Hi all!
I haven't uploaded a post in awhile as we have been super busy! We've taken in several horses, Rudy, Roxy, Captain, and Star. Captain and Star both suffered from severe hoof neglect, but they are doing much better. Captain is on the REHRC website, but I have a few pages I need to upload for the other horses.
But this post is a request for your votes! Recently, I entered the story about how my horse, Missy, changed my life in a contest that Horse and Rider magazine is hosting on their website. I really want to become one of the finalists. Not so much to win prizes, but to get the word out about our hoof recovery center. If we should win prizes, we could raffle them to purchase hay and feed.
So I'm really hoping you could go to the H&R website (that link will take you right to Missy's story) rate the story and vote for us!
Please vote once per day until the deadline. This would be a great way to help out our horses without leaving your chair or spending a dollar!
The true story that I submitted for the contest is below if you'd like to read it here and then decide if you'd like to vote. Thank you so much for taking the time to help us out!
In 1996, a scruffy little 8 year old quarter horse came into my life. Within months, I dropped a twenty year smoking habit and fifty extra pounds, while Missy developed into a beautiful bay mare. We earned awards and were pictured in an AQHA publication for riding hundreds of miles together. But while I worked in a basement office, I yearned for an occupation involving horses.
Then at 15, Missy came up lame and I was hurdled toward the emerging changes to traditional hoof care often referred to as bare hoof trimming. Missy’s unnaturally shod hooves led me to my new profession as an Equine Hoof Rehabilitation Specialist and the owner of my own business, Heel First Landings, Inc.
Before this sweet mare came into my life, I had rarely traveled, but my quest to learn more about