Thursday, 18 July 2013

Mina's first 5 weeks

Mina has been here 5 weeks and is working well so its time for an update. On arrival she had remedial (reverse) shoes which had resulted in a distorted hairline but its good to see that is now levelling up again. This is her worse foot and the one on which the medio-lateral balance is changing the most. 

Unlike many horses Mina had a reasonably strong palmar hoof when she arrived. You can chart how much hoof she has grown since day one by looking at the position of the nail holes, now almost grown out. 

The shoe and pad hid her feet pretty effectively but as you can see from the lower photo taken a few days after the shoes came off, she had a pretty good foot but the sole is asymmetric, which usually indicates a problem with medio-lateral balance. 
Comparing the same foot today her frog is stronger, her heels are more supportive and the symmetry is beginning to improve but there are still changes she needs to make - more soon!

Wednesday, 17 July 2013

Hard day at the office...

On Friday the fields looked like this...
...and today they look like this.
Although making haylage always means long days, early starts and late finishes, its been years since we had such a settled spell of fabulous weather. Instead of racing against the clock, with black clouds, gloomy forecasts and imminent rain on the horizon we've got this, and it makes all the difference :-)
A banal photo but an incredibly satisfying one. I slept well last night.
3 fields down, 2 to go (though not till next month). And I must admit, when the view from the office is like this, I can't really complain.
Normal blog service will resume, with updates on Mina and Freddie and an introduction to new boy Fryday coming up...

Tuesday, 16 July 2013

Blog, interrupted (but the ex-rehabs are going strong)

The blog has to take a back seat today because we've got 3 hayfields cut  - too early, really, for up here but the weather is too good to miss. Andy has done his hours on the tractor so today is my turn, which means the horses here get to lounge in the shade and eat all day while I'm rushing about!
No excuses for these guys, though...I love this photo of Bailey and Lainey, taken just after their 3rd barefoot anniversary, which I blogged about last week - don't they look fab?!
Kate and Rolie have also gone out and done the business again, with a double win at the weekend - big congratulations to them!

And last but not least, the frilly won by Amanda and Lucy in their first 90 round  - on grass too :-) They are competing BE90 at the end of the month so wish them luck, folks :-)

Monday, 15 July 2013

Foot balance, shoes and lameness - Itsy's udpate

Horses have a range of lameness when they arrive here. With some its as mild as a slight shortness in stride, noticeable only to someone knows the horse well and can contrast how they move when at their full potential.
With others, like Itsy, its much more dramatic.  She is only a young horse and was demonstrably lame in walk when she arrived. In trot on a circle (as you can see from the footage at the end) it was obviously uncomfortable for her to move. These stills from the clip contrast her landing on her worst foot (in shoes) on day one, above, and today, below. 
Of course its not just her front legs which have been affected. A freer stride in front means she can also properly step under behind.

Her lameness was first assessed in November 2011 and had been an on/off problem during 2012. MRI revealed impar ligament damage and navicular bursitis and although Itsy initially improved with remedial farriery the lameness recurred after a few months, hence her referral here. 
Over 8 weeks her nail holes have grown out and her palmar hoof has become stronger. There is an interesting change in the profile of her hoof wall, too - now straighter and less convex.
If you contrast her hairline, particularly towards the back of the hoof, you can see that instead of having heels which were under-run and becoming crushed, she has a more robust heel and digital cushion.
Of course her frog has become more substantial and her heels have de-contracted...
 ...but her foot is also re-orientating and re-balancing. Itsy is a good example of a horse whose foot balance is much better when she is loading centrally rather than peripherally, as in a shoe.
I've already posted footage of her landing, which improved over the first few weeks she was here. 


At that point she was still struggling on a circle but as her landing has become more established and her foot has strengthened she has steadily become more level in trot. Obviously, the new surface on the school has helped but its really only the icing on the cake, as she had already become noticeably more level when coming in from the field and as she was moving round the tracks. Here is her comparison footage.

Thursday, 11 July 2013

Hoofcare heaven or tilting at windmills?

Anyone who regularly goes onto so-called "social media" and has an interest in horses and hoofcare will have stumbled across the latest online controversy.

