Cadfael&Coffee
Well-Known Member
Fronts should be plenty for a young horse in light work, then if after a couple of weeks you feel she's still footie at the back put backs on.
I agree- put fronts on.
If you really want to go barefoot, do it in a couple of years when it's education is established, and then you can play about with diet etc to your heart's delight![]()
C&C I don't disagree that this poster should shoe, because she cannot control the horse's turnout, but anyone considering this approach, "shoe now, barefoot later" needs to know that it is very often much more difficult to condition the horse when it has been shod for a couple of years than it is never to put them on.
For a start, the shoes will cause changes to the foot, with a shod foot typically having lateral cartilages only around 1/4 the volume of a working barefoot horse and lacking blood capillaries in that lateral cartilage. (research by Bowker).
Second, any metabolic issues which are preventing the horse from growing feet strong enough to work without shoes will continue to affect, and probably degrade, foot quality. In the worst cases (I have owned one) the feet can eventually become soft enough to bend with your fingers and the horse ends up having to be shod in pads to protect its soles, or worse.
The OP will most likely, like most people, have no problem at all with shoeing her horse. But "shoe now I can always barefoot later" is not necessarily as simple a strategy as it sounds.
Tbh, I think 'natural' barefooters would argue strongly against stabling to restrict grass intake, and stabling for any length of time full stop. Movement is a key componant to healthy hooves, minds and bodies. This is where yards and tracks come in if you need to reduce grass intake.If you're going down the what-is-more-natural route I would debate what is more UNNATURAL about shoes v keeping a horse stabled for long periods of time to enable it to be unshod.
Tbh, I think 'natural' barefooters would argue strongly against stabling to restrict grass intake, and stabling for any length of time full stop. Movement is a key componant to healthy hooves, minds and bodies. This is where yards and tracks come in if you need to reduce grass intake.
Fronts are going on nxt week now but i still feel a full set is better????
As most horses are kept on livery yards there aren't many people with yards or tracks available to them so to reduce grass they do need to stable for long periods.
I know lots of yards have individual turnout but many yards would not be happy with liveries setting up their own track system- you are very lucky
I was simply highlighting that these options are not possible for all people who are restricted by their yards.
I understand this and this may well be where shoes are a good compromise.As most horses are kept on livery yards there aren't many people with yards or tracks available to them so to reduce grass they do need to stable for long periods.
Do what you and your horse is happiest with!
As you are doing more work on hard/stony ground you might need shoes.
No point keeping her barefoot even if she is sore, just so she is barefoot! You probably won't need to put hind shoes on though. My cob can do loads of roadwork with just fronts and but gets footsore compleatly barefoot.![]()
I personally don't think boots are a "massive faff" takes all but five minutes to put on a pair of Cavallo's; hardly time comsuming.
Have you seen that study by k c la pierre? Well, basically if a horse is shod too early, the pedal bone (like the rest of the body) doesn't develop as well so is less dense. This could explain why some horses transition well and some take time.
Think about it - e.g. those japanese binded-feet ladies? They bind the feet when children so thay are small. But when as adults released they take a normal form but the bones are weaker and eventually some women need support. If you saw a skeleton at the National history Musuem their feet are much holey-er. And thinner.
Binding the feet involved breaking the arch of the foot, which ultimately left a crevice approximately 5 cm (2 in) deep, which was considered most desirable. It took approximately two years for this process to achieve the desired effect; preferably a foot that measured 79 cm (33 1⁄2 in) from toe to heel.[10] While foot binding could lead to serious infections, possibly gangrene, and was generally painful for life, contrary to popular belief, many women with bound feet were able to walk, work in the fields, and climb to mountain homes from valleys below.