mrdarcy
Well-Known Member
My response? It's a load of codswallop. I read up about all this when it was first put out there...... he talks the talk, I'll admit that, but he only has ONE example out of thousands of heavy horses.
I have seen the horrendous effects of barefoot butchery, including horses PTS because of the determination to change the shape of horses' feet to conform to the 'barefoot' ideal.
You need to look harder at what is being taught, and the link to how much money these guys charge to even read their articles.
Barring a bout of laminitis, a mild change of diet should NOT make your horse lame.
Reread the initial post by the OP. The clue to his lameness is in the increased roadwork.
There are hardly any comp riders that go barefoot, and there's a reason for that....... the horse needs shoes to do a load of work, and jumping horses need studs.
One of the cruellest notions I've ever heard is the acceptance of a 'transition period' of lameness (which is in essence what you are saying here). Just stop and think what that really means to the horse.
It's him that is in continual pain, not you. It's his feet that HURT. Yet you happily dish out advice to complete strangers that they should continue to keep their horse in pain.
Get off your blinkered soapbox and think about the poor bloody animals suffering because you're seduced by the church of barefoot..........
He has more than one example and he is just one trimmer - there are many many draft horses out there working hard without shoes.
I see you drag out the Strasser example - that's getting such a tired arguement. The Strasser trim is nothing like the trim done by AANHCP and other trimmers. In fact Jaime Jackson the founder of the AANHCP was one of the people the RSPCA used to testify against Dr Strasser's student in the UK to gain the prosecution. So please do your research properly. The AANHCP trim is never ever invasive - unlike farriers who will still dig deep holes for abcesses into live tissue and ressect hoof walls exposing live tissue. Our guiding principle is to do no harm. We do not force a foot into any shape or ideal. We allow nature to do it's thing - the wild horse hoof is the hoof the horse has evolved over millions of years. No domestic horse will ever have a hoof that looks exactly like a wild horse hoof but given the right diet and environment a domestic horse will grow a hoof that is pointing in that direction. We let the individual horse grow the feet he needs dependent on his own conformation - nothing is forced into a text book shape. We don't add wedges to try and force heels up, or heart bar shoes to try and add support, or any other types of rememdial shoeing that is forcing the foot into what human's have decided is the ideal hoof shape.
There are lots of barefoot competition horses - I know plenty and there are many many more in the USA. In fact the current American National Endurance Champion is barefoot - that's a race ride covering 100 miles in a day. You don't get a tougher test of a horse's feet than doing 100 miles in a day.
The transition period is not cruel - these horses are not left to hobble around, I would never sanction that - and that's why I always recommend using hoof boots. Most horses are immediately sound on soft and smooth surfaces anyway. It might take a little longer on stony surfaces but I see just as many shod horses uncomfortable on stony surfaces.
You say I'm blinkered yet I've been on both sides of the fence. I've had shod horses and I've had barefoot horses - so I think I'm more than qualified to compare them. Have you trained/competed both shod and barefoot horses? Until you have how can you say one way is better than another? My barefoot horses are so much healthier and sounder than they were when shod. They no longer brush or overreach, they don't get filled legs after hard work, their action is straighter and more fluid, their muscle tone is better, they're more sure footed, don't slip on the roads, the condition of their feet is vastly improved, no more cracks, splits or flares. And I do lots and lots of roadwork - I have no choice, where I live to get them fit for competitive endurance I have to do lots of miles on the roads. This improves their feet rather than compromises them. You'd be more than welcome to come and look at my horses feet if you want proof.
I know even before you reply that you'll rubbish everything I've just written - that's okay, fortunately there are plenty of people out there who aren't so close minded. Your retoric used to be the majority view but opinion is thankfully shifting and you only have to read a few threads on here now to see more and more people are giving barefoot a chance and seeing the positive results. It takes a while to change anything, especially in such a traditional world as the horse world, but it is happening and I agree with brucea... another ten years and there will be as many barefoot performance horses as shod ones.