Puddock
Well-Known Member
i think Boa's go to carthorse size now?? Nope, just checked, nowhere near big enough!
Thanks for having a look for me, methinks we will just need to soldier on as best we can.
i think Boa's go to carthorse size now?? Nope, just checked, nowhere near big enough!
I stepped out of my friends kitchen and found a patch of ....mint! Got some growing in the yard now![]()
Is there any scientific research that proves a link between poor horn growth and genetics?
There have been studies about horn quality and genetics in sheep and cattle, not sure about horses.
However you only have to look at different breeds to see a link between genetics and hoof quality/growth. i.e. compare dartmoor ponies to TBs to cobs- all different.
This is what confuses me. Some people will say "it's genetics" with absolute certainty as to why a horse needs shoes.
Yet there is no scientific research to back it up?
Perhaps that comes from the belief that things like flat soles or thin walls, or footines are not changeable and therefore must be genetic. I think these things are changeable in most / many horses so to me it can't be genetics, but is a product of environment.
This is what confuses me. Some people will say "it's genetics" with absolute certainty as to why a horse needs shoes.
Yet there is no scientific research to back it up?
My horses live out on this-
![]()
Are barefoot, 100% perfectly sound on ALL terrain, never footy, have fabulous feet, are trimmed when they need it by a farrier and are both competing (1 events/ BSJAs to 1.15, the other is an ex-racehorse just pootling at RC)
They dont receive any faddy balancers, supplements, feeds. No hoof boots, no nothing.
Hmmmmmm so how does that work?!
My horses live out on this-
![]()
Are barefoot, 100% perfectly sound on ALL terrain, never footy, have fabulous feet, are trimmed when they need it by a farrier and are both competing (1 events/ BSJAs to 1.15, the other is an ex-racehorse just pootling at RC)
They dont receive any faddy balancers, supplements, feeds. No hoof boots, no nothing.
Hmmmmmm so how does that work?!
I'm always amazed that this isn't common knowledge, and I'm not criticising anyone - until I became a fully paid up member of the barefoot brigade I didn't know it either!!
How can Laminitis be so common yet so many people don't realise that its a gut problem and that sore feet are a symptom? Why are vets not explaining this to people? Why is it not part of the laminitis article in every magazine every spring? Someone mentioned that they'd asked their farrier and he'd never heard of it, why not?
It frustrates me so much that owners are struggling to manage horses without the proper information about exactly how the problem occurs, knowledge is power and all that!!
Just to re-iterate, i'm not criticising anyone who didn't / doesn't know this, there is no such thing as a bad student only a bad teacher!!
Just thought I'd mention that a farrier is within his rights to refuse to shoe a difficult/dangerous horse. It's the owners job to present the horse as suitable for shoeing. Why should the farrier get his head kicked in? Its like going to the hairdressers and moving about while the scissors are being used, getting up and wandering off, or maybe kicking the hairdresser. What kind of haircut would you end up with then? If the hairdresser was willing to carry on that is.