tallyho!
Following a strict mediterranean diet...
There's the automatic fall back for barefooters- oh but look at lame horses in shoes. And all I'd say is nobody says bad shoes are a good idea..
Exactly. And your point is what?
There's the automatic fall back for barefooters- oh but look at lame horses in shoes. And all I'd say is nobody says bad shoes are a good idea..
I think everyone should just do the best they can for their horse whether it be with or without shoes.![]()
and others saying it will fix everything, degenerative disease, ligament injuries, anything that is wrong with your horse will be fixed by taking off shoes.
Somebody I knew send a horse to rockley and when he came home it wasn't long before he was back in shoes. What a waste off money.
There's the automatic fall back for barefooters- oh but look at lame horses in shoes. And all I'd say is nobody says bad shoes are a good idea..
My personal bug bear is when people shoe without really even knowing why or thinking it through,but in cases where it has been an informed decision and the horses welfare has been the main consideration then I don't see a problem with it.
I think some of us get pushed into corners and have to 'come out' sometimes if you like. I admit I do believe shoes are damaging to horses in the main and especially on young horses with already underdeveloped hooves being shod young and then back to back throughout their lives. For me developing and keeping strong hoof structures (especially the back half) is a great way to prevent many problems, so for me personally it's a no brainer for that reason alone. I certainly don't believe peeps who shoe are bad owners though.well as i am the one who mentioned preaching i feel i should answerthe threads on barefoot/shoeing interest me as i have 5 unshod/barefoot horses and would prefer to keep them that way, what makes me uncomfortable is the insistence by some that barefoot is the only way and horses categorically do not need shoes at all and as an owner you are somehow at fault if you do shoe. some of the debates do become very one sided and i feel that sometimes some of the barefoot advocates lecture rather than invite discussion, sadly this reminds me too much of the time i spent living with some members of a religious group who tried to convert me
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I'm sure the posters don't mean to come across this way and i do respect them for their knowledge and dedication but think if they lightened up a bit people would be more open to their ideas![]()
just my opinion of course and i am fully aware that my past plays a big part in how i feel![]()
This. Shoeing just because that's what you do, is something I don't feel is a wise stance to take. Also totally leaving hoof care to your professional and not learning even the basics about hooves is imo also unwise.My personal bug bear is when people shoe without really even knowing why or thinking it through,but in cases where it has been an informed decision and the horses welfare has been the main consideration then I don't see a problem with it.
well as i am the one who mentioned preaching i feel i should answerthe threads on barefoot/shoeing interest me as i have 5 unshod/barefoot horses and would prefer to keep them that way, what makes me uncomfortable is the insistence by some that barefoot is the only way and horses categorically do not need shoes at all and as an owner you are somehow at fault if you do shoe. some of the debates do become very one sided and i feel that sometimes some of the barefoot advocates lecture rather than invite discussion, sadly this reminds me too much of the time i spent living with some members of a religious group who tried to convert me
![]()
I'm sure the posters don't mean to come across this way and i do respect them for their knowledge and dedication but think if they lightened up a bit people would be more open to their ideas![]()
just my opinion of course and i am fully aware that my past plays a big part in how i feel![]()
Haven't read the post that prompted this response but the only difference I can see is that once shoes are on, they are on 24/7 whereas tack etc. is on for a small proportion of a 24 hour period. Yes there will be residual effects from 'abuse' through tack but the tack itself is off and the horse has release.However, I don't see how good shoeing or trimming is any more of a welfare issue than using different bits/tack/training methodsDone properly the horse won't suffer negative effects, done badly they will.
'But saying that people who are working their horses without shoes simply can't tell their horses are lame is just having a closed mind.' and you're putting words into my mouth....
Fair enough.Lets list good reasons to shoe:
You really want to ride with studs.
The horse has a pedal bone fracture, a very big dorsal wall resection to remove a keratoma and similar serious issues. (This does not include cracks unless they are a result of coronet band damage, because most of those heal with no shoe on when the foot can rid itself of the stresses that have caused the crack. It does not include laminitis.)
Your horse has a metabolic disease which is proving difficult to control with diet and/or drugs and is perpetually sore without shoes on.
As an owner you are unable to provide the work/diet/turnout that your particular horse needs to be comfortable without his shoes on. NO criticism is implied by this. If you cannot turn out at night instead of during the day, or strip graze, or work the horse every day and those things are what your particular horse would need, then you cannot.
I personally think this list is comprehensive and that those horses who "just can't do it" will fit into one of the last two categories, though many, many metabolically challenged horses are undiagnosed.
Time and time again you can say anything on the internet, and say it loud enough and long enough people will start to think there's something to it, even if there isn't. That is why we push for scientific research. You can clal Rockely horse research at me all you like-but there's a reason nobody has taken it any further
I would like to know how to get a medieval meadow in an Irish reclaimed bog... yesterday.
Having moved my horses three times in the past few years I can categorically say all grass is not equal in regards to the health of horses. If you happen to live in a place that suits your horses consider yourself very lucky.
My major problem with the barefoot movement is that it is unregulated and any old person can set themselves up as a trimmer.
All my horses are unshod, they compete and hack normally, they are seen by a properly qualified farrier regularly. None of them have ever gone footy, ever had foot abscesses and I have not had my pasture analysed. They do not get fed magnesium. My 14yo advanced horse has never ever had shoes on, yet still managed to get a ligament injury hooling around in the field, before anyone says anything, her feet are perfectly balanced. All of my horses are seen by the farrier whilst still on their mothers or as soon as they arrive as weanlings.
I agree with those that have posted that you are made to feel like a bad owner if your horse is unable to go barefoot and a lot of the advisers DO sound like preachers, some sound patronising at best and fanatical at worst. Some of the advice is also hair-raisingly inaccurate This puts people off.
My major problem with the barefoot movement is that it is unregulated and any old person can set themselves up as a trimmer. Now I realise that not all farriers are brilliant but then there are also some very bad trimmers around - remember the self taught angle grinder woman? Just this week I have learnt of a lovely Hano mare, sent to a friend of mine for training, the barefoot trimmer attended her last Friday and by Saturday the poor mare could not even stand she was in so much agony. So for every bad farrier there is a bad barefoot trimmer and they can do as much damage as each other, but at least with a bad farrier you have somewhere to complain to, who do you complain to about trimmers like the ones mentioned above?