Debates wether to post but so blooming happy I could cry

hackedoff

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I have posted a few posts about how my poor horse had fell in the field last May and ruptured a tendon. It was a long haul with many months of box rest and then restricted exercise. The healing process has taken time not least due to the fact he is now 22 years old.

I got the old clear to start working him in January. Meanwhile whilst the tendon was healing his pastern and fetlock on the same leg started to pull up right and misaligned. There was some heat on and off indicating artheritis but he was sound.

The last couple of months I have been riding him at a walk at weekends but became concerned as he was very reluctant to trot.

I have his shoes pulled off last Autumn and he has been barefoot since then with hoof boots to hack over the very stoney tracks round here. He was very reluctant to trot unless in company. he has had a very good barefoot trimmer who I would happily recommend to anyone, no grass since then and D&H safe and sound plus hay.

I loose schooled him in the menage last weekend and he was very unhappy in trot, tried running him up the lane to see if he was lame in trot and he refused to do more than a few pottery strides.

I discussed this with my OH as my instinct was that no shoes didnt suit pony but was very close to PTS. OH view is that he wouldnt run around here barefoot no matter how long his feet were conditioned and pony had been happy with shoes for at least 19 years .

As a last ditch try I had my farrier come up today and re shoe him. she was very pleased with the state of his feet and how they had been trimmed. This pleased me as I hate it when professionals criticise each others work for no reason other than to big themselves up.

No I dont claim a miracle happened with his shoes going on but.... he walked up the track to the menage slightly more forward than last week. He came out of the menage and down the track almost like his old self. I thought what the heck, Ill try to trot him up and bugger me if he didnt take of past me at a fast trot! Not his old mega ground covering trot of his youth, but then I dont run the same as I did with him 10 years ago either!. He had a decent length of stride and not pottery. It was a distinct improvement on last weekend when I thought that picking him up and carrying him would be esier. More importantly I had to haul to stop him. He did the same down hill as well.

I am so happy to have my boy sound again . If I hadnt had my little boy (human) with me I would have had a good blart.

I really dithered about posting this as there are suddenly so many pro/anti barefoot threads today. But all I can say is that Im happy, he's happy and I hope that what else others choose to do, shoeless or shod, they and their horses are equally happy.
 
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What good news! After so much box rest and slow recovery building work load back up it's emotional to have the result you wanted! All the best and with regards to shoeing, do what you and your farrier thinks best for your horse xx
 
Brilliant news :)

Don't beat yourself up for having his shoes off. You tried, it wasn't for your horse and you have adapted his management accordingly.

I hope he gets better and better for you :)
 
good news.
Qhat did the 'very good barefoot trimmer' recommend when your pony was so lame he didn't want to trot?
 
Susie T he wasn't lame, just 'footy' he has always had flat feet and sensative thin soles and I don't think he is convinced his feet should touch the floor without a shoe being there! Funny old boy really.
 
so pleased that your boy is more comfortable, we all have to do what is right for each individual horse and we must listen to them rather than other people. im sure lots of us would like to do away with shoes but its not always the best option for the horse....... lets hope youve got him for a good few years..
 
Susie T I'm happy with where my pony is now, I feel its not particularly relevant to pick other what any one said prior to that, she was happy enough with progress and no he isn't/wasnt lame once tendon healed. . One of the frustrating things I find with proffessional advisors and also virtual advisors is that so many people seem to either abdicate responsibility for making decisions and instead leave it to their advisors, or over rule their own common sense.then of course if anything goes wrong its the advisors fault and not the person who sought advice... TBH what ever trimmer/vet/farrier/man in the moon had said to me, my instinct was that he would be happier with shoes. So far I seem to be correct. If I'm proved wrong that's my error in judgement just as much as not shoeing him till now was also my error. No one elses.
 
that is great!! I am so glad you posted as I had decided to take my horse barefoot However in Jan he had surgery for suspensory ligament in his RH so had to have heartbars on back, he was barefoot on front and started walking out in hand 8wks ago
I moved him to a friends yard for rehab as there is no road work at my yard
she is traditional about shoeing and said he needed shoes on front to start ridden work as he was feeling the ground quiet badly, farrier agreed so Friday he was shod.

I was a little sad but thought it was better for him for now. I hadn't got the time to take it slow enough for his feet and I knew it wasn't the right place for messing around with boots (finding ones that fit and work takes time) which she hasn't got

He seems much happier too

I may well try barefoot further down the line when his rehab is complete and he is still sound (hopefully)!!
 
good news for you and pony, glad he's back on his feet, be they shod feet or bare feet;) At the end of the day all we ever want is what is best for our horses, if that includes shoes then so what, i have 5 that are unshod at the moment but i'm well aware that the new one is not happy with the stony track, I prefer to keep them as natural as possible but will have shoes put on him without a second thought.
 
I'm glad you posted this, you sound very very sensible, as does soulful!

I would say it's like anything in life, you don't have to do "one or the other" no rules, if they work well unshod than so be it, or shod etc etc, it's always the extremists that cause problems.

Bit like complimentary medicine, it can work well with conventional drugs, so why do one or the other?
 
My point is she wasn't solving your horse being lame (not beign able to trot is lame, he may not be obvious on one leg as more than one foot is affected) but happy to continue down 'barefoot' route whih obviously wasn't working. So they don't always have your horses best interest at heart. A good example of bad trimming being as bad as bad farriery. I am glad your horse is better, but it would have been nice if your professional ould have helped you more, plenty of people would not be brave enough to make your decision in the current shod/barefoot debate.
 
Glad he's comfortable.

As has been said earlier it is the owners responsibility/decision in the end. Not all horses can easily be managed barefoot and it can become a detective mission and extensive learning experience. :)
 
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