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horse lands toe first..Terrible pictures added

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lindseylou2290
Reg. Aug 2013
Posted 2014-07-21 9:11 PM
Subject: RE: horse lands toe first



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CowgirlLindz - 2014-07-21 3:53 PM

A lot of the times shoes cause and/or help these problems worsen(navicular, thrush, arthritis...) Because they interfear with how the hoof was meant to function. No wonder you get heal pain, shoe in the way, causes less frog stimulation and as a result less blood flow. Frogs become little unused things/reseed, heels contract....heal pain......WAM Navicular!. Perfect unused sick frog for thrush to eat away at! Decreased blood flow/decreased shock absorption - stress on joints - BAM ARTHRITIS or at least causes more harm helping arthritis along.

The more I read and learn about hooves the more I believe shoes just flat out suck. IMO anyone else or I'm I to be stoned by the shoe people!

Nobodies gonna stone you - however, I have seen good/correct shoeing benefit horses - my mare is a testament to this.

There are bad farriers, bad shoers, and bad natural hoof practicioners as well. I think in order to accurately state a blanket statement like this and make the correlations in which shoes cause more problems, you may need to consider all the information and sources that you are pulling your information from ....
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cheryl makofka
Reg. Jan 2011
Posted 2014-07-21 10:38 PM
Subject: RE: horse lands toe first..Terrible pictures added


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Iwish - 2014-07-21 8:06 PM

Never heard of a frowning hair line around the heels could mean problems. Learn something new everyday. What kind of problems would that suggest?

It wasn't my horse, but someone who goes to the same vet, hers had the frown, vet never even blocked went straight to X-rays and a bone spur showed up. This was a career ender for this horse, the spur was in a bad spot and could not be removed.
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cheryl makofka
Reg. Jan 2011
Posted 2014-07-21 10:49 PM
Subject: RE: horse lands toe first


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lindseylou2290 - 2014-07-21 9:11 PM

CowgirlLindz - 2014-07-21 3:53 PM

A lot of the times shoes cause and/or help these problems worsen(navicular, thrush, arthritis...) Because they interfear with how the hoof was meant to function. No wonder you get heal pain, shoe in the way, causes less frog stimulation and as a result less blood flow. Frogs become little unused things/reseed, heels contract....heal pain......WAM Navicular!. Perfect unused sick frog for thrush to eat away at! Decreased blood flow/decreased shock absorption - stress on joints - BAM ARTHRITIS or at least causes more harm helping arthritis along.

The more I read and learn about hooves the more I believe shoes just flat out suck. IMO anyone else or I'm I to be stoned by the shoe people!

Nobodies gonna stone you - however, I have seen good/correct shoeing benefit horses - my mare is a testament to this.

There are bad farriers, bad shoers, and bad natural hoof practicioners as well. I think in order to accurately state a blanket statement like this and make the correlations in which shoes cause more problems, you may need to consider all the information and sources that you are pulling your information from ....

I have to agree with cowgirl lindz, there are more bad farriers then good farriers.

Around where I live, a person can take a weekend course call themselves a farrier charge 40/trim, 120-200/shoe. There is no licensing body for farriers. Since I have a foundered horse, and have had contracted heels I find it very frustrating that I know more about the mechanism of the foot, and how to trim than most farriers.

Barefoot trimming, to belong with one organization, they have to do so many "clinic" hours, so many education hours to keep their status current.

I have had shoes cause contracted heels, and for that very reason, the horse has to be pretty bad off for me to get someone to put shoes back on. Right now I have one with fronts on as she abscessed (nothing shoes could have prevented) at the cornet band, it has grown out to where I would have more problems if I didn't shoe.

