cptrayes
Well-Known Member
Stop all the meds, get her on a low sugar/high fibre diet and get her shoes off. Get your farrier to talk to Nic Barker. Pain is for a purpose - it's to stop her overusing injured tissue. You'll need to know how much pain she is in so that you can see how much she is progressing. (Obviously I don't include being in severe pain, but that's unlikely with this disease unless she is made to do work that she is not ready to do).
Put her on a lead and walk her on smooth tarmac roads like a dog, to build up the back half of her feet. If her frogs don't touch the floor, put her in boots and pads to stimulate the frogs until they do. And walk her in a sand arena if she can manage that and you have access to one.
If she's sound in hand, ride her in walk until she is sound in trot. Keep her working on any surface she is sound on, she needs movement to cure her feet.
She could be sound in 3 months like mine was, and jumping next year like mine was. At the very least, you will know in 3 months whether she is likely to come right or not.
Have you looked at the horses on Rockley's blog and what they are doing now? There are so many of them that this year they have hired Milton Keynes Equestrian Centre for their annual get together.
Put her on a lead and walk her on smooth tarmac roads like a dog, to build up the back half of her feet. If her frogs don't touch the floor, put her in boots and pads to stimulate the frogs until they do. And walk her in a sand arena if she can manage that and you have access to one.
If she's sound in hand, ride her in walk until she is sound in trot. Keep her working on any surface she is sound on, she needs movement to cure her feet.
She could be sound in 3 months like mine was, and jumping next year like mine was. At the very least, you will know in 3 months whether she is likely to come right or not.
Have you looked at the horses on Rockley's blog and what they are doing now? There are so many of them that this year they have hired Milton Keynes Equestrian Centre for their annual get together.