Shoes mask weaknesses, barefoot highlights strengths
Sunday, 13 December 2009
Learning more about trimming
To be a better trimmer I need to see a wider variety of cases. So I have taken myself off to Dallas to train with Jamie Jackson. He has updated his training programme and its much more intensive and rigorous than previously. Which is just as well because I know I have a lot to learn.
We are practising on a mix of cadavers and live horses. Although it is sad and sometimes unpleasant to think about the dead horses, I would rather make my mistakes on them than a live one. The fatal mistakes have already been made on the dead horses and sometimes the evidence is in their feet.
The pictures above show what could have been a good foot that over a relatively short time period could have been rehabilitated. It has bull nose and compacted soles from inappropriate foot care. The later pictures show the compacted sole coming out and what the foot looks like after one trim.
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2 comments:
This is really interesting because I've never seen a photo of such a compacted sole! Amazing how the frog appears to be "sunken" into the hoof capsule.
Can you give me some more information on how the condition progresses to get to that point?
~Jenny
http://eventingakhaltekes.blogspot.com/
It's basically a management issue. The sole builds layers a bit like tree bark. If the exercise/environment and/or care do not facilitate the foot in shedding the layers as nature intended (gradually over time) then they can build up and get compacted.
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