Tnavas
Well-Known Member
Never intentionally cantered on the road but on occasions the horse has decided otherwise. Out hunting it will happen though.
To be honest we used to exercise all the liveries for at least one hour daily, trotting on tar sealed roads. In all the years at the centre I don't remember them ever being lame. They were all shod, all stabled, could work on Flint paths that you would have thought would destroy their feet.
My filly was one that developed an abscess or two, she was unbroken and lived part out part stabled.
I then went on to work with in a hunting yard, carried on what I had been taught and my employers had a full season with no lameness and commented on how fit their horses were.
These days we are far too soft, we work on surfaced arenas and our horses suffer from soft, overly sensitive feet.
To add we oiled hooves twice daily, fed Sugarbeet and grain and schooled out in the fields in all conditions.
To be honest we used to exercise all the liveries for at least one hour daily, trotting on tar sealed roads. In all the years at the centre I don't remember them ever being lame. They were all shod, all stabled, could work on Flint paths that you would have thought would destroy their feet.
My filly was one that developed an abscess or two, she was unbroken and lived part out part stabled.
I then went on to work with in a hunting yard, carried on what I had been taught and my employers had a full season with no lameness and commented on how fit their horses were.
These days we are far too soft, we work on surfaced arenas and our horses suffer from soft, overly sensitive feet.
To add we oiled hooves twice daily, fed Sugarbeet and grain and schooled out in the fields in all conditions.