keeperscottage
Well-Known Member
So daughter and her boyfriend took mare back to vet hospital for second remedial shoeing. If you didn't read my earlier thread, Cushings TB mare had laminitis in all four feet fifteen months ago. Remedial farrier (of my choice, not vet hospital's farrier) took so much off her soles that he exposed soft tissue. Vet fuming. Months later, went sound, returned to usual farrier (who tended to leave toes long) but, over the months, left her toes so long that her pedal bones rotated, and, because her soles were so thin (thanks to remedial farrier) landed us in the situation where she had a 50-50 chance of survival. Daughter has worked hard with her, religiously packing her feet daily with sugar and iodine, then cutting cardboard hoof-shaped "boxes" and taping them on with duck tape, as advised by vet hospital farrier. She has worked tirelessly with her mare, each day spending about an hour and a half sorting the sugar and iodine, which was a tedious task, I can confirm!
Anyway, mare's strides gradually became long and easy - made us realise how "stodgy" she'd been before!
Took her back to Newmarket on Friday and farrier was SO pleased with her - and said he was so proud of my daughter! Told her how he tells owners what to do with their horses' feet and, as they lead their horses away, he can almost see the bullet going into the horse's head because owners can't be bothered to put in the hard work!
Mare is looking fantastic and hopefully can be ridden again soon!
And, the icing on the cake, the foal I bred from her almost six years ago won his first point-to-point weekend before last - his fourth outing! An old friend now owns him, and there was a photo and short article about him in H&H last week - and daughter had a mention, ha ha!
Anyway, mare's strides gradually became long and easy - made us realise how "stodgy" she'd been before!
Took her back to Newmarket on Friday and farrier was SO pleased with her - and said he was so proud of my daughter! Told her how he tells owners what to do with their horses' feet and, as they lead their horses away, he can almost see the bullet going into the horse's head because owners can't be bothered to put in the hard work!
Mare is looking fantastic and hopefully can be ridden again soon!
And, the icing on the cake, the foal I bred from her almost six years ago won his first point-to-point weekend before last - his fourth outing! An old friend now owns him, and there was a photo and short article about him in H&H last week - and daughter had a mention, ha ha!