OLDGREYMARE
Well-Known Member
Your vet should email the xrays to you without argument,then you can post them on the facebook site.
Not a very scientific response from me but iodine alone WILL harden the foot; you do not "need" the sugar as stated in a previous post. To harden (not thicken) the sole pack it with thoroughly wrung out iodine swabs and dress. I used nappies and duct tape with the iodine solution the colour of weak tea.
A previous practice told me to use sugar iodine mix but the frog never truly hardened; current vet explained why but I can't figure out how to convey it on here! He instructed the use of the diluted iodine swabs and it worked. The foot was like solid fibreglass it was so hard. I know this also isn't ideal but I have a specific horse with a specific condition and under guidance from vet and trimmer.
Re your mare. Ideally you want to thicken the sole not harden it. To do this the foot requires stimulation. I know you said that your mare can't cope with out shoes but if you take a step back that should set off alarm bells. We are so conditioned that it's hard (and scary) to think and look outside of the box at times.
So she's shod for protection... shoes are 1/4" thick rims; at best these "protect" the sole from stones and gravel <1/4" but what about everything else that will be in contact with her extremely sensitive sole? In this situation hoof boots with varying pads will provide complete protection and gentle stimulation allowing her comfy steps and it's those steps that will enable the sole to develop.
I think it's a condition of us horse owners to keep doing the same thing expecting different results. It's bad farriery that has put your mare in this position and even the best farriery can't give or grow a healthy foot.
I'm guessing that you're probably dismissing this bf stuff as nonsense that's maybe ok for cobs and ponies but not horses like yours who does need shoes. I thought the same, if not worse, as my sensitive TB mare NEEDED shoes and couldn't cope without them. Alarm bells should have been going off but I had, what I believed at the time to be, good vets and I had a good regular shoeing regime.
Unfortunately it took me losing that mare and some verbal abuse from a BFer on here before I clicked on. Have a read of Lucy Priory's blog/website; it was on there that my first light bulb switched on that a horse who is not sound without shoes is not sound.
Read Rockley blog
Read the thousands of BF posts in this section of the forum. Read all the users who said their horses couldn't and now they are!
Pete Ramey's website and books
Feet First book (although disregard the info 're feeding seaweed -don't).
Perhaps speak to a non horsey person as they can often see things logically whereas we are so conditioned that sometimes we can't see the wood from the trees.
For another viewpoint read about barefoot running and what being barefoot is doing for humans; some of the points are transferable.
I'd imagine that most BF advocates taking the time to reply are doing so because they've been where you are and know the heartbreak ing distress and anguish. To be out of options and have the "experts" tell you what you should do and to suggest anything different is blown out of the water. If things didn't break we wouldn't need to look elsewhere for answers and sometimes it takes until you are at a "nothing to lose" point. Rockley used to get horses who'd been through vets, shoeing, pads, tildren, etc etc and nothing had worked so with nothing to lose why not try barefoot. The success rate is unbelievable. Now horses are going there as a first option. You can do it at home and it does take work but it is doable.
I really wish you and your mare the very best
What a great post! I hope the OP takes everything you say on board
I've PMd you!
Your vet should email the xrays to you without argument,then you can post them on the facebook site.
They are but sometimes I think there is nothing better than hearing from someone who was sceptical and has been there. As the owner of a native you would presume he would have good enough feet to do it so I don't ever feel like I'm in the position to push it as a suggestion for some other breeds.
Great post.Not a very scientific response from me but iodine alone WILL harden the foot; you do not "need" the sugar as stated in a previous post. To harden (not thicken) the sole pack it with thoroughly wrung out iodine swabs and dress. I used nappies and duct tape with the iodine solution the colour of weak tea.
A previous practice told me to use sugar iodine mix but the frog never truly hardened; current vet explained why but I can't figure out how to convey it on here! He instructed the use of the diluted iodine swabs and it worked. The foot was like solid fibreglass it was so hard. I know this also isn't ideal but I have a specific horse with a specific condition and under guidance from vet and trimmer.
Re your mare. Ideally you want to thicken the sole not harden it. To do this the foot requires stimulation. I know you said that your mare can't cope with out shoes but if you take a step back that should set off alarm bells. We are so conditioned that it's hard (and scary) to think and look outside of the box at times.
So she's shod for protection... shoes are 1/4" thick rims; at best these "protect" the sole from stones and gravel <1/4" but what about everything else that will be in contact with her extremely sensitive sole? In this situation hoof boots with varying pads will provide complete protection and gentle stimulation allowing her comfy steps and it's those steps that will enable the sole to develop.
I think it's a condition of us horse owners to keep doing the same thing expecting different results. It's bad farriery that has put your mare in this position and even the best farriery can't give or grow a healthy foot.
I'm guessing that you're probably dismissing this bf stuff as nonsense that's maybe ok for cobs and ponies but not horses like yours who does need shoes. I thought the same, if not worse, as my sensitive TB mare NEEDED shoes and couldn't cope without them. Alarm bells should have been going off but I had, what I believed at the time to be, good vets and I had a good regular shoeing regime.
Unfortunately it took me losing that mare and some verbal abuse from a BFer on here before I clicked on. Have a read of Lucy Priory's blog/website; it was on there that my first light bulb switched on that a horse who is not sound without shoes is not sound.
Read Rockley blog
Read the thousands of BF posts in this section of the forum. Read all the users who said their horses couldn't and now they are!
Pete Ramey's website and books
Feet First book (although disregard the info 're feeding seaweed -don't).
Perhaps speak to a non horsey person as they can often see things logically whereas we are so conditioned that sometimes we can't see the wood from the trees.
For another viewpoint read about barefoot running and what being barefoot is doing for humans; some of the points are transferable.
I'd imagine that most BF advocates taking the time to reply are doing so because they've been where you are and know the heartbreak ing distress and anguish. To be out of options and have the "experts" tell you what you should do and to suggest anything different is blown out of the water. If things didn't break we wouldn't need to look elsewhere for answers and sometimes it takes until you are at a "nothing to lose" point. Rockley used to get horses who'd been through vets, shoeing, pads, tildren, etc etc and nothing had worked so with nothing to lose why not try barefoot. The success rate is unbelievable. Now horses are going there as a first option. You can do it at home and it does take work but it is doable.
I really wish you and your mare the very best
What's her diet, management, turnout, grazing like? Putting chemical products on her hooves won't help.
Wagtail, she had Imprint shoes fitted when she had laminitis over a year ago - she really struggled in them and slipped with every step! The shoes fitted now are lightweight, just a few nails plus glue. She's currently sound, by the way.
Thank you for all your replies. Two weeks on from her visit to Newmarket, our mare is virtually sound. She is looking absolutely amazing, too! Only problem is, we've been told to turn her out in the arena, not our waterlogged paddocks, but she chews the fences so we've had to stick a grazing muzzle on her, which sends her into a mega sulk! Vet is coming out to see her next week. She's now on Happy Hoof, Fast Fibre, Blue Chip Lami Light, Global Herbs Rebuilder, Formula 4 Feet plus OH's homeopathic stuff (he's a homeopath). And, of course, we're still using the sugar and iodine mixture on her soles every day. Fingers crossed for her, please!
Keratex hoof hardener contains a well known carcinogenic (Formalin/Formaldehyde), not something to paint on living tissue IMO.
I know, just being alive seems to be enough to cause cancer, but this case is beyond my threshold of what's acceptable.
keretex hoof hardener, it really works