cptrayes
Well-Known Member
My new forest pony is shod all round, all yearCosts me a small fortune but she needs to be shod for the work that she does.
Unlikely to be true S&D, sorry
My new forest pony is shod all round, all yearCosts me a small fortune but she needs to be shod for the work that she does.
Thats abit harshI also don't believe in this barefoot is best. I believe in what is best for the indervidule horse or pony.
Herbie is unshod. (I'm lothed to use the term barefoot anymore due to the extreame reaction it gets) I hack him out, school him, compeat him and hunt him and he copes just fineHe's a forest bred forester and we live in the new forest so it's all natural to him. We wouldn't be able to get shoes on him anyway. He was shod infront when I bought him. The shoes were put in very badly and when my farrier went to shoe him we found out why.
I was hanging off one side of him, one farrier was hanging off the other side and the other farrier was hanging off his foot
He was dangourous and we had to give up. (My farriers bred persharons (SP
) and delt with foals bigger than Herbs but even they said it wasn't worth the fight
) I now have a girl farrier who Herbie loves
but as he is coping fine barefoot so we have desided not to rock the boat and put shoes on.
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But when I take them off I am not shoeless or unshod, I am barefoot, or in my stockinged feet.
The term "shoeless" implies that shoeing is the natural order of things and that being without shoes is a temporary state of affairs. For barefooters, the reverse is true.
I don't care if other people want to call their horses shoeless but I am baffled that they have so much of a problem with me calling mine barefoot.
In the original True Grit the heroine says "you'd better put some shoes on it, I ain't riding no barefoot pony. It's not new!
You say potato, etc etc etc - agree though, it doesn't mean either of us is wrong!
hhhhmmmmmmmmm blimming english language and its definitions /associations..... causes soooooo many problems
I wonder why there has been a perception that any extreme regime is required ..... apart from a transition period to let a previously shod horse get used to being without the rest is just good general and feet health management![]()
ahem,its not ignorant rubbish,very insulting comment in my mind,all our horses are shod,thats the way it is,everyone is entitledto their own opinion onthis contentious issue.
I will not be putting you on ignore. I do not mind reading your provocative nonsense. If I read it I can correct incorrect statements that you make about horses needing shoes. You also write it partly to get a response from me and on a windy wet winter evening, I am happy to oblige you![]()
Ah, extreme regimes. Well I have all my lot on what many would think of as an extreme regime. I don't do it because I've been told to or because it's a fashion either despite what others may think.
I have one laminitic, two who were overweight and one who developed severely flat hooves and cracks on turn out last winter. Since they have been yarded (in a very lage yard surrounding my buildings) the cracks have healed with only three proper trims, the two have lost weight and coincidentally their hooves have improved and one who is prone to irritability with other horses is as chilled as can be.
No I didn't buy them like that, they became like that since moving to Ireland. It's a long, long story but involved trips back and forth to England, horses with a friend for a year, sick relatives and importantly taking my eye off the ball.Restriction for health issue (over weight and laminitic - how did that happen - did you buy them like that?) is not the same as restriction to indulge a methodology to prove a point.
Horses and circumstances are individual.
Two horses happily barefoot. One was shod for 13 years previously and the other has always been barefoot.
If either of them needed shoes, I wouldn't hesitate to find what was wrong with my management of them and correct it.
Exactly. Which is why neither shoeing nor barefoot should be force fed on the internet.
I think your arrogance and determination to spread the word that your methods are the only way forward is frightening.
I've been at a lot of world class events the last few years - all their horses were shod, all hundreds and hundreds of them. Are you egotistical enough to believe that you are right and they are wrong?
If horses can be kept sound and happy without shoes, then fine. If they need shoes then fine.
But barring a few, MOST horses in serious competitive work need shoes.
I agree and changing management greatly is where I've seen the biggest changes and for the better.Most sensible reply I have read, and yet it has somehow been glossed over in the hubbub!
An important aspect being that if the horse was sore then it's management would need to be tweaked to result in ideal management for a healthy horse - this would be the same management regardless of what you do/don't do to your horses feet! It is just fortunate that those without shoes show problems much more quickly, the owners can then attend to the issue before it escalates.
This is the perception I want to quell.
There is no extreme regime!!!! You are absolutely right about health and management tazzle. However, the health and management in the UK in general is not ideal for performing barefoot nor is it set up for it. Our pasture is for harvesting milk and meat. It is too rich for most horses. You cannot deny that the UK has the highest prevalence of equine obesity, cushings, laminitis, EMS and other metabolic disorders. Shoeing is perceived to save the horses hoof from deteriorating in our wet claggy climate where footrot in sheep & cattle is a major problem. This is NORMAL???!!!!! No THIS is extreme.
A paradigm shift is taking place in the UK and I am glad you think it's easy peasy common sense stuff as it has taken a long time for many modern owners to realise ponies can't be kept like cows.
All the research and dedication invested into laminitis, cushings, navicular, and other painful manifestations of current husbandry has led to developments which is now thought to be common sense as tazzle demonstrates. Maybe we should have just asked her before we gave the vet, who is a very very clever person, our money to cure our laminitic horses with crazy shoeing and drugs which gave them ulcers and abcesses, which holed them up in a stable for 6 months no moving.
Should have just unshod him...![]()
I am amazed at the number of barefoot horses on here!!!
nah ..... didn't think you were uppity![]()
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.... you were clarifying for anyone confuggled
Have a wee laugh ....
. I remember turning up for and endurance ride some years back and the farrier looking her Taz's feet saying at first she could not compete because she was not shod. Then when I said she was barefoot he demanded a letter from my farrier so he could be sure I had not just pulled shoes off recently cos I had lost one..... Flipping heck could he not see she had no nail holes in her hooves
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He let me take past only cos I had brought her boots as back up
this was her on stony ground
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actually a lot of it was stony ground through forest trails that day !
and at one point she was trotting and keeping up with an arab that went nowhere at less than 8 - 9 mph....... not bad![]()