IrishMilo
Well-Known Member
Thank you, I’m a huge fan of letting horses be barefoot and luckily am quite savvy on foot issues as I have a massive interest in hoof anatomy.Have a look at the ‘barefoot rehab for navicular’ group on Facebook, I’ve taken mine barefoot and honestly never thought he’d transition, he’s doing amazing, he used to trip over fresh air, now it’s like he knows where his feet are and can position better, he is retired as has a multitude of issues, but he’s likely along same lines, 10 year old ex-racer that was heavy raced as won….
He had nerve impingement in neck too, broken pelvis, start of arthritis in knees, likely hocks too, not think it now in field mind, living life like pays his own vets bills is ted!
It may not hurt while he’s out on downtime while get your head around it all? At least to let you absorb it all in, is he in pain, does he fight carrier, to get up/down etc, all the usual things and the not so usual, like mine was dragging his leg and back was up, turned out his urethra was flat with a massive bean…..removed and relaxed, he had one spinal injections course and rest was intensive rehabbing the body BUT was all slow work
Whatever decide he’s your horse, you know him best and what he can and can’t do![]()
I said to my vet straight off the bat that I wouldn’t be interested in a ‘fix’ of continuing to shoe and adding wedges, I’m very much of the opinion that that only sticks a plaster on the underlying problem.
I was genuinely shocked when he suggested a barefoot rehab, it’s so rare to find a vet who will go against the grain. I’d already bought him some hoof boots to transition him and his shoes are coming off this Thursday.
We’re going to start him on CBD as well, vet said he’s had some good success with it.
