Casey76
Well-Known Member
As in title...
It appears that a lot of people on here bash on about Rockley, and one of the main tennets being that a horse will grow the foot best suited to him - is that really the case? Always?
My horses are unshod, farrier trimmed. Blitz is trimmed every 4-5 weeks, Tartine every 8-10 weeks. Blitz's feet tend not to crack or chip, they just grow. Self trimming is going to be unlikely unless I start driving him for miles and miles every day as his hoof wall is over 1cm thick in places.
Tartine dishes. She lands flat on her heel, but rotates the foot and takes off on the lateral toe quarter. The medial toe quarter grows, and the longer it gets the more she dishes. It is a vicious circle. That medial toe quarter doesn't chip, and if it gets long enough it compromises her stride (as I found out once, after a farrier mix up, and she went 12 weeks). the more work she does on rocky terrain the quicker her feet get distorted.
I'm certain, that if left to "nature," even if kept on a variable terrain and they walked for miles and miles every day, that their feet would compromise their musculature/ tendons etc.
I don't think Rockley is the be all and end all for "barefoot" - you have to look at each horse as an individual. I also believe that it *isn't* possible to take every horse barefoot, not unless you throw ethics and morals out of the window and keep a horse in pain during a protracted "transition". Not everyone has the right facilities, ground, turnout, time to transition a horse successfully. Severely compromised horses, e.g. with PPID using shoes +/- pads can make the difference between a happy horse who can go out to pasture with other horses and stay in work or be segregated with severely restricted food with both horse and owner struggling and unhappy.
Anyway, jmho
It appears that a lot of people on here bash on about Rockley, and one of the main tennets being that a horse will grow the foot best suited to him - is that really the case? Always?
My horses are unshod, farrier trimmed. Blitz is trimmed every 4-5 weeks, Tartine every 8-10 weeks. Blitz's feet tend not to crack or chip, they just grow. Self trimming is going to be unlikely unless I start driving him for miles and miles every day as his hoof wall is over 1cm thick in places.
Tartine dishes. She lands flat on her heel, but rotates the foot and takes off on the lateral toe quarter. The medial toe quarter grows, and the longer it gets the more she dishes. It is a vicious circle. That medial toe quarter doesn't chip, and if it gets long enough it compromises her stride (as I found out once, after a farrier mix up, and she went 12 weeks). the more work she does on rocky terrain the quicker her feet get distorted.
I'm certain, that if left to "nature," even if kept on a variable terrain and they walked for miles and miles every day, that their feet would compromise their musculature/ tendons etc.
I don't think Rockley is the be all and end all for "barefoot" - you have to look at each horse as an individual. I also believe that it *isn't* possible to take every horse barefoot, not unless you throw ethics and morals out of the window and keep a horse in pain during a protracted "transition". Not everyone has the right facilities, ground, turnout, time to transition a horse successfully. Severely compromised horses, e.g. with PPID using shoes +/- pads can make the difference between a happy horse who can go out to pasture with other horses and stay in work or be segregated with severely restricted food with both horse and owner struggling and unhappy.
Anyway, jmho