I could tell you how much youâre already paying to treat ulcers, but you already know. If youâd like two really great FREE tips to help ulcers, just scroll down towards the end. Thanks for reading the story and I hope you enjoyed it.
Includes:
Ulcer Symptoms
Underlying Causes
CARE PLANS
– Emergency
– On medical drugs
– On herbal
– Hidden ulcers
– Preventative
HERBAL PRODUCT CHOICES
– Detailed descriptions
– When to use
– When not to use
HERBAL PHARMACEUTICAL DRUG CHOICES
– Detailed description
– When to use
– When not to use
– "Fake" ulcer list
SINGLE EMAIL WITH QUESTIONS TO DR. TUCKER
REFUNDABLE WITHIN FIRST 60 DAYS
These tips alone may easily save you the money for the report â not to mention months and months of ulcer medication.
The Peppermint trial is very simple. Simply give peppermint leaf to your horse for two weeks and see what happens. Get regular peppermint tea (herbal, no caffeine) either loose leaf or in a teabag (cut open teabag to get leaf out.) A good (and inexpensive) brand is Mountain Rose Herbs.
Give two tablespoons loose leaf peppermint per serving. Give once per day for two weeks in your horse’s feed or by hand.
This is a very low amount and completely non-harmful.
If your horse does not want to eat it, do not force feed . Horses know what they need, and if your horse says, “No, thank you” to the peppermint tea, then respect the decision.
Many people see changes in their horse while taking the peppermint tea. You may see changes such as calmness, a more peaceful eye, a decrease in stress lines, and eating better. You may see this within three days or toward the end of the two-week trial. Whenever you see positive changes, consider that a positive test for ulcers.
If you see these kinds of improvements, however minimal, this is the clue that your horse is indeed having trouble with ulcers. Peppermint tea will not cure your horse, but it will help most horses with ulcers. You can leave your horse on the peppermint tea indefinitely.
Please note: Peppermint will “test” at horse shows and the horse should be off peppermint for five days prior to showing.
Let me tell you a brief story about mineral clay.
There may be a few of you out there who remember QuikClot®. The Army used QuikClot for wounds out on the battle field. Quikclot is a mineral clay that binds to open wounds immediately. It rapidly stops bleeding, and healing takes place underneath this clay “bandaid.”
Ulcers are pretty much an open wound. If you use some mineral clay (I recommend Dynamite brand Miracle Clay), you can syringe it into your horse every day.
In addition, mineral clay absorbs toxins, which will help support your horse’s liver.
There are other bentonite or green clays available. Be sure you use one that is a mineral clay, not just clay. Clay by itself can leech minerals from the body, causing other problems.
"Hi Renee, Thank you so much for the PDF file, it is full of some much wonderful information. I am an equine massage therapist in New Zealand and have been finding a lot of horses with stomach and ulcers issues. We have a 7yr old racehorse that we have taken over the lease, all was good then this ulcers appeared, he became more angry and stopped eating but trying to urinate by stretching out, then working off. We had bloods and urine tests came back all good. We then realised he had ulcers. he did 4 weeks on the vet medication but symptoms where still there. We only have around 2 gut products in NZ to chose from so doing research have managed to come up with a formulation that is working, also working on other horses. I was excited to read about one of the causes of ulcers being heavy metals and vaccinations as we have been giving a product derived from the ground that is like clay but does not pull all the good nutrients out but helps the absorption of other nutrients. It also helps eliminate heavy metals, pesticides and toxins â safe to give all year. We have added others things but it makes me happy to know we are on track. Keep up the good work."
"Hi Dr Renee! I love all the information in the PDF you created. Unfortunately I think I have a couple of horses with ulcers, I also suspect a couple of client horses may have them as well. I want to say thank you as I have been puzzling over a three year old we have in training that seems to like his job and is suited to being a cowhorse, is making progress, but just donât look right and has little energy or stamina. Everything is matching up that heâs had a long-standing issue. Heâs always been touchy/sensitive/caused me to worry/uptight/mouthy/bitey â and there have always been other possible answers. He eats a lot, but doesnât put on weight, even with good (I think) supplements. After following your recommendations, he is doing so much better! Keep up the fantastic work! "
Includes:
Ulcer Symptoms
Underlying Causes
CARE PLANS
– Emergency
– On medical drugs
– On herbal
– Hidden ulcers
– Preventative
HERBAL PRODUCT CHOICES
– Detailed descriptions
– When to use
– When not to use
HERBAL PHARMACEUTICAL DRUG CHOICES
– Detailed description
– When to use
– When not to use
– "Fake" ulcer list
SINGLE EMAIL WITH QUESTIONS TO DR. TUCKER
REFUNDABLE WITHIN FIRST 60 DAYS
"I did not purchase your report because I suspected ulcers, but to arm myself more thoroughly for determining various âbehavioral issueâ solutions when working with other peopleâs horses. I had no specific questions when I ordered the report, but I did find it quite informative, well organized, and understandable. I always appreciate works that go beyond the mainstream of whatâs readily available and perpetuated by pharmaceutical industry marketing momentum. What else? I appreciated the photo of the stress lines in eye and nostril areas."
