amandap
Well-Known Member
It could well be deficiencies or even excess of something/s in the grass and or other forage. Copper (for example) is stored in the liver so effects of depletion may take some time to be reflected in the hooves.
Well as some of you are aware I've been having some on/off lameness issues with my boy. Vet came out, reckons bruised sole so had been treating him for that and all was looking good. Then he pulled a front shoe on wedand came in like he was missing a leg. Shoe went back on yesterday, he seems ok, maybe not 100% on it, but think he's just still a bit sore. Anyway I was having a prod at his feet and realised I could flex the sole with thumb pressure!
Not sure what to do now, will speak to farrier on Monday but wondered if any of you had any experince in dealing with it?
He lives out on the rainy west coast of Scotland which probably doesn't help. Is fed adlib haylage in field, and gets small daily feed of happy hoof, fast fibre, equihoof hoof supplement, mag ox and pink powder. Regularly wormed etc and has just been brought back into work after a spell off due to the lameness.
Any thoughts/advice greatly appreciated!
Thanks guys
Current plan of attack is as follows:
Email equimins and get that supplement, and ask them whether their paint on hoof hardener would be a useful addition in the meantime. Change chaff to something non molassed (although he only gets small handful once a day anyway), leave him in stable for few hours each day and couple of nights a week to let soles dry right out. Keep him in light exercise on good ground only, and all going well will invest in over the shoe boots for stoney ground until his hooves thicken. Will also speak to farrier on Monday.
Seem reasonable? I know I'm not doing everything recommended, but at least I'm starting somewhere! Also, did I read that cinammon is good for feet or did I make that up?![]()
Although I am a spokesperson for the Barefoot Talibanand I agree that ground stimulation is the best way to thicken soles......I would be cautious about removing the shoes at this time. Try the minerals for a couple of months and see if that helps.![]()
LeneHorse what supplement are you using?
You two both need to get your hay analysed and then feed the specific minerals they need rather than trying to blanket supplement with commerical stuff, which is too weak and clogged with fillers to give them what they actually need.
Thin soles is an extremely big problem and also a very specific one which needs getting on top of asap.
I am not aware of any of the other horses at the yard having problem feet - if the hay/grazing was poor would others not be affected? Her field mate gets no hard feed whatever just grass and hay, and her feet are fine.
Re chaff, you can get Dengie molasses free, with or without alfalfa, it is very palatable.This thread has really got me thinking about what I am feeding my horse. I have been using Formula4Feet (suggested by my farrier) for her hoof supplement. It had good results at first with better hoof growth but after a couple of year's use her feet have stayed much the same as they were before. Previously I tried her on NAF profeet liquid but she refused to touch the feed with it in.
She gets Dengie HiFi original as well which probably has far too much molasses so I'm thinking of changing that. Would Hifi Lite be better, or should I try a non alfalfa based chaff? Any recommendations? I'm not sure about the A&P fast fibre as sometimes I get her brought in if I'm working late, and on those days I need to make her feed up in the morning and leave it in the box for her coming in at night.
Our YO supplies the hay but he buys it in so it can vary according to where he's sourced it from, so I'm not sure if it would be worth getting the analysis done as the next bale might be completely different. Where do you send it to get analysed - can anyone provide a link?
I am not aware of any of the other horses at the yard having problem feet - if the hay/grazing was poor would others not be affected? Her field mate gets no hard feed whatever just grass and hay, and her feet are fine.
I have actually started to suspect that she might be borderline EMS and am getting her blood tested next week. Is there any link between EMS and thin soles? I know they are more prone to laminitis.
I could go on forever about this but will spare you any more of my worries.
Anyway thanks to OP for bringing up this subject and to everyone who replied with such useful ideas.
The linseed meal is a palatable powder, it is a slow release source of energy [oil=fat], 10 kgs from Equimins or 25kg from Charnwood Milling.Thanks again guys. Sadly, horse came in lame todayand is now on box rest to let his feet dry out a bit before doing anything else. Phoned my vet, but they are emergency only on a Sat and he didn't feel that this was an emergency
So on his advice, horse to be box rested until Monday or Tuesday and if no improvement then to go for xrays to examine extent of damage, and if he's improving then he says its prob more of a managment issue like you guys have said.
Couple of questions - how do you feed micronised linseed and where do you get it? Also, am going to invest in hoof boots for over his shoes whilst hacking atm until things improve - can you recommend me any?
Thanks again for all your help - fingers crossed! x
Im fairly convinced that the company name 'NAF' is a hidden in plain sight joke at the expense of all their customers - never touch their products with a barge pole!
Most of the barefooters on here feed some variation on micronised linseed, a non mollassed chaff (readigrass in my case) and pro hoof.
LOL! I do think a lot of us talk about more difficult/sensitive horses. There are many more stonking barefoot horses out there who have owners without a care in the world.Ummmmm "most barefooters" doesn't include meI feed NAF haylage balancer because it contains yea-sacc and a probiotic that suit my boys well and are cheaper than buying separately and I get a "free" all round vit and min top-up in the same bucket. They have done very well on it, including one who is sensitive to daytime grass in summer and one who is an outright laminitis risk. I don't feed any chaff but I do feed molassed sugar beet and molassed (but not much, they don't taste sweet) cheap own-brand pony cubes.
I do supplement more magnesium and also copper, the copper due to a heavy excess of both iron and manganese in my water supply.
I also recommended NAF haylage balancer to the owners of my Iberian, extremely grass/carbohydrate sensitive, navicular rehab and he is also doing very well on it. And to a friend who has four hardworking barefoot horses who also do well on it.
There are three variables of which diet is one, exercise is two and trimming the hoof is the third.As such, I'd rather leave him shod, but improve his diet so allow him to grow better/more resiliant feet.
Hi MLT, barefoot is something that I will consider for the future, but not at the minute. He has enough to deal with imo without adding more change/trauma into the mix. My biggest issue/s with barefoot is that he lives out, and I live on the west coast of scotland. So his feet would struggle even more with shoes off. From what I've read on here their diet needs managed to the nth degree which really doesn't suit me. He's liveried 30 mins away from me and doesn't catch for other people, so a once a day visit is all I can manage. I also hack a lot, and not all of the going is very good.
As such, I'd rather leave him shod, but improve his diet so allow him to grow better/more resiliant feet.
I suggest you stable at night on clean dry shavings, feed 20gm of biotin, consider researching barefoot, but first you need to get him on a solid diet, forget Happy Hoof as a good thing for feet, its a marketing ploy!
The basic barefoot daily diet is hi fibre low sugar, and additional minerals which must be balanced.
80-120gms micronised linseed meal [Equimins]
0.5 to 1kg Fast Fibre [Allen and Page]
A hoof supplement which will provide 20 gms of biotin plus MgO, available at Equimins, as is advice.
Assume the diet is low in Magnesium, you need to feed a balanced mineral supplement, targeted at hoof growth.
I use Dengie non molasses lo alfalfa chaff
Try to exercise on the road every day to get blood flow and encourage healthy hooves, you must get rid of any disease and have a good farrier.
Out of interest why is Happy Hoof so bad when it's recommended for ponies/horses with laminitis?
It is not SO BAD, but listing a pinch of biotin as an ingredient is a scam, horses need 20gms per day, which would double or treble the cost of a bag of chaff.Out of interest why is Happy Hoof so bad when it's recommended for ponies/horses with laminitis?
if nature has provided a flat footed/shallowed sole then so be it.
but her feet are what nature gave her and have to be lived with.
I don't mean any offense, but I find it so sad and frustrating that people can still think like this despite the wealth of evidence to the contrary.