Bay Equine Service

Bay Equine Service Dr. Linda Molesworth and Dr. Kelly Quesinberry
Accepting New Clients, Share with your friends! Ambulatory and shipin Equine Veterinary Services.

Hours by appointment. BE SURE TO "LIKE" US ON FACEBOOK!

Now Hiring! Weekend barn help in Huntingtown. We are looking for help again. One of our employees got a full time positi...
04/21/2026

Now Hiring! Weekend barn help in Huntingtown.

We are looking for help again. One of our employees got a full time position and will be leaving.
Experienced Barn Help needed in Huntingtown.
Currently need Saturday and Sunday mornings starting in May. Often here working alone so need to be comfortable with horses.
Schedule Is a little flexible, but a Saturday and Sunday is required.
Morning shift starts 7am , afternoon shift 3pm.
Each shift roughly 4 hours.
Cleaning stalls, moving horses in and out of fields, feeding horses, barn cleaning, and other routine barn chores. We are willing to wait for the right employee.
Email [email protected] or text Dr. Molesworth at 443–532–7669

Sharing this for those clients that are interested. This is an American Association of Equine Practitioner talk open to ...
03/26/2026

Sharing this for those clients that are interested. This is an American Association of Equine Practitioner talk open to clients. It is FREE, BUT you do have to register at the website listed in the graphic or in the link of the post.

What a wonderful opportunity to learn about Founder and Laminitis!

HORSE OWNER WEBINAR ALERT! 📢

Join us for our upcoming Horse Owner Education Committee webinar! Our topic will be "Oh Sugar! My Horse is Foundering!"

Join AAEP-member veterinarians Drs. Allie Catalino and Chelsea Folmar for an in-depth discussion about the two most common metabolic disturbances in horses: Cushing's Disease and Insulin Dysregulation. They will take you on a deep dive into diagnosis, treatment and management of these diseases, followed by discussion about laminitis, a common sequela.

Registration is FREE but required. A recording of the webinar will be available if you miss the live event. Register at https://events.zoom.us/ev/Aqk4QqZ8CSEZVzoTjoed1OchP7YIDfrDxmN7sn3bmdtN0eMBkO1X~AhLXYhuX8F4hYAwaFVb5RYYV903KHqLrJKTrAP-zT2spI-fUNInOwEr12A

This informative session is brought to you by the AAEP Horse Owner Education Committee.

Eagle visit!Going to be a good day. One or two eagles not in frequently stop at the tree on my driveway. Always good to ...
03/01/2026

Eagle visit!
Going to be a good day.
One or two eagles not in frequently stop at the tree on my driveway. Always good to see them.

We are looking for help again!Fresh Meadows is hiring!Experienced Barn Help needed in Huntingtown.Currently need Friday ...
02/28/2026

We are looking for help again!
Fresh Meadows is hiring!
Experienced Barn Help needed in Huntingtown.
Currently need Friday afternoons and Saturday and Sunday mornings.
Schedule Is a little flexible with a weekday afternoon shift.
Morning shift starts 7am , afternoon shift 3pm.
Each shift roughly 4 hours.
Cleaning stalls, moving horses in and out of fields, feeding horses, barn cleaning, and other routine barn chores. Available immediately, but willing to wait for the right employee.
Email [email protected] or text Dr. Molesworth at 443–532–7669

Nothing quite like a busy day! Dr. Kelly started out with a normal scheduled day, which quickly turned into heading to 2...
02/10/2026

Nothing quite like a busy day! Dr. Kelly started out with a normal scheduled day, which quickly turned into heading to 2 emergencies one after another.

First up was a goat with urinary stones that were removed under sedation and pain meds. Intact and castrated male goats are at increased risks for urinary stones due to anatomy and diet. The stones pictured were just a little bit of what Dr. Kelly removed. Said goat is much happier tonight and is back to urinating.

Second emergency was a va**nal prolapse in a cow. Dr. Kelly used multiple treatment techniques to get this girl back to normal before she calves. Everything is sutured closed in a way that is safe, allows her to keep her va**na/ va**nal canal in place, and also allows those ties to break easily and allow her to calve normally.

Fresh Meadows is hiring!Experience Barn Help needed in Huntingtown. A two hour shift Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday and...
01/21/2026

Fresh Meadows is hiring!
Experience Barn Help needed in Huntingtown. A two hour shift Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday and Sunday afternoons roughly 330 to 5:30 PM.
Cleaning stalls, moving horses in and out of fields, feeding horses, barn cleaning, and other routine barn chores. Available immediately, but willing to wait for the right employee .
se Email [email protected] or text Dr. Molesworth at 443–532–7669

Stay Vigilant!
12/29/2025

Stay Vigilant!

https://youtu.be/0XzuuYmIEQY?si=AkldI8Q4ykzNiehXIn case you missed this presentation live yesterday, this is a recording...
11/26/2025

https://youtu.be/0XzuuYmIEQY?si=AkldI8Q4ykzNiehX

In case you missed this presentation live yesterday, this is a recording. More good information. Worth a watch, sponsored by AAEP for horse owners.

