It's weird seeing feet without long toes....
How about this transformation. 1 year since the shoe fell off.
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Just found this shod pic. Same foot a year apart. He spent about 9 months in shoes before I got fed up of watching the foot change for the worse. Added lines for anyone who needs a visual.
Aug 2019, looking a bit bullnose, long toe and HPA slightly broken back.
Sept 2020, now using barefoot trimmer.
He's slowly getting some concavity to the foot and the frog is opening up. Now the sole isn't being trimmed into oblivion he is also fine on all surfaces.
It's weird seeing feet without long toes....
How about this transformation. 1 year since the shoe fell off.
View attachment 55893
What is amazing and depressing is how common is the shape of hoof in IrishMilo’s top photo. It’s seen more or less as normal. So people (including professionals) don’t notice it or realise it’s a problem in the making.
And yes, I learned the hard way.
That's a great example of the toe shortening just by the strengthening of the back of the hoof from a correct landing.My sister's horse had the most extraordinary angle change after his shoes came off - this is at about 6 months I think, and after a stint at Rockley. That toe was never trimmed - it grew out on its own shortly after this photo.View attachment 55907
It didn't break off - it wore down. Nic (Barker) felt he would be badly lamed if we tried to trim the toe back and, as he was fabulously sound at the point this photo was taken we decided to let him guide us. He was extremely lame when he first went to Rockley so we didn't want to go back to that. It's a shame I don't have a photo of the underside of his foot taken at the same time, because it would show that despite what you might think from the side on photo, there wasn't actually a huge amount you could have trimmed off his toes.But surely leaving the toe so long creates a lot of unnecessary extra leverage on the suspensory apparatus before it breaks off?
That photo is very similar to how my pony in the last pic's feet grew after his shoes were off though I don't have any pics.It didn't break off - it wore down. Nic (Barker) felt he would be badly lamed if we tried to trim the toe back and, as he was fabulously sound at the point this photo was taken we decided to let him guide us. He was extremely lame when he first went to Rockley so we didn't want to go back to that. It's a shame I don't have a photo of the underside of his foot taken at the same time, because it would show that despite what you might think from the side on photo, there wasn't actually a huge amount you could have trimmed off his toes.
ETA there is a really good explanation here (by Nic) as to why she didn't trim his toes back and why we kept this up once he was home: http://rockleyfarm.blogspot.com/2012/06/bizarre-feet-of-legend.html
I do think that it is really important to be led by the horse as much as possible. This horse became consistently sounder during his time at Rockley and by the time the above photo was taken he was 100% sound and rock crunching - so do you trim because it doesn't "look" right and risk laming the horse, or do you just keep doing what you're doing and leave him to it?
This photo shows and earlier stage of the transformation:
Not sure if it is the photos but the coronary band on the trimmed foot looks a bit more horizontal than on the untrimmed foot. It looks a bit like he's shortened the toe by trimming a bit more from the toe than the heel so changing the angle of the hoof. Fine in a horse that needs more heel but I don't think I'd want the foot to be tipped to put more weight on the front of the pedal bone in one that has just recovered from laminitis. Might just be the pics giving this impression.I have before and after shots from before the farrier yesterday and after. He was sound both before and after, feet seem really strong. 6 weeks since last trim. He is still a bit wriggley to get sole shots, but here are a representative sample of side on, 1 back and 1 front.
He is recovering from lami and box rest. The front shoes were only on whilst the lami was acute, he has been barefoot all of his life.
The trim was done by a great farrier.
The trim wasn't huge, but they look a whole different ball game IMO. Just with one trim.
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Not sure if it is the photos but the coronary band on the trimmed foot looks a bit more horizontal than on the untrimmed foot. It looks a bit like he's shortened the toe by trimming a bit more from the toe than the heel so changing the angle of the hoof. Fine in a horse that needs more heel but I don't think I'd want the foot to be tipped to put more weight on the front of the pedal bone in one that has just recovered from laminitis. Might just be the pics giving this impression.
I do get what you are saying. The problem is, there really wasn't much you could have actually taken off his toes despite what it looks like from the side. He had a bout of mechanical lameness while still in shoes - caused, funnily enough, by having his toes trimmed too short when he was being shod to x rays by vet and remedial farrier. Vet looked at latest set of x rays, told the farrier how to trim the feet, and next thing you know he could barely walk... . Anyway, this caused his feet to pretty much completely collapse and run forward - Nic included sole shots on some of her blog posts and it does show that his whole foot was sort of stretched forward. It wasn't a case of trimming off any excess hoof and hey presto, shorter toes and better foot. We had to wait for that better foot to grow in. I would also, again, like to stress that in both the first and second photo I posted, this horse was sound. And we are talking about a horse who had been lame for quite a long time prior to having his shoes off and going to Rockley. With hooves that are doing incredibly strange things, as his were (even Nic was pretty taken aback by them, and she's obviously done a lot of rehabs), but are quite clearly improving slowly but steadily, I'm not sure I'd want to take any risks.It’s an epic transformation, HR, especially from the first pic, but it’s not aesthetics that concerns me, it’s mechanical forces and physics in the second pic.
I have a (rather elderly) physics A level.
Oh I totally agree with this and I'm not against trimming at all. We sent him to Rockley because we just couldn't get him sound - it was his last chance really. Once we got him home we did our best to keep him self-trimming as much as possible but he did also see a farrier even while his toes still had the "flippers"). At that stage though he just ran the rasp round rather than trying to interfere too much with what the hooves were doing.It’s all very well to be against trimming when you have an awesome hoof wearing track like they have a Rockley .
Most of us don’t have that .
My experience is that horses do best with weekly trimming so that it’s small changes so sudden change .
a good trimmer and farrier taught me how to do it .
My rough understanding (from the Prof B videos) is as the hoof wall pulls forwards it leaves a gap which the bone fills in. So when you get a foot like in HR’s photo the bone has grown forwards so much and you can’t just trim the hoof back. You have to do it gradually- or in HR’s case let it happen naturally on the Rockley tracks.It’s an epic transformation, HR, especially from the first pic, but it’s not aesthetics that concerns me, it’s mechanical forces and physics in the second pic.
I have a (rather elderly) physics A level.
My rough understanding (from the Prof B videos) is as the hoof wall pulls forwards it leaves a gap which the bone fills in. So when you get a foot like in HR’s photo the bone has grown forwards so much and you can’t just trim the hoof back. You have to do it gradually- or in HR’s case let it happen naturally on the Rockley tracks.
What I haven’t got my head around is how the process reverses itself and the bone remodels itself back to its original shape...
(I need to listen to the videos again to understand better!)
Old horse, TB ex-racer - transition over 3 months. View attachment 55948View attachment 55949
ImpressiveOld horse, TB ex-racer - transition over 3 months. View attachment 55948View attachment 55949