The practice of "farriery" is tightly controlled in England and Wales and, as we all know, only "registered farriers" are permitted to shoe or prepare a horse's foot for a shoe. This has been the case since 1975 - so far so good. 
The Act was clearly intended to regulate shoeing and there is nothing in it about trimming but because farriery IS regulated in this country, unlike in many others, both the FRC and trimmers' organisations have been circling the issue with a fair amount of mistrust in recent years. The recent spat arose because of concerns that the FRC was lobbying for an extension of the current statute so that it would include trimming as well as shoeing.

There are lots of aspects about this whole debate which I find puzzling. I haven't posted about it up til now because  - to me at least - the issue is a complex one. 

Let's strip it back and look at it from the horse's point of view. 
If someone is going to come along and bang nails into your feet, by god they had better know what they are doing. The margin for error is tiny and the risk of doing serious damage - both immediate (a nail into the quick) or long-term (improper foot balance leading to ligament, tendon and eventually bone damage) is immense.  
Equally, if someone is going to come along and trim your foot and change your balance and how you load your feet, by god they had better know what they are doing. An over-aggressive trim, just like a bad shoeing job, can instantly lame a horse and ignorant trimming over months and years can as surely lead to ligament and tendon damage as poor shoeing.

There is already legislation in place which has been successfully used in the past to prosecute the worst trimmers so is the answer really to extend regulation? You might be tempted to bang your fists on the desk and say yes, but my own suspicion is that horses are let down as often by farriers as trimmers. 

In my experience, the obsession by both sides with "trimming" (and shoeing, by farriers) is tilting at windmills. Trimming (and shoeing) is the most risky and least constructive part of hoofcare. Whether you are a farrier, a trimmer or an owner, you can do a lot of damage trimming (or shoeing) but you can't create a healthy foot with a trim (or shoe). 

I see hooves which have been deformed and weakened by shoes on a regular basis but I also get emails like this one on all the time: 

"It's just amazing what a difference diet can make - I always thought a trim every 5-6 weeks by was the answer -  every summer the trimmer put on the sheet that she had pulses but no suggestion that she needed to come off grass  or a change in diet needed- my own fault should have paid more attention and she has always been good to ride on grass and in the arena - she was only ever shod a handful of times before I got her when she was 4 years old just backed and she has been barefoot for 8 years however I can see in even a short while of a better diet she is much improved."

The emphasis in bold is mine - because it wasn't the owners fault. She put her trust in a "professional"; it was a failure in the trimmer's training programme (and, by the way, this was a trimmer from a "recognised" organisation). Its not just the trimmers to blame, because farriers don't routinely give dietary advice either. 
Then there are the trimmers - and farriers - who "re-balance" feet even when the horse is sore or less capable after every trim. I've posted about them before because its a very, very common problem but the most frightening fact about most of those guys (of whatever discipline) is that they took out their knives and rasps with the very best of intentions - they thought they were doing the best for the horse even though the horse was telling them otherwise. And in some cases they do it again, and again, and again, convinced that they know better than the horse what the horse really needs.  

This is a scary fact for owners because it means that a genuine, kind-hearted, passionate, committed farrier or trimmer isn't necessarily going to be better for their horse. Benevolent intentions help, but they aren't enough.

Many years ago, Ghost was "well shod" in "remedial shoes" - and was getting lamer each month. His (registered) farrier was well qualified, had his own horses (which IME is rare for a farrier), was a lovely guy and wanted to do the very best for the horses in his care.

No part of his farrier training (nor the vet) had suggested he look at limb loading, biomechanics, record how hooves were progressively deformed by the bar shoes or assess Ghost's deteriorating soundness. He put his faith in shoes despite the fact that they were ruining Ghost's feet and so the "degenerative" prognosis became a self-fulfilling prophecy. This is an incredibly common story and is echoed for most of the rehab horses who come here. 

I actually feel very sorry for most farriers who care about horses. During their farrier training they are given only one tool with which to improve horse's feet - bang a shoe on. Nothing about diet, nothing about exercise, nothing about the biomechanics which are the cornerstones of healthy hooves and healthy horses. Some educate themselves later on, of course, but its not the norm.
Equally, there are a lot of trimmers who have nothing but a "barefoot trim" in their tool-box. And on its own, that won't get them far either, from what I see of the horses who come here.

