Barefoot hoof porn - what caused this then?

Interesting. I do like these hoof threads, they are fun even though I clearly have no clue :D

Oh, just seen your post about being embarrassed. Is he compensating for your riding, had you an injury that was causing you to ride unevenly perhaps? Please forgive if that's not the case as I'm taking wild guesses now!
 
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Interesting. I do like these hoof threads, they are fun even though I clearly have no clue :D

Oh, just seen your post about being embarrassed. Is he compensating for your riding, had you an injury that was causing you to ride unevenly perhaps? Please forgive if that's not the case as I'm taking wild guesses now!

No, riding was equally as useless all the time :D

Rofl! My mind is boggled at that hint.

Can you share? Bear in mind it's before the watershed :D
 
A sudden incidence of dressage tests, causing even more focus on straighness and engagement of the hindquarters? (Scraping the bottom of the barrel here.) :p
 
A sudden incidence of dressage tests, causing even more focus on straighness and engagement of the hindquarters? (Scraping the bottom of the barrel here.) :p

You don't know how funny that is, I can tell you! I've never met a horse with such disdain for schooling, and after four years I still haven't managed to persuade him that he would enjoy it. He simply lives to jump, and he'll jump anything at all in his path, he's awesome! He'd put arsenic in my tea or something if I took him to a dressage competition instead of a hunt :D

The second, higher, ring is unconnected to the first.
 
Lol! Leaving your hormones and alcohol aside then, you fell off or (dare I say it?) you trimmed him! :D

Over-trimming?

Yeahhhhhh!!!

One day I decided to make his foot look prettier by trimming off the remaining flare that I thought was going to go anyway. Mistake!! He grew it back in double quick time, with the ring to remind me what a berk I'd been :)
 
So the full story is that I bought him as a six year old who had been backed at five and turned away for another year. At six, he was the most one sided horse I have ever ridden who was not actually unsound. He has even muscle development, but he simply did not move straight and would not carry my left seat bone.

In response to this movement, he grows a flange/extension on the outside of that one foot only. The more he is worked, the straighter he is, and the smaller the flange gets. At the end of a hunting season it's all but gone, but it returns with a vengeance when he is laid off.

So I brought him into work in August to get fit for the new season in September, and he did a lot of work with a straighter body but the foot was still adapted to being bent in the body. The forces that put on the extension caused the first ripple.

Then for some mad reason I decided two months ago to tidy up the extension, thinking that it would be reducing soon anyway. It was clearly a mistake, since the second ring appeared when he went overboard producing foot to put it back again.

Now I don't know about you, but I think that's fascinating.
 
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Gosh, he sounds like you are describing my horse, 'right bend??? are you sure Mum I can go round to the right with my head all the way round to the left look!' The less my horse works the wonkier he always seemed. Did have two very flared hind feet until I had him shod behind three years ago :(. Off to Rockley on Sunday (Yippee!) for Nic to undo all my mistakes and work her magic!
 
For the first six months the only way not to end up with saddle swung off to the left when on a right rein was to have his head out to the left.

His diagonal opposite front foot was very asymmetric too, but that's straight now.

Mine was barn reared in winter and hadn't got a lot of movement when he was young, I don't think. Do you know what caused yours?
 
Very interesting and fascinating especially when you can see the reasoning and knowledge behind it. But chocolate - ugh! No reasoning behind that!
 
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