Wundahorse
Well-Known Member
I came to being a "barefooter" unwillingly, dragged kicking and screaming pretty much. I'm so traditional in my background its not true (well so it CPTrayes for that matter!!)
The critical question to keep asking your vet is what will her "best option" CURE for your horse, and keep asking it until she tells you the truth which is "nothing" it will just mask the pain the horse feels for a while, until it returns and you have to make further adjustments to the shoeing package again.
Believe me, I loved having shod horses, it was easy, I had no "foot" responsibility and didn't have to worry about what I could do when, what to feed, etc etc. But, losing horses in their early teens to bilateral front foot lameness is not OK, its a manmade degenerative condition and once I understood that I couldn't continue to have a horse shod for its lifetime.
Now, I don't necessarily advocate that being unshod forever is the only way, but if I shod a horse, it would be for a few months, to enable them to do something they couldn't do unshod, then I'd get them off and rehabilitate the feet to their natural shape again.
So the same is true for you, if you want to rehabilitate your horse and return him to soundness, barefoot is really the best option for him, it doesn't have to be forever, but once you've tried it you may not want to shoe again.
The decision is yours.
I guess show jumping took it's toll over time with our boy,plus his nearside foot turns in and he dishes which invariably puts more strain on his joints.The coffin joint,navicular and pedal bone are slightly out of alignment in the left foot too.This year has been very dry with hard ground in our area,and at the end of summer,the apprentice failed to cut his feet back enough,which by the end of the 6 week period caused him to feel very sore in front.Our usual farrier shod him then,and he was sound in 2 days.Then 3 weeks ago he tripped in the field,and again was lame.There was clearly an underlying problem waiting to emerge.I will see how the shoeing goes,and assess if this does improve things.