I've lost count of the number of times when an owner has brought a lame horse here (and interestingly every single one has been under the regular care of either a farrier or trimmer) and admitted that the farrier or trimmer has never watched their horse walk or trot up either before or after the trim or shoeing job. To me, that's negligent as well as highlighting that the trimming or shoeing job was done with little or no awareness of the needs of that horse's movement. 
If I only had the options of trimming or shoeing as a way of improving horse's hooves and soundness during rehab I would have given up before I even began because of course most of the horses who come here are the ones whom shoeing (and increasingly trimming) has already failed.

Not to mention that there is a significant number of horses out there who are much more comfortable if they are allowed to set their own foot balance rather than have a biped impose what they think is suitable...
Given that regulated farriers lame horses and unregulated trimmers lame horses, even when they have the welfare of the horse at heart and the best intentions, regulation isn't the panacea some think it to be.

So is the answer in better training for trimmers AND farriers?

Farriery training is, as many of you are aware, in disarray following Ofsted's recent report which closed down National Farriery Training and uncovered "significant examples of bullying and harrassment" in the apprenticeship scheme. As we know, although trimming is part of the training the most important elements of hoofcare are missing from the syllabus. Astonishingly, there is no requirement for farriers to undertake any continuing professional development and by a further anachronism the official stance is still that horses "need" shoes for normal work and that "only" farriers are sufficiently well-trained to trim horses.

This is so far from the reality for most barefoot horses that owners have - understandably - lost confidence in many farriers and in their governing body. 

Equally, the various barefoot training organisations have widely divergent standards, many over-emphasise the trim as the cornerstone of hoofcare and  - like the FRC - most lack transparency and accountability when problems arise, which does not inspire confidence among owners.

There is a National Occupational Standard for Equine Barefoot Care (to give it its full title) but neither the farriery training nor any of the barefoot organisations offer this as a qualification - though some of the latter try to mirror their training to the NOS' requirements. 
If we are aiming for hoofcare heaven we need to think much, much bigger and way, way outside the box. We need to look beyond trimming - and shoeing - and look at hooves from the horse's point of view.

* For Kate..."Tilting at windmills" was the phrase used to describe Don Quixote who in the satirical novel by Cervantes thought he was jousting against ferocious giants. He was so befuddled that he never realised he was in fact tilting at windmills. 

He was also noted for a tendency to "intervene violently in matters which did not concern him"... 

Wednesday, 10 July 2013

Boys of summer

Just time to share news of 2 former rehabs...Firstly Alfie, the Morgan, who went home earlier in the year.
Sue and Alfie make a great team and it was lovely to receive this photo of the pair of them. Sue says:

"I had a lesson last Saturday and some friends watched me, I was concentrating so much (hence my
very stern expression in the photo) that I didn't realise they were taking pictures of us! He's working brilliantly, that coupled with our new instructor, there's no stopping us."
It was also an important anniversary on Monday - 3 years to the day since Bailey arrived at Rockley. This is photo taken a few months after he went home and I'm pleased to say he is still just getting better and better :-) I am privileged to think that I am still - apart from Lainey - one of the very few people to have ever ridden him!

Tuesday, 9 July 2013

Chester's first 2 weeks

Time for a quick update on Chester, who arrived 2 weeks ago with lots going on in his feet. This is his "better" foot...
...with the comparison of the same foot 2 weeks later below. As usual, no trimming was required or carried out; he has lowered his heels and hoof wall for himself and as you can see his frog and heels are also de-contracting and becoming stronger. 
 This is the lateral shot of the same foot. 
Again, without trimming he has already shortened his toe and brought his heels back. 
His "worse" foot was his RF. It was more severely contracted than the LF and has a particularly crushed and distorted lateral side. The ridge of bar extending on the  medial side may well be a reflection of this.
I know a lot of trimmers and farriers would love to get in there with a hoof knife and make it all look prettier but in fact Chester is more than capable of dealing with his own feet. As is often the case, trimming bar and heel would be dealing with the symptom without addressing the cause. 
Far more effective, in my opinion, to allow his feet to develop, strengthen and load properly and then - guess what - by addressing the cause the symptoms disappear as well. 
 This is his RF on day one. 
After a fortnight his toe is shorter; his heels (as you can see from the sole shots too) have yet to catch up, but by the time of his next update I would expect his feet to look much less under-run.

Chester's landing is also beginning to improve  - video to follow...