Log in to my account Barrel Horse World
Come on in Folks on-line

Today is

You are logged in as a guest. Logon or register an account to access more features.


Stepping off shoes and contracted heels....

Jump to page :
Last activity 2014-10-27 11:49 AM
12 replies, 3698 views

View previous thread :: View next thread
   General Discussion -> Barrel Talk
Refresh
 
missroselee
Reg. Jul 2006
Posted 2014-10-26 10:22 PM
Subject: Stepping off shoes and contracted heels....


Military family

Damn Yankee


Posts: 12390
500050002000100100100252525
Location: Somewhere between raising hell and Amazing Grace
 Do any board members have a horse who is prone to stepping off shoes because of an enormous stride?  What does your farrier do to help prevent it?

What are the best ways to treat and then prevent contracted heels?  Wider shoe?  Larger shoe?  Pads? etc etc
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
lucky2
Reg. Oct 2008
Posted 2014-10-27 12:53 AM
Subject: RE: Stepping off shoes and contracted heels....


Extreme Veteran


Posts: 350
1001001002525
You might want to look at how long the toe is and or style of trimming/shoeing. Most of the time contracted heels almost always means the toe is too long. You might want to get a second opinion on the farrier work.
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
komet.
Reg. Jun 2012
Posted 2014-10-27 2:41 AM
Subject: RE: Stepping off shoes and contracted heels....



Expert


Posts: 4121
20002000100
Location: SE Louisiana
Contracted heels are common if your horse has no frog pressure.. Like halter horses standing on those tall heels with the frog way above the ground or a horse that has lost a frog due to thrush... Another possible cause is a farrier using the very back nail holes on a shoe too small for the foot and preventing proper expansion of the heels. Proper frog pressure is needed to make the heels expand with every step or the heels will start to contract and that will be what is needed to correct the problem if it has already happened.

If by stepping off the shoes you mean overreaching, the simple fact is the front foot is not getting out of the way before the corresponding back foot gets there... There are lots of reasons for this.
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
JLBerry
Reg. Jul 2013
Posted 2014-10-27 7:16 AM
Subject: RE: Stepping off shoes and contracted heels....



Elite Veteran


Posts: 639
50010025
Location: God's country...aka TEXAS
Back up the toe and leave the heel and let it grow. It will take a while if they are badly contracted. It would be best to just go barefoot for a while and let the feet grow. It is also from being shod too tight, no heel expansion, too small of shoes, unbalanced...the list goes on. I would get a new farrier.
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
missroselee
Reg. Jul 2006
Posted 2014-10-27 7:35 AM
Subject: RE: Stepping off shoes and contracted heels....


Military family

Damn Yankee


Posts: 12390
500050002000100100100252525
Location: Somewhere between raising hell and Amazing Grace
Β Thanks guys. I know why they are contracted. I do understand the mechanism there. He's barefoot for the time being. He has stepped shoes off his whole life no matter how many different ways he's been shod. There are no good farriers around here. So I was hoping for ideas on options when I start trying to ride again
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
Three 4 Luck
Reg. Sep 2003
Posted 2014-10-27 8:34 AM
Subject: RE: Stepping off shoes and contracted heels....



Accident Prone


Posts: 22277
50005000500050002000100100252525
Location: 100 miles from Nowhere, AR
 I've got one prone to forging and occasionally stepping off shoes--he's got long sloping pasterns with matching feet and a big overstep.  My farrier started doing a rocker toe and that made all the difference in the world.  

My old farrier was short-shoeing him to keep shoes on and it had his heel under run and contracted.  Took nearly a year to get him back where he should be.
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
Barnmom
Reg. May 2006
Posted 2014-10-27 8:48 AM
Subject: RE: Stepping off shoes and contracted heels....



Hog Tie My Mojo


Posts: 4847
2000200050010010010025
Location: Opelousas, LA
I am trying glue on flexible shoes on my mare that has these exact same issues. 

I tried the barefoot thing with her, had a very good trimmer but her heels never uncontracted and her whole foot just pushed out in front of her.  We are gluing on PLR Race shoes now and since there is so much glue in the heel area, it is much harder to step the shoes off.  Next shoeing we are going to a flex shoe since locking her heels in to an aluminum shoe will not allow them to expand.

I have ordered the Easyshoe Compete and the Flexx Sport from Soundhorse, not sure which one will work best until we set them on her foot. 
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
missroselee
Reg. Jul 2006
Posted 2014-10-27 9:11 AM
Subject: RE: Stepping off shoes and contracted heels....


Military family

Damn Yankee


Posts: 12390
500050002000100100100252525
Location: Somewhere between raising hell and Amazing Grace
Barnmom - 2014-10-27 9:48 AM

I am trying glue on flexible shoes on my mare that has these exact same issues.Β 

I tried the barefoot thing with her, had a very good trimmer but her heels never uncontracted and her whole foot justΒ pushed out in front of her.Β Β We are gluing on PLR Race shoes now and since there is so much glue in the heel area, it is much harder to step the shoes off.Β  Next shoeing we are going to a flex shoe since locking her heels in to an aluminum shoe will not allow them to expand.

