BethH
Well-Known Member
Hi
I have a lovely horse who had a Kissing Spine operation 7years ago successfully and has been sound shod and in ridden work ever since. He is trained very correctly both ridden and on the ground, long and low, lots of long reining and no gadgets with an instructor regularly checking I am sitting properly!
My problem is that I moved yards where my excellent farrier wasn't particularly welcome and so changed to another very well respected farrier about 18 months ago. I find that my horse is incredibly sensitive to correct balancing of his feet, but have had niggles about his way of going, especially over the last 9months. Everything has been checked back, teeth etc as I am very careful about him not being sore as he did have huge behavioural problems before surgery that become a well rehearsed routine caused by the pain in his back and when he isn't sore he is generally a poppet. I have moved yards and can now get my old farrier back if that is the right thing to do.
I have especially noticed that my horse seems not able to move freely in front, his movement has been looking increasingly restricted and it has become gradually worse over the last 4 months. I am pretty convinced it's the way he has been shod as my previous farrier took great pains to grow a decent heel on my horse and after the last couple of shoeings it has become more and more noticeable that his heels have disappeared, his feet are also looking smaller and the hoof wall isn't straight but curves. My previous farrier rolled his toes on the fronts slightly, but now all 4 seems to be rolled halfway up the hoof wall.
He was last shod just under 4 weeks ago and is looking increasingly uncomfortable to the point I don't want to ride him and he looks like he is landing toe first on all 4 feet on the long reins and is now looking lame/stiff on the back end. The current farrier will not be shoeing him in future but do I get my old farrier back who isn't great at organizing his diary or take a risk on barefoot. I am worried that the soreness he will go through will make him a handful to deal with as he was pretty dangerous in the past and also if I transition him by just taking the backs off first or take all the shoes off will that add stress to his back that could cause me problems in the future. He is on a sugar free diet of fast fibre and top chop lite anyway as he can't cope with anything more complex and his only sugar is the odd polo.
I feel a bit panicky about doing the right thing for him but if he is shod I feel that cramping his hoofs in to shoes may not be the best thing for him and having had other not great farriers in the past my trust is at a slightly low ebb! I am also wondering if that ability to move more freely without a lump of metal on his foot will allow him to balance better.
Sorry for ther long ramble but ryan and I have had a very long and difficult journey over the last 9years and I have sworn he will never have to suffer pain again so my guilt is huge at the moment!
I have a lovely horse who had a Kissing Spine operation 7years ago successfully and has been sound shod and in ridden work ever since. He is trained very correctly both ridden and on the ground, long and low, lots of long reining and no gadgets with an instructor regularly checking I am sitting properly!
My problem is that I moved yards where my excellent farrier wasn't particularly welcome and so changed to another very well respected farrier about 18 months ago. I find that my horse is incredibly sensitive to correct balancing of his feet, but have had niggles about his way of going, especially over the last 9months. Everything has been checked back, teeth etc as I am very careful about him not being sore as he did have huge behavioural problems before surgery that become a well rehearsed routine caused by the pain in his back and when he isn't sore he is generally a poppet. I have moved yards and can now get my old farrier back if that is the right thing to do.
I have especially noticed that my horse seems not able to move freely in front, his movement has been looking increasingly restricted and it has become gradually worse over the last 4 months. I am pretty convinced it's the way he has been shod as my previous farrier took great pains to grow a decent heel on my horse and after the last couple of shoeings it has become more and more noticeable that his heels have disappeared, his feet are also looking smaller and the hoof wall isn't straight but curves. My previous farrier rolled his toes on the fronts slightly, but now all 4 seems to be rolled halfway up the hoof wall.
He was last shod just under 4 weeks ago and is looking increasingly uncomfortable to the point I don't want to ride him and he looks like he is landing toe first on all 4 feet on the long reins and is now looking lame/stiff on the back end. The current farrier will not be shoeing him in future but do I get my old farrier back who isn't great at organizing his diary or take a risk on barefoot. I am worried that the soreness he will go through will make him a handful to deal with as he was pretty dangerous in the past and also if I transition him by just taking the backs off first or take all the shoes off will that add stress to his back that could cause me problems in the future. He is on a sugar free diet of fast fibre and top chop lite anyway as he can't cope with anything more complex and his only sugar is the odd polo.
I feel a bit panicky about doing the right thing for him but if he is shod I feel that cramping his hoofs in to shoes may not be the best thing for him and having had other not great farriers in the past my trust is at a slightly low ebb! I am also wondering if that ability to move more freely without a lump of metal on his foot will allow him to balance better.
Sorry for ther long ramble but ryan and I have had a very long and difficult journey over the last 9years and I have sworn he will never have to suffer pain again so my guilt is huge at the moment!
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