LankyDoodle
Well-Known Member
My 17.3hh has bad feet... but only in summer (between late May and September)!
The last shoeing cycle and this, in particular, have been awful. His shoes have come loose in the 6th week of the cycle both times, and the back feet especially are crumbling to pieces. Last time his front feet were as bad if not worse than the backs; the farrier trimmed him right back and the feet were fine, although he was a bit foot sore for 2 or 3 days. Like I said, he is then fine until the 5th week and in the 6th his feet start crumbling and cracking, hoof fibres showing and the shoes have nothing to hold onto so they come loose, but not loose enough to hang off (gaps between hoof and shoe, if you know what I mean).
My farrier is not due until Thursday. I have phoned him and left a message to get back to me asap about possibly coming on Monday or Tuesday, as although it is only 2 days earlier, it means I can be there and chat to him about what the solution might be as well.
My farrier is fab and has things up his sleeve for most things, but I just don't know what I can be doing to stop this. He gets biotin and a nutrient supplement. He gets kevin bacon applied. The ground he is on is soft but not boggy.
He does have incredibly bad sweet itch. This is our first year with him and our friends, who we bought him from, thought it might be to do with the sweet itch that he gets bad feet only in summer.
I have thought of maybe getting him done 5-weekly instead of 6, just in the summer months, and a friend of ours recommended Stokholm Tar? Does anyone have any ideas what we can do else?
The other problem is, my farrier is coming this week and in 3 weeks from then, we are taking the horses to Cornwall for 2 and a half weeks. This means his feet will start to be getting bad by the time we go (not bad, but it will be mid-cycle so not great), and it also means that 5 weeks from this shoeing we will still be in cornwall, so his feet will be crap for the second half of our final week, so possibly not going to get much riding done that week (as he gets sore when like this, and not riding with loose shoes!). Is it daft to ask our farrier to come 3 weeks after this shoeing, just to trim his feet so they are good to go for Cornwall?
Also, final question I promise, are there any particular shoes that might help this? I know it isn't a problem with the shoes, but I wondered if a different type of shoe could help his feet?
Oh and just to add, bare foot not an option - he's been bare foot before and it made his feet worse.
Thanks guys. I know this is a pile of questions!
My farrier is not due until Thursday. I have phoned him and left a message to get back to me asap about possibly coming on Monday or Tuesday, as although it is only 2 days earlier, it means I can be there and chat to him about what the solution might be as well.
My farrier is fab and has things up his sleeve for most things, but I just don't know what I can be doing to stop this. He gets biotin and a nutrient supplement. He gets kevin bacon applied. The ground he is on is soft but not boggy.
He does have incredibly bad sweet itch. This is our first year with him and our friends, who we bought him from, thought it might be to do with the sweet itch that he gets bad feet only in summer.
I have thought of maybe getting him done 5-weekly instead of 6, just in the summer months, and a friend of ours recommended Stokholm Tar? Does anyone have any ideas what we can do else?
The other problem is, my farrier is coming this week and in 3 weeks from then, we are taking the horses to Cornwall for 2 and a half weeks. This means his feet will start to be getting bad by the time we go (not bad, but it will be mid-cycle so not great), and it also means that 5 weeks from this shoeing we will still be in cornwall, so his feet will be crap for the second half of our final week, so possibly not going to get much riding done that week (as he gets sore when like this, and not riding with loose shoes!). Is it daft to ask our farrier to come 3 weeks after this shoeing, just to trim his feet so they are good to go for Cornwall?
Also, final question I promise, are there any particular shoes that might help this? I know it isn't a problem with the shoes, but I wondered if a different type of shoe could help his feet?
Oh and just to add, bare foot not an option - he's been bare foot before and it made his feet worse.
Thanks guys. I know this is a pile of questions!