emfen1305
Well-Known Member
Ooo, interesting - not the type of horse I was expecting from the hoof pics!
So I would guess that he crosses his back legs laterally when moving on any kind of turn. So as he steps his inside back leg forwards on a turn it reaches under him almost to track that the outside legs are on. Which then overloads that hip and the force is taken excessively through the very back edge of his hoof. And that would account for the slightly rampant frogs on his back feet.
If my mass of assumptions is close then a bit of work to get him to use his lateral abdominal muscles, lift through the shoulder and move straight when on the curve you should be able to improve him
What were you expecting out of interest? We don't actually know what he is haha, some days he looks like a cob tank and other days he looks like a spindly weedy thing!
I assume you mean a circle or a change of rein as opposed to a tight circle? I am not sure actually, I will have to have a look and take some videos at the weekend. At his worst he was going around on the left rein on two different tracks, his hind legs were turned to the inside and head to the outside, presumably because his right hind was worse and he struggled with it on the outside. Are the frogs on his hind feet not good? Sorry I told you the feet baffle me!
Our current rehab programme is walking out on straight lines and encouraging him to work over his back and use his stomach muscles to help strenghtne his back. I posted about struggling to get him to do this on the long lines but seem to have had some success with some belly lefts and using the equiami off the head collar over the last couple of days and then the physio is back out next Friday.