melbournesunrise
Well-Known Member
I may just be being paranoid and over-anxious (normal for me at any time!), but...
Horse is shod on all four, feet done 10 days ago. Previous to that, he'd had a skewed shoe on his left hind, which he didn't do any schooling or hacking on, but he does live out 24/7.
After a week of 3 schooling sessions and a few days off, I took him on out hacking today. Some roads, some harder ground, some softer ground and hillwork. He loves it, and I found out today that he is fully capable of halt-canter!
During the road work, I was listening and watching for his footfalls. On that same back foot as the skewed shoe was, I could hear, in some of the trot work, a sort of chink noise - the sort of noise that makes you think the shoe is loose! We limited ourselves to walk from then, and the chink wasn't there at all. When I checked the foot and the shoe, there was no sign of looseness at all...
I'm really worried its going to be a problem, after having one skewed shoe. But if I can't find anything wrong, I don't feel like I can approach the farrier without seeming like a paranoid weirdo, because I'm so over-cautious and possibly a pain in the backside with it :S
What would you do in this situation - hearing the sound of a loose shoe, but not finding any loose qualities when checked??
Horse is shod on all four, feet done 10 days ago. Previous to that, he'd had a skewed shoe on his left hind, which he didn't do any schooling or hacking on, but he does live out 24/7.
After a week of 3 schooling sessions and a few days off, I took him on out hacking today. Some roads, some harder ground, some softer ground and hillwork. He loves it, and I found out today that he is fully capable of halt-canter!
During the road work, I was listening and watching for his footfalls. On that same back foot as the skewed shoe was, I could hear, in some of the trot work, a sort of chink noise - the sort of noise that makes you think the shoe is loose! We limited ourselves to walk from then, and the chink wasn't there at all. When I checked the foot and the shoe, there was no sign of looseness at all...
I'm really worried its going to be a problem, after having one skewed shoe. But if I can't find anything wrong, I don't feel like I can approach the farrier without seeming like a paranoid weirdo, because I'm so over-cautious and possibly a pain in the backside with it :S
What would you do in this situation - hearing the sound of a loose shoe, but not finding any loose qualities when checked??