"I was definitely requiring information about the treatment for stomach ulcers. I have a regular chiropractor for my horses and I could not work out why she was always needing to work the poll and left hind-leg on each horse âŚalways the same issues, especially when I am really careful to keep them as comfortable as possible.(And I am always checked also) ⌠I could not work out why the treatments never seemed to hold. I had done more than one treatment with Ranitidine but the ulcers immediately re-flared up the moment I stopped âŚand I felt it was soothing rather than healing. Everything seemed to be stressfulâŚcold weather, travelling, hot weather, stabling, and the worst of all was earthquakes ( one of my horses colicked with stress and then diedâŚwas probably already an ulcer horse but we were so into saving ourselves and fixing things around us I missed the symptoms). They all had regular massages every week to relax them and herbal help, but still ongoing issues âŚespecially girthiness and very tight in the TMJ and neck. Their toplines had fallen away. I googled and googled and only got the same answers and so your information was a God-sendâŚall I wanted was something new and concrete to tryâŚ.so desperate for help â-and I am gratefully doing it all. So far he is definitely more comfortable and offering similar work to before his ulcers became obvious. His neck and especially his jaw are no longer LOCKEDâŚyay!! Thank you so much for following up your instincts and giving us your informationâŚI am really grateful and would love any more information that may come up."
"Dear Dr. Tucker, I have received your Fix Your Horseâs Ulcers Forever and have started Frodo (one of our dressage horses that we have suspected for a while may have ulcers) on the peppermint tea regime. We have been searching for alternatives to scoping and drugs and had almost given up when I found you online last week. Needless to say, we are excited and relieved. "
"This is an excellent report and you should be proud of it! I am a Human and Animal Chiropractor in Australia and you have just saved me many hours of my own research â so thank you for making it available."
"Labor day I could not ride my horse Apache even a mile without triggering a painful colic-like episode, in fact could not even get him to let me hand walk him 1/2 a mile, he would just stop. Now, about 4 weeks into your program, I can pony him for 2 hours with a good gallop in there (he was competing with my saddle horse for first place) and I can ride him bareback, and he feels energetic, forward, and enthusiastic under me. I think I got my horse back!!! Thanks, you may have saved his life, I was so close to giving up. "
"Thanks so much Renee, I cant tell you how helpful your Ulcer Report has been. So many people told me the crow hopping was excitement, the lack of roundness with his body was adrenalin or emotional, and that bit may be true but I am sure something is not right, he is uncomfortable and the ulcers is why. The info youâve given me saved my horse! If ever you are in the UK, id love you to come n see Smugs and maybe give him a butt scratch! lol"
"Thanks again Renee, I appreciate your help as I have not found one Aussie vet willing to assist with anything other than long term use of omaprazole & I have long been saying to them it is not a solution. My horse has had this ongoing problem since November 2007 & was scoped January 2008 with severe ulcers found to be present. Preddy granules & an extensive shopping list of medication has been recommended & tried but so far my best result has been with omaprazole & slippery elm but it doesnât stop them from coming back. So, thank you again for what you are trying to do to help the worlds ulcer suffering horses & their suffering owners!"
"I put my 13 yr old Arab/Warmblood cross on your Ulcer protocol earlier in the month. I started him on the peppermint immediatelyâ-I was silently stopped by the shift I sawâ-almost immediately. And then when I got the dirt!- the clay. I make it when I feed @ 7-7:30am and then feed when I go back down to my barn @ around 10:30/11pm- to finish cleaning stalls and tack up to âplayâ. This boy has not spooked from the wind around the trees since he has been on the dirt! Winter is always hard for us! I could go on- but he is truly Arab sometimes. He now yells at my truck coming down to the hill at mid morning- knowing he is going to get hisâdirtâ! I do so thank you for all this researchâŚsuch really good information."
50% Complete
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.