TheFarrier
Well-Known Member
I dont believe my word is gospel, i dont treat my cleints like carp and i dont expect tea coffee or anything of the sort. I do my job because i love it. I appologise for farriers out there who do of course.
I am really sorry that people seem to think that fariers dont know anything any more. We have CPD where we have to do a certain amount of extra training every year to keep up with what was current. We do a lot of training for a long period of time and no this is not just about shoes, infact we sepnd an entire year before even bieng allowed to study farriery learning about steel and shaping it and bending it etc etc.
There was a debate recently between farriers and barefoot trimmers and the out come is that the trimmers could not say how what they do is any different to a good trim done by a farrier, be that as it may what bothers me is that anyone who follows the barefoot movement seems to feel that our years of training dont count for anything and that we dont know what we are talking about.
I am not against horses bieng barefoot at all, what i believe is that when the rate of work wearing down the feet exceedes the rate at which the horn grows then either cut back on the work being done or put shoes (or boots) on your horse. Anything else is just cruelty.
I have been doing some research on barefoot trims and looking at as many expamples on the net as i can find. I dont believe that the good ones look any different than a trim i do myself (on working horses) and the ones that were not were shocking. I dont beleive a horses foot should be without quarters and i dont believe that a horses foot ahould be unlevel with parts of the wall not making contact with the floor. Horses were designed to walk flat.
Be all this as it may, it is late, and i just wanted to ay that i cant go to bed without saying that not all farriers are against horses being barefoot. I am neither fanatical about shoes or no shoes, i believe in doing what is best for the horse. That at the end of the day is my job. Call it a trade if you will... i call it a passion
I appologise for any typos or spelling errors as i said its quite late.
here is the thread that made me write this post. I hope everyone has a lovely week and enough dry weather to spend time with your neds and get a few rides in too.
http://www.horseandhound.co.uk/forums/sh...ID=#Post4636499
I am really sorry that people seem to think that fariers dont know anything any more. We have CPD where we have to do a certain amount of extra training every year to keep up with what was current. We do a lot of training for a long period of time and no this is not just about shoes, infact we sepnd an entire year before even bieng allowed to study farriery learning about steel and shaping it and bending it etc etc.
There was a debate recently between farriers and barefoot trimmers and the out come is that the trimmers could not say how what they do is any different to a good trim done by a farrier, be that as it may what bothers me is that anyone who follows the barefoot movement seems to feel that our years of training dont count for anything and that we dont know what we are talking about.
I am not against horses bieng barefoot at all, what i believe is that when the rate of work wearing down the feet exceedes the rate at which the horn grows then either cut back on the work being done or put shoes (or boots) on your horse. Anything else is just cruelty.
I have been doing some research on barefoot trims and looking at as many expamples on the net as i can find. I dont believe that the good ones look any different than a trim i do myself (on working horses) and the ones that were not were shocking. I dont beleive a horses foot should be without quarters and i dont believe that a horses foot ahould be unlevel with parts of the wall not making contact with the floor. Horses were designed to walk flat.
Be all this as it may, it is late, and i just wanted to ay that i cant go to bed without saying that not all farriers are against horses being barefoot. I am neither fanatical about shoes or no shoes, i believe in doing what is best for the horse. That at the end of the day is my job. Call it a trade if you will... i call it a passion
I appologise for any typos or spelling errors as i said its quite late.
here is the thread that made me write this post. I hope everyone has a lovely week and enough dry weather to spend time with your neds and get a few rides in too.
http://www.horseandhound.co.uk/forums/sh...ID=#Post4636499