asommerville
Well-Known Member
According to the farrier if I want to jump my 6 yo he'll need shoes on?! Surely not? I plan to hopefully show and event him and really don't want him shod. Is he pulling my leg?
this^^^Is your farrier very young and inexperienced?!
or stupid?
Of course you can jump your horse without shoes!
According to the farrier if I want to jump my 6 yo he'll need shoes on?! Surely not? I plan to hopefully show and event him and really don't want him shod. Is he pulling my leg?
I would listen to your farrier! He is very experienced, been doing it for many years and wouldn't say to do something if it wasn't needed.
He has told me things to do that I have thought were rubbish, but in the end he was right!
'For most horses working regularly on firm or abrasive surfaces, shoeing with steel shoes remains the the most viable and common option'
'A large proportion of the UK equine population, however contains thoroughbred breeding'
A member of the Worshipful Company of Farriers would never be biased towards shoes would they?.... oh hang on....
The H&H article was a start, however..
So that's saying that if you hack regularly, you need shoes. Despite mounting evidence that shoes cause bad concussion on hard surfaces and that as long as you build up distances slowly, there is no problem at all with hacking sans shoes. In fact tarmac is great for BF hooves.
Oh dear. Now they're repeating the TB's have crappy hooves and can't go BF lie, but are extending it to horses with TB blood. *sigh*
As said in earlier posts - Yes, you can jump BF and you don't need to stick to an arena either. There are members on here that event and hunt BF.
I agree that each horse should be treated as an individual, but while Vets and Farriers are so biased (and under-informed about working unshod horses) and owners trust them implicitly, when will things change?
In general, no. However, there will be times when the ground needs studs. This point comes at a different time for different horses. See how you get on but if your horse is struggling with the footing then either shoe and use studs or decline to jump in those conditions. You won't have any problem on an artificial surface though!
Didn't Zara's horse manage the XC at the Olympics without a front shoe?