This is the recording of a webinar held November 25, 2025. Please note that the current EHV-1 situation is changing rapidly. To get the most updated informat...

Equine EHV-1. Everyone has read about the EHV-1 outbreak in Texas and Oklahoma that started at the women’s professional ...
11/22/2025

Equine EHV-1.
Everyone has read about the EHV-1 outbreak in Texas and Oklahoma that started at the women’s professional rodeo association in Waco, Texas.
Please be cautious and critical of what you read on social media. Information is good, panic is bad.
Virtually all horses have been exposed to this virus and can have a positive blood titer if tested, and do not get sick. The virus does stay in the body, and during periods of stress can cause illness, without a new exposure. It has been shown that old horses have more serious complications in these cases than younger horses. We have read about the case in St. Mary’s County Maryland. I do not personally know this Horse or Owner or Farm. But official sources have confirmed this is an unrelated case to the current outbreak in the west. Most likely this horse was a horse that had the virus in its system and for some reason it reactivated and caused a severe illness that the horse did not survive. Due to the power, often bad, of social media there is no need for the owner or farm to be identified. The state does do contact tracing. So if there was any exposure, you would be notified. 
With hundreds of horses at the competitions in Texas, and Oklahoma, there will surely be many more cases in the next week or two. We do not know yet how widespread this outbreak will be due to the number of horses and how far these horses travel to competitions around the United States.
The best protection against spreading this disease is identification, isolation and quarantine.
If you go to competitions or events with lots of horses at a location, It is always good practice to take temperatures daily or twice a day. Low-grade fevers of 101.5 are often in the first signs of EHV-1. Knowing your horses normal temperature is important. Horses are usually about 100.0, but some run low and their normal temperature is 99.0. So a degree and a half above their normal daily temperature is something to be of concern. Early identification and quarantine is the most important thing. “Healthy” horses can be infectious and spread the disease before they are noticed to be sick.
The EHV-1 virus can cause respiratory disease, abortions, and EHM the neurologic form. Our vaccines protect against respiratory disease and abortion. There is no vaccine for the neurological form. Vaccines do decrease the shedding of virus in healthy horses, so can help decrease the viral load in the environment. This potentially helps decrease all diseases from EHV-1. This is why proof of vaccines are required at many events.
Bay Equine normally vaccinates for Flu and EHV rhino twice a year.
Spread of the virus is through Contact. It does not live more than a few hours in the environment. However, communal water troughs can be a common source of spread. Temperatures and moisture contribute to how long viruses live in the environment.
You can think of it a little bit like Covid. If you drink from the same glass, or water bucket, as someone else you could be exposed. If you are very close in a car or around a dinner table, or in stalls across from each other, or tied next to each other, you could expose each other. You, or your horse, can look healthy, but still be contagious. If you go into a stall immediately after an infected horse leaves, you could be exposed. If you enter that stall 24 hours later, probably not.
Horses usually show signs within one to three days of exposure. But this can be as subtle as a 1.5° temperature increase which you wouldn’t notice without a thermometer.
I will try to post more later. But the take away messages now are:
1. Take temps regularly. Know your horses normal temp and keep a log in writing.
2. Be aware of your surroundings. Pay attention to water sources, and distance from other horses. If you’re using a stall at an event, when was the last time a horse was in there. If you’re not required to bring a health certificate, then no one else is either. 
3. Just because we had one isolated case in Maryland, does not mean we are at high risk like Texas and Oklahoma and some of the western states at this time. 
4. Social media can be very good, and very bad. We all know this. Just remember not everything you read is true or accurate.

Most of you know, I also ride and compete and trailer to endurance rides in many states. So I’m in this with you professionally and personally.
Dr Linda Molesworth

HOLIDAY COGGINS DELAYS Our regular lab will be closed from November 17 through December 9, 2025. We do have another lab,...
11/10/2025

HOLIDAY COGGINS DELAYS
Our regular lab will be closed from November 17 through December 9, 2025. We do have another lab, but it will add additional fees and longer return times for coggins testing.
Be sure to make your appointment now if you need Coggins results in the next month.

Address

2195 Hunting Creek Road
Huntingtown, MD
20639

Telephone

+14105359700

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