Democratic Sentinel, Volume 19, Number 15, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 April 1895 — Horses and Electricity. [ARTICLE]

Horses and Electricity.

The horse is easily killed by electricity. It is popularly supposed* that the current, on entering the body, meets with some physiological susceptibility that makes this animal more vulnerable than others to the action of such a current. The London Lancet holds that there la no good ground for this assumption. The explanation lies elsewhere. The hoof, and more particularly its crust and sole, is a good insulator, but the shoe presents to the ground a large metallic contact, and this contact is in connection with metallic conductors in the shape of nails, which pierce the strongest part of the insulation and afford an easy electrical path into the body. The contact with earth is further improved by the great superincumbent weight of the animal, and it may often happen that in passing over wet ground the external surface of the hoof and the wet fetlock, especially in the case of untrimmed horses, may become sufficiently wet to form a good surface condition, and so carry a current directly from the earth to the upper part of the body. In this way the safety of the natural “resistance’,* of the hoofs is neutralized. A horsei, too, covers more ground than a man, and runs greater risk from being in contact with points of ground further apart. Farriers ought to consider the above well, so as to induce them to bestow extra care upon the.driving of the nail, to see that it does nob penetrate to the “quick.”—[Boston Transcript.