![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjnX_X4AwlEvmDIwgEAqJOTCCqTSDcdrxhtV0eHy4kCmXQPEJ7siDA0VxEZlb3BYL11tVp7wgkHUFeqJ1adFndu1Wa6Uco4OoYojuM55dgCW3i0SniRnD4CCsju0vSEch00oCBeu8C0b2Y/s280/Photo056.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg2buF-f9eXzVGx8Ohp0vWOHBdA3Tks65-I8eji4UPIZrefSJVg80FFyeGQCqtF6VaoZEJ5PxTqBYJQ4NfQz7tQt9LS0R8hyphenhyphenyksiUEddw5kHdMVgh1-wZ_MUzbrEmcYG63YrAVdhyphenhyphenm-ht0/s320/Photo042.jpg)
Photos can be misleading. So let me describe what I see 'hands on'. The sole is really very flat and has been for months. Every time we get a smidge of concavity we have a metabolic event of some sort and it splats.
The white line is stretched and doing something rather nasty at the toe. We have also had a bit of thrush in the frog. But the horse is sound over some pretty nasty rocks. Bouncingly sound. Long may it last. We can work on better form, but healthy, active, function will go a long way to helping that happen.
Cross your rasps for this one. :-)
Fingers and toes are crossed!
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