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Iwish
Reg. Oct 2010
Posted 2014-07-21 11:10 PM
Subject: RE: horse lands toe first..Terrible pictures added



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Ah I see. Well at this point I have just about had it with this colt. This is my fist yearling I have ever had and it has been a disaster so far. I will never buy another yearling. I dont know if this is something I have caused or if I was to stupid to notice before.
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cheryl makofka
Reg. Jan 2011
Posted 2014-07-22 12:11 AM
Subject: RE: horse lands toe first..Terrible pictures added


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Iwish - 2014-07-21 11:10 PM

Ah I see. Well at this point I have just about had it with this colt. This is my fist yearling I have ever had and it has been a disaster so far. I will never buy another yearling. I dont know if this is something I have caused or if I was to stupid to notice before.

The vet is the only one who can tell you what is going on.

Don't put the cart infront of the horse.

A proper assessment and diagnosis will help you decide where to go from this point.
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aqhabarrelchic1
Reg. Apr 2005
Posted 2014-07-22 12:34 AM
Subject: RE: horse lands toe first..Terrible pictures added


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 He's probably fine his feet don't look bad.... If he's in an irrigated field that's wet his feet are most likely soft.. He has a nasty crack up the side from breakage no biggie...  You can't tell if a horse has a bone spur unless you get xrays done. And I've seen horses have huge show careers with bone spurs on their coffin bones!...  If he was mine I would get him hoof tested  trimmed spray them with blue coat it will dry them out and toughen them up... Then pack them with magic cushion... To take sorness out of them if that didn't help pop some X-rays.. But that's me
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Iwish
Reg. Oct 2010
Posted 2014-07-22 3:18 AM
Subject: RE: horse lands toe first..Terrible pictures added



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That's what im hoping is that his feet are just soft from the flood irrigation but that's wishful thinking. I might give that a try first aqha and see if that does the trick before spending $500+ in x rays and what not.
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aqhabarrelchic1
Reg. Apr 2005
Posted 2014-07-22 3:26 AM
Subject: RE: horse lands toe first..Terrible pictures added


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Iwish - 2014-07-23 1:18 AM That's what im hoping is that his feet are just soft from the flood irrigation but that's wishful thinking. I might give that a try first aqha and see if that does the trick before spending $500+ in x rays and what not.

 It won't hurt to try literally my mares feet get soft and she's sore for weeks we spray blue coat on and it drys the souls out.... And I swear that stuff saved her hoof she had an abscess that under minded her whole hoof!! I had to spray it in the hole the shoer dug 3 times a day for a month and a half :
 
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SuckerForHorses
Reg. Apr 2014
Posted 2014-07-22 7:30 AM
Subject: RE: horse lands toe first..Terrible pictures added


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So I'm not seeing anything glaringly obvious about these feet that would indicate heel pain. I do not see contracted heels and the frog looks nice and plump and overall, healthy.

If it's wet where he is, I would definitely suspect soreness from that when you get him out on solid or rocky/pebbly ground.

DuraSole is your friend.

The feet don't scream "this horse should be sore" to me. If he were my horse, I would have a full vet eval now, because the feet look pretty decent. I wouldn't want to risk it being something ABOVE the foot causing him to be off.
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Iwish
Reg. Oct 2010
Posted 2014-07-22 1:52 PM
Subject: RE: horse lands toe first..Terrible pictures added



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Im starting to think it is coming from elsewhere as well. Im trying to get him in as soon as i can, having conflicting schedules with the vet.
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Nevertooold
Reg. Oct 2003
Posted 2014-07-22 2:26 PM
Subject: RE: horse lands toe first..Terrible pictures added



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SuckerForHorses - 2014-07-22 7:30 AM So I'm not seeing anything glaringly obvious about these feet that would indicate heel pain. I do not see contracted heels and the frog looks nice and plump and overall, healthy. If it's wet where he is, I would definitely suspect soreness from that when you get him out on solid or rocky/pebbly ground. DuraSole is your friend. The feet don't scream "this horse should be sore" to me. If he were my horse, I would have a full vet eval now, because the feet look pretty decent. I wouldn't want to risk it being something ABOVE the foot causing him to be off.

I was thinking the same thing...My horse's heels were underslung and his toes were long. His frog was very long and thin. 

In the one picture, her horse's heels are out of whack..one side is longer then the other. My horse's feet were terrible and I'm also not seeing terrible at all. Not good..but far from terrible. 
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spitzh
Reg. Sep 2011
Posted 2014-07-22 2:33 PM
Subject: RE: horse lands toe first..Terrible pictures added



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Contracted heels for sure. A farrier can do a corrective trim on it and within a week and those "baby butt cheeks" will drop. My gelding had contracted heels really bad. If you need to treat thrush, Copper tox works really well. My mare use to stand her in poop for extra padding and it lead to thrush year around. If you use Copper tox WEAR GLOVES! It smells horrible.
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CowgirlLindz
Reg. Jul 2011
Posted 2014-07-22 3:51 PM
Subject: RE: horse lands toe first..Terrible pictures added


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I'm not seeing anything horrible. He is very overdue for a trim yes. I don't think there is anything that putting him on a regular trimming cycle (with a good balanced trim) wouldn't help. Heels look uneven. They look wet/waterlogged so that could for sure be contributing to the ouchyness. Hard to tell about thrush from the picture but they do look waterlogged especially the frogs so it's definitely likely.

Don't give up! Buying young is hard and buying old is hard. You can't fix any physical/conformational problems when they are old. When they are young and still growing you still can or help improve them (depending on the problem of course).

From what I've been reading proper hoof care is very important, if not most important when they are still young and growing.

Sorry for the shoe war. But I think they don't help overall. MAYBE if the farrier is perfect, the trim is perfect and the shoe is perfect it wouldn't cause harm to the horse.....maybe.

I don't know about you guys but the farriers around here get away with murder! Never on time for appointments. They think they are god. We only have so many, owners have to deal with loads of stuff because who else are they going to go to?

One lady from england was telling me one day how horrible it was and how they don't get away with this stuff over there. There are so many well qualified farriers over there if one steps out of line there are so many ready to take the position.
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Iwish
Reg. Oct 2010
Posted 2014-07-22 5:29 PM
Subject: RE: horse lands toe first..Terrible pictures added



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Im having a hec of a time finding a certified natural balance farrier in my area.
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Nevertooold
Reg. Oct 2003
Posted 2014-07-22 7:57 PM
Subject: RE: horse lands toe first..Terrible pictures added



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Iwish - 2014-07-22 5:29 PM Im having a hec of a time finding a certified natural balance farrier in my area.

Where are you located?
Someone on here might know one. A good barefoot shoer would also work. 
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Iwish
Reg. Oct 2010
Posted 2014-07-22 10:21 PM
Subject: RE: horse lands toe first..Terrible pictures added



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Location: the high desert
Central oregon. I found one that sounds promising just waiting on a call back. At this point in time I think im dealing with two separate things. I think his feet are soft from the flood irrigation and unbalanced but I think he might be having something else going on..
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SuckerForHorses
Reg. Apr 2014
Posted 2014-07-23 10:51 AM
Subject: RE: horse lands toe first..Terrible pictures added


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For those of you saying "definitely contracted heels" - can you please explain why you are saying these heels are contracted???

I'm definitely NOT seeing contracted heels. The heel buttresses are back at the widest point of the frog, nice and wide, where they belong.

ETA: Please DON'T use Koppertox for thrush. It's very caustic and abrasive to new healthy tissue growing in. Soak in Oxine [which is the same thing as White Lightning] a few times a week, the rest of the time try to keep his feet clean and dry, and apply DuraSole to try to harden the soles up.

What I see in the pics is a horse that is in a wet environment and slightly overdue for a good trim. I do not see contracted or underrun heels whatsoever.

Edited by SuckerForHorses 2014-07-23 10:54 AM
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Iwish
Reg. Oct 2010
Posted 2014-07-23 2:01 PM
Subject: RE: horse lands toe first..Terrible pictures added



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Location: the high desert
No worries there. As much as I appreciate everyone's advice, im not starting him on or doing anything to him till he has been seen by the vet. Im still looking for a good natural balance farrier but still not finding much.
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