I have ordered the Easyshoe Compete and the Flexx Sport from Soundhorse, not sure which one will work best until we set them on her foot.Β 

Β I'm looking at doing something similar. Very expensive but....
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
Barnmom
Reg. May 2006
Posted 2014-10-27 9:25 AM
Subject: RE: Stepping off shoes and contracted heels....



Hog Tie My Mojo


Posts: 4847
2000200050010010010025
Location: Opelousas, LA
Which is why I am very lucky that my hubby is also a farrier along with everything else he does.  I could not afford to keep messing with this mare otherwise.  Farriers around here charge $100-200 a foot to glue shoes on, plus the cost of the shoes.

Honestly, it is not hard to glue shoes on once you get all the equipment to properly prep the foot and the shoe, just time consuming and a PITA.  I can't remember the guys name, but there is a farrier that travels all over to glue shoes (Dubai, Kentucky, California etc.) and he has an awesome how to video on the Easycare website.
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
cheryl makofka
Reg. Jan 2011
Posted 2014-10-27 9:55 AM
Subject: RE: Stepping off shoes and contracted heels....


The Advice Guru


Posts: 6419
50001000100100100100
If the horse is pulling off shoes he is not balanced.

I had two horses who would pull shoes all the time with one farrier, we went to the extreme of putting trailers on the hind feet to change the movement of the leg. It did work.

Went to a different farrier, horses never pulled another shoe
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
sorrel horse ranch
Reg. Apr 2006
Posted 2014-10-27 11:07 AM
Subject: RE: Stepping off shoes and contracted heels....


Military family

Angel in a Sorrel Coat


Posts: 16030
500050005000100025
Location: In a happy place
cheryl makofka - 2014-10-27 9:55 AM If the horse is pulling off shoes he is not balanced. I had two horses who would pull shoes all the time with one farrier, we went to the extreme of putting trailers on the hind feet to change the movement of the leg. It did work. Went to a different farrier, horses never pulled another shoe

I definately agree. 
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
missroselee
Reg. Jul 2006
Posted 2014-10-27 11:36 AM
Subject: RE: Stepping off shoes and contracted heels....


Military family

Damn Yankee


Posts: 12390
500050002000100100100252525
Location: Somewhere between raising hell and Amazing Grace
Β I know his feet aren't balanced. I know why his heels are contracted. I'm looking for ideas on options for a horse that will still step shoes off even when his feet are balanced. He is on vacation and barefoot until further notice and I'm working on his feet daily.
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
cheryl makofka
Reg. Jan 2011
Posted 2014-10-27 11:49 AM
Subject: RE: Stepping off shoes and contracted heels....


The Advice Guru


Posts: 6419
50001000100100100100
missroselee - 2014-10-27 11:36 AM

Β I know his feet aren't balanced. I know why his heels are contracted. I'm looking for ideas on options for a horse that will still step shoes off even when his feet are balanced. He is on vacation and barefoot until further notice and I'm working on his feet daily.

If he is balanced, he shouldn't be pulling shoes.

If he is running around the pasture without shoes, is he clipping himself? If he is then it may not be the balancing problem.

Putting trailers on the hind feet will eliminate the pulling shoes, but will create havoc with the hocks are the trailer is pulling the leg out of alignment so it lands on the outside of the front foot

I have had a few horses farriers have contracted over a years time, my vet is the one who diagnosed them and supervised their trims and shoes for the next year. Farrier lady will disagree with the method, but it did work.

My vet pared the sole around the frog to 1/2" away from the frog practically till blood, this allows the elasticity of the foot to drop when there is pressure on the foot. The last 1/4" of the heel he would rasp down 1/8" lower then the rest of the foot, the hoof wall on the front of the foot where the toe is he would rasp down from cornet to bottom approx 3" in the front this allows the release of the foot, think of an egg the concave shape doesn't allow flexibility so he weakened the area to allow flexibility of the back of the foot.
Then he applied shoes leaving 1/8" of the entire shoe exposed all the way around the foot, I never had a horse pull one and these were competing horses.
Remember the last part of the heel is shorter then the rest of the foot so it didn't touch the shoe. Within 30 min of the new shoes the heel was touching the shoe, and very little of the shoe was exposed around the foot.
I had to reset every 4 weeks.
Just an FYI my vet is a certified farrier from university of Oklahoma as well as a equine vet, dentist, and surgeon.
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
Jump to page :
Jump to forum :
Search this forum
Printer friendly version
E-mail a link to this thread
 

© Copyright 2002- BarrelHorseWorld.com All rights reserved including digital rights

Support - Contact / Log in to my account


Working Truck World Working Horse World Cargo Trailer World Horse Trailer World Roping Horse World
'
Registered to: Barrel Horse World
(Delete all cookies set by this site)
Running MegaBBS ASP Forum Software
© 2002-2026 PD9 Software