Michen
Well-Known Member
Has anyone experienced this? Cutting a long story short horse had a new farrier (mine has moved) and he cut the toes back too far. Horse has weak soles already though decent frogs. The day after shoeing he was pottery (well actually he was pottery immediately after shoeing) and I had the shoes taken off 24 hours after shoeing with the idea of booting him and giving his feet a chance to recover. Within ten minutes of the shoes being off he had pounding pulses, raises heart beat and quite literally could barely walk. Absolutely crippled even with hoof boots on. This horse had a shoe off for the last week for a suspected abscess/bruise and he was in no way crippled with that one shoe off and with a boot.
Had emergency vet out who essentially said he had "stress laminitis" from the trauma of the shoeing and how drastically his feet were cut back. He wasn't reacting much to testers around the laminae area though which is hopeful. So I have a horse in my stable on a deep full bed on multiple pain killers and who looks exactly like Torres did when his shoes were removed. Nearly a year later.
Many, many tears have been shed and I feel so bloody responsible that this has happened, plus he's on full loan and it's happened in my care
beyond gutted.
Had emergency vet out who essentially said he had "stress laminitis" from the trauma of the shoeing and how drastically his feet were cut back. He wasn't reacting much to testers around the laminae area though which is hopeful. So I have a horse in my stable on a deep full bed on multiple pain killers and who looks exactly like Torres did when his shoes were removed. Nearly a year later.
Many, many tears have been shed and I feel so bloody responsible that this has happened, plus he's on full loan and it's happened in my care