ester
Not slacking multitasking
Does a bay TB feel a little out of place!? 
Does a bay TB feel a little out of place!?![]()
At any rate, we don't want you cringing in the corner with your hackles up...pity.... I'll leave. Best wishes....
Right Front Before and After by missyclare, on Flickr
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The bottom line is that he was lame and now he's not, which is good.
Quad et demonstrandum, Anyone?If an unsound horse, with care comes sound, then where are the decisions and remedies to be questioned?
I also fail to understand how the foot of a horse in Canada should be so different from one here in the UK, but then the foot of a horse has always been a mystery to me, which is why I listen to my farrier.
Alec.
but then the foot of a horse has always been a mystery to me, which is why I listen to my farrier.
Alec.
Alec I am one of many people on this forum who, if they had listened to their farrier, would now have either a paddock ornament or no horse at all. Three horses in my case, dozens of others owned by other people. I know two horses that hunted the last meet of the season this weekend. In autumn last year one was prescribed wedge rocker shoes and given a 30% prognosis of ever turning to some level of work. The other owner was told everything that could be done had been and to bute the horse up until it could cope no longer and then retire or pts.
Both horses were taken barefoot and removed from all medication and are sound and evidence is fast growing that they are very likely to remain so. That last statement cannot be said of any soundness brought about by remedial shoeing.
The fact is that only the best farriers are up to date with what has been achieved with barefoot rehab of foot lame horses, and that they are unfortunately still currently in a minority.
I can't help feeling that part of the problem is that both professions have so much revenue to lose if they do, and it's in no-one's financial interest to publish any research that would get the message out there.
It's terribly difficult for people to go against their vets and farriers. It's very frightening taking all the responsibility yourself, especially if your horse doesn't find the process easy.
It's my experience that vets prescribe remedial shoes because farriers tell them it will help, but there are probably some the other way round too.
The problem is that we simply don't yet have enough vets or farriers who understand just hour much more effective barefoot rehabs are than their conventional treatments. . I can't help feeling that part of the problem is that both professions have so much revenue to lose if they do, and it's in no-one's financial interest to publish any research that would get the message out there.
Not in my experience......... we have a horse that went lame in April last year, had the vet, xrays etc and the vet recommended that given our particular environment and circumstances bar shoes and nine months rest on restricted turnout would be the best and quickest option, the alternative being shoes off and turn away completely for a year (but we do not have the facilities for this). The farrier then remedially shod the horse, using the xrays provided by the vet and said that he too would have said the same! Horse has now been brought back into work very slowly and went on a 14 mile fun-ride last weekend with no adverse effects. The vet and farrier both made recommendations based on the horse and the available facilities.
Not in my experience......... we have a horse that went lame in April last year, had the vet, xrays etc and the vet recommended that given our particular environment and circumstances bar shoes and nine months rest on restricted turnout would be the best and quickest option, the alternative being shoes off and turn away completely for a year (but we do not have the facilities for this). The farrier then remedially shod the horse, using the xrays provided by the vet and said that he too would have said the same! Horse has now been brought back into work very slowly and went on a 14 mile fun-ride last weekend with no adverse effects. The vet and farrier both made recommendations based on the horse and the available facilities.
but how do you know if his advice is good or bad? …….. .
Ets. The one person who I probably wouldn't listen to would be the zealot who being qualified as neither a vet or a farrier, contradicts qualified advice maintaining that 'they know best'.
Horse had a soft tissue injury nerve blocked to his hoof, no bony changes were shown on xray, shod he was 3/10's lame, barefoot he was much much more lame, he was sound within days of the bar shoes going on-so since July last year (fronts only), he has always had a 'heel first landing', he is not stabled and has had 9 months of constant movement in his own area, but no cantering or looning around. By resting I meant unridden. Soft tissue injuries can take up to a year to heal and sometimes never do. He was worked in hand for 4 weeks before he was ridden and the riding has been slowly and gradually introduced. Yes, it is early days but looking good so far. He is currently hacking for an hour about three times a week and doing a longer weekend ride, he has also been in the school.Incidentally Serenity Jane, , if your vet and farrier had a clue about barefoot rehab, you could possibly have achieved a sound horse in the first three to four months of the nine months rest and restricted turnout your horse had in the stables where he now is, without resting him at all. Though initially you'd have got pretty fit yourself (or someone would) with all the hand walking it might have taken to achieve a flat, or preferably heel first, landing before he was ok to ride.
I'm genuinely sorry you weren't better advised, and given a proper choice to make even if you had still chosen the same option.
Have you looked at Rockley Alec, are you including them in the list of folk you wouldn't listen to over a farrier/vet?
Vets don't know everything. Sometimes the owner can know more about the condition than the vet. I have yet to meet a vet who knows more about PSSM than I do, it's my specialist subject and hardly known in the UK so why would they know more than me. They have all been pleased I've taken the initiative to educate myself. Indeed it's saved my horse's life probably as several have recommended things to help which contain ingredients which could kill her.
one success from either side of the argument doesn't prove a point,