Michen
Well-Known Member
I must apologise, I have been using the expression broken back when I should have been saying broken forward.
Knew what you meant!
I must apologise, I have been using the expression broken back when I should have been saying broken forward.
Mitchen sounds like you have a good vet.
I wouldnt turn him away, Id keep chipping away at his work but Id probably put eventing on the back burner this year. See if you can get the HPA in better alignment first. I have no strong feelings on whether the horse should be shod/unshod for that process but I do think the wonky balance he has created himself unshod might be telling.
I could do but it feels a bit cheeky asking for their opinion given I have no intention of sending him there. It is a business after all and I know Nic is always super busy.
Offer to pay a consultancy fee?
If you had not taken x rays I would be telling you to crack on. But you did. And the x rays tell a very, very different story. And might yet prevent you from joining the ranks of people with retired or PTS eight year olds.
As I said above, you trust your vet, follow his advice. Mine would be telling you not to increase the pressures on those changing feet and event that horse this year if you want him to stay sound.
I think you need to ask yourself a question as to why you posted this thread. You have a vet you trust, yet you needed the support of other inexpert people on this forum before you were prepared to follow his advice. Why? If you have doubts, listen to them.
I still keep going back to the point though- if we are saying this alignment is incorrect and likely to cause issues then we are disputing the whole idea that allowing a horse to self trim and grow the foot he wants is a successful way forward.
Your horse is sound and happy - I would work away. We can get ourselves too precious about issues when like us not all horses are the same shape. If he is sound and work built up at a suitable pace there is no reason he will not stay sound or that he has an underlying issue. He is upright - not all horses are perfect. You can probably slowly adjust the angle minutely but how many horses have a perfect HPA?
I'd crack on and monitor. Eventing is not that stressful at amateur level..
When I say the plan was for him to go eventing, I’m meaning an event a month at 80cm on good ground so perhaps 4/5 this season depending on what sort of summer we have (I don’t, or have ever run my horse on bad/hard ground). He’s about 85% there fitness wise for xc and is already schooling, jumping once a week, etc etc so there isn’t going to be some intense increase in work, other than longer canters out hacking so longer routes.
It’s so hard to ever know what to do with them, I’ve spent all evening reading about how their skeleton develops- I had no idea that geldings on average take 6 months longer than mares to mature! The more I read and learn the more I think riding them at all compromises them so much that you wouldn’t know where to draw a line.
I will see how things go and monitor, I know him well enough to pick up when something isn’t right and if plans need to change they will change- I will take this week by week. It’s not going to be me in the saddle anyway unless I miraculously get my nerve back. Regardless of how things go it will be interesting to re x Ray in say six months and see if, as predicted by some users on here and my vet/farrier, his angles have relaxed again.
Thank you all for your comments, I appreciate every viewpoint even if they are sometimes hard to hear- but that’s the beauty of HHO!
When I say the plan was for him to go eventing, I’m meaning an event a month at 80cm on good ground so perhaps 4/5 this season depending on what sort of summer we have (I don’t, or have ever run my horse on bad/hard ground). He’s about 85% there fitness wise for xc and is already schooling, jumping once a week, etc etc so there isn’t going to be some intense increase in work, other than longer canters out hacking so longer routes.
It’s so hard to ever know what to do with them, I’ve spent all evening reading about how their skeleton develops- I had no idea that geldings on average take 6 months longer than mares to mature! The more I read and learn the more I think riding them at all compromises them so much that you wouldn’t know where to draw a line.
I will see how things go and monitor, I know him well enough to pick up when something isn’t right and if plans need to change they will change- I will take this week by week. It’s not going to be me in the saddle anyway unless I miraculously get my nerve back. Regardless of how things go it will be interesting to re x Ray in say six months and see if, as predicted by some users on here and my vet/farrier, his angles have relaxed again.
Thank you all for your comments, I appreciate every viewpoint even if they are sometimes hard to hear- but that’s the beauty of HHO!
Don't get too hung up on reading about the maturity of the skeleton. The legs stop growing quite early, it is the back and neck that are last to mature, which is why putting a heavy weight onto a young horse is not a good idea. Our "traditional" way of some ground work at 2 ish, backing at 3ish + and then riding away/schooling and light work at 4 has stood the test of time unless there the animal is hugely immature and there is an obvious reason not to break in. And I know of plenty of horses that have been broken in a 2 and go on to work and live well into their 20s.
Lots of horses manage without perfect conformation. Years ago when you could go round the stables at Badminton on dressage day I was amazed at some of the weird and wonderful conformation faults of those Advanced Event horses and one of the soundest animals I knew which raced and did endurance well into its 20s had the worst twisted foot I have ever seen. No vet would have passed it.
I think it would be a good idea to send the X rays to Nick at Rockley and by all means pay a consultation fee! Then carry on gently following the vet's advice. After all as you say, you want to know if it can be a horse and do things!
Michen might the footage/pics be on fb chat if you search?
i think too much is being made of the term eventing here, its like the difference between tootling round elementary and working a horse at PSG...........both dressage, but one is rather more strenuous.
80cm is not burghley, doesnt require burghley prep or pace and should be well within his capabilities at a moderate fitness level, its basically a good canter round (and i teach many eventers who would agree).................you arent going to have to increase work level by 500% just to be ready is what im getting at.
OP i think you have a sensible approach.
I'm really resisting launching into a mechanics discussion that I know will be supremely dull for 99.9% of people![]()
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I think you should think about the 0.01%![]()
I am no expert on X rays, but I also has an immature 5yo some years back. He was never lame, had no issues at all other than being weak and immature.
My vet advised not eventing until he was 6 years old.
We did that. Loads of relaxed hacking, some BS (only to 90cm initially) and general schooling. I was glad we did that as the horse went from 16hh to 16.3 in just over a year. I can't imagine he would have been strong in himself whilst growing like that.
To me the extra year was well worthwhile just to let him grow into himself. When we did event all the groundwork was done, he was well ready. He was sound and working BE to Nov, SJ to Newc, hunt, team chase and an all round good egg until he was 17.
If I had a horse who had already had mysterious lameness and who was immature in frame then I would give the summer to mature slowly.
With dodgy X rays I would also pay a consultation fee to Rockly.
Thats essentially whats been done, the horse was five last year, did next to nothing- lameness found, time off and bought back into work over winter. Now about to turn six, sound albeit with different hoof angles that hes grown himself.
Michen, I think Red thinks your picture in your opening post is of a five year old, not a six year old. That should in itself tell you something. That's no doubt you have improved him massively from when you bought him, but he is still very immature and weak looking for his age.
I think you might be more active on this thread than even I am C!
Will keep everyone updated especially if I get a response from Rockley re consult.