cptrayes
Well-Known Member
I thought people might be interested in seeing this. I am part way through rehabbing a horse who will not stay sound in shoes. In spite of the fact that he has not had shoes on for around a year, his feet did not fix themselves. They have needed careful work to make them start to heal themselves inside. One of the first things he did when put into work was throw up bars that started at the heel and went right round the tip of the frog and down to the other heel in one piece. I call this emergency scaffolding because it's my experience that horses with weak internal structures often grow extra long or extra thick bars, but I've never seen a "one-piece" bar like this before.
So, after a month and a bit of constant work on hard flat surfaces (we call them roads round here
) and this morning the bars simply fell off. This is the one from around the point of his frog in one forefoot. It's about the size of a fifty pence piece.
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-t4ZVmNfjrvU/UKTrMtiZOcI/AAAAAAAAA7I/ullMl7QxCMc/s320/PICT0149.JPG
In the last month he has been very slightly unsound in his left fore outside edge, then it changed to his right fore outside edge, then it moved to again to his right fore inside edge and then disappeared altogether a week ago.
I'm finding him fascinating because I think he will prove that "barefoot" is not enough to heal a horse, or he would have come sound in the field in the year he was laid off - they need the right work too.
p.s. button pushers please note that this is not an advert. I am not a paid trimmer and have nothing to gain from this post, except perhaps a bit of abuse from people who will have a go at me for "working" a lame horse
p.p.s. blog address below in siggy if you want to know more about him or follow his progress.
So, after a month and a bit of constant work on hard flat surfaces (we call them roads round here
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-t4ZVmNfjrvU/UKTrMtiZOcI/AAAAAAAAA7I/ullMl7QxCMc/s320/PICT0149.JPG
In the last month he has been very slightly unsound in his left fore outside edge, then it changed to his right fore outside edge, then it moved to again to his right fore inside edge and then disappeared altogether a week ago.
I'm finding him fascinating because I think he will prove that "barefoot" is not enough to heal a horse, or he would have come sound in the field in the year he was laid off - they need the right work too.
p.s. button pushers please note that this is not an advert. I am not a paid trimmer and have nothing to gain from this post, except perhaps a bit of abuse from people who will have a go at me for "working" a lame horse
p.p.s. blog address below in siggy if you want to know more about him or follow his progress.
Last edited: