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 ND Sweetheart
Posts: 3471
        Location: In My Own Dream Land | Ok Y'all I need a little help. We've done xrays and there is nothing 'wrong". My mare is very sore on her front feet. I'm wanting to put pads on to help her out. When I got her last summer, she was barefoot. I put shoes on and it helped but didn't take her slight "gimp" when on HARD ground away. I was looking at doing a pour in pad. What are you opinions.. Thanks |
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 Extreme Veteran
Posts: 425
     Location: California | Have you thought about something like this?
I dont know much about full padded shoes, other than I don't care for the idea. lol
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padded shoe.JPG (35KB - 164 downloads)
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 Expert
Posts: 5290
     
| Chances are your horse is like mine, extremely thin soled. Xrays clean but tender footed. I started feeding a hoof supplement, and also using pads for 3 shoeings (18 weeks) also using a sole conditioner under the pad ( Squirt it under there every few days) called "Rickens". My horse has grown a ton of foot in the last 12 weeks. We are thinking this will be the last 6 weeks with pads! |
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 ND Sweetheart
Posts: 3471
        Location: In My Own Dream Land | I'm just wondering if she will need more coverage than just a shoe.
Anyone used anything like this??
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 Born not Made
Posts: 2931
       Location: North Dakota | Is it soreness on any specific spot? Heel pain? Toe pain? Or overall?
Is your mare landing heel first, flat-footed, or toe first?
A little more information might make for a better suggestion!
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 ND Sweetheart
Posts: 3471
        Location: In My Own Dream Land | Its toe pain. If you take hoof testers, she is very sore. To be honest, I'm not sure if she is landing, toe, heel etc first. |
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 Expert
Posts: 5290
     
| tThompson - 2015-04-03 2:05 PM
I'm just wondering if she will need more coverage than just a shoe.
Anyone used anything like this??
I like that concept. Is it a temporary pad? What's it called and where did you find it? |
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 ND Sweetheart
Posts: 3471
        Location: In My Own Dream Land | FLITASTIC - 2015-04-03 7:14 PM tThompson - 2015-04-03 2:05 PM I'm just wondering if she will need more coverage than just a shoe. Anyone used anything like this?? I like that concept. Is it a temporary pad? What's it called and where did you find it?
Its a pour in. EquiPak from Vettec. The picture is used with the mesh. I have to talked to a few gals here and they have used it for 10 months or more and have been real impressed. Guess its worth a shot. Sounds like you have to repour every shoeing but if it helps, I guess that's what we'll do. |
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Married to a Louie Lover
Posts: 3303
    
| We padded 3 or 4 at the barn last spring with the regular green vettec pour in pad when our turn out conditions were miserable from a rough freeze/thaw cycle. They were getting body sore from walking on it. The pads helped tremendously and we were ready to do it again this spring in a heartbeat if it looked like the spring would be messy - thankfully it's not been bad at all.
I would say the pads are worth a try, or take a hard look at your farrier and his experience level and see if perhaps you need to take the xrays to another farrier who specializes in lameness issues for a second opinion. |
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 447
     Location: New York | I have a gelding who's the same way, xrays are clean but he gets sore in his front feet. I use the pour in pads when he's running( usually around 8 months of the year) and he seems much more comfortable with them on! I like that theres no way for mud or anything to get in between the pad and the foot, like with regular pads. |
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 477
       Location: Lost in the swamps | My horse is thin soled right now, from imbalanced feet, he is at 11mm and should be 13plus. Going to talk with my new farrier and tell him what the vet said and see if he agrees with trying shoes and pads on my next farrier visit.(which is what the vet reccomended) |
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 Expert
Posts: 2457
      
| I am in the middle of this with a horse - she is super thin soled, but x-rayed fine. We chose to put her in rims with a full leather pad between the shoe and her hoof. My farrier packed the soles with Equi-pak to help build sole and keep infection at bay. Here in another week or so we're going to re-set with more of the same for the second round ... Super economical so far and I'm hoping it does the trick to help her out. If it doesn't ... the next step is possibly pour in pads.
ETA - It is only on her front feet.
Edited by lindseylou2290 2015-04-05 8:36 PM
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Ms. Dr. Phil
    Location: My happy place | I have used these for 5 years, very happy with them.
http://shop.impactgel.com/Horse-Trax_c74.htm |
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I AM being nice
Posts: 4396
        Location: MD | if I have to pad one that I am running, the pour ins are the only way to go. Have used the vettec pour ins on several horses throughout the years, in various disciplines and have always been happy. |
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Expert
Posts: 1414
    
| tThompson - 2015-04-03 5:05 PM
I'm just wondering if she will need more coverage than just a shoe.
Anyone used anything like this??
I use the pour in pads with my gelding. He was thinned soled and had inflammation in his bursas. We injected bursas, made a shoeing change and started using the pour in pads. At first we did a full pour. With the new type of shoes we were using I was a little concerned about my gelding having enough grab with the ground. After two resets I asked my shoer to only do a big 1/2 fill with the pour in pads. Enough to give him support but still allows dirt to get in there.
I don't know if it's the shoes, the pour in pad or a combo but my gelding LOVES LOVES LOVES the new setup (been doing it for 2 years). His soles are great now too. He licks and chews every time my shoer resets him, I'm not changing anything. |
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 399
     
| I love the impact gel pads! |
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 Veteran
Posts: 232
   Location: Winging It in KY | FLITASTIC - 2015-04-03 8:14 PM tThompson - 2015-04-03 2:05 PM I'm just wondering if she will need more coverage than just a shoe. Anyone used anything like this?? I like that concept. Is it a temporary pad? What's it called and where did you find it?
Nanric They have the Vettec here as well as the Rickens foot formula.At least you can read about it. |
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 Extreme Veteran
Posts: 547
  Location: Greencastle PA | Try the pour a pads they r awesome, i use them, and my gelding had xrays and everything, he was what they call stinging and they have helped him plus the shoes stay on and you can go longer between shoeing. |
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 Extreme Veteran
Posts: 547
  Location: Greencastle PA | tThompson - 2015-04-03 5:05 PM I'm just wondering if she will need more coverage than just a shoe. Anyone used anything like this??
i use them awsome. |
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 Am I really the Weirdo?
Posts: 11181
       Location: Kansas | tThompson - 2015-04-05 9:35 AM FLITASTIC - 2015-04-03 7:14 PM tThompson - 2015-04-03 2:05 PM I'm just wondering if she will need more coverage than just a shoe. Anyone used anything like this?? I like that concept. Is it a temporary pad? What's it called and where did you find it? Its a pour in. EquiPak from Vettec. The picture is used with the mesh. I have to talked to a few gals here and they have used it for 10 months or more and have been real impressed. Guess its worth a shot.
Sounds like you have to repour every shoeing but if it helps, I guess that's what we'll do.
Chance (my gray horse) has Equipack in his front shoes and I believe Cole is using the mesh but a blue Equipack (maybe the super highpowered kind...I just know it's pricey LOL). We have been doing this for about a year now and it's kept Chance's feet from being sore very often. We do still have to inject coffin joints occasionally but the Equipack is helping I think. Or maybe I'm just afraid to change anything when he's working good and feeling like a freight train. lol. We do repour the Equipack every shoeing and occasionally the mesh will rip away from the nails & he'll lose a pad a few weeks into a shoeing cycle but so far that hasn't been a big deal. I think it adds about $40-50 to my price but when Chance feels right, he can win way more than that back. His foot pain tends to be across the center third of the frog but so far we have no navicular bone changes, just small feet on a hard-running horse with fairly straight pasterns. Equipack has been better for him than traditional pads because now we don't get water and crap under the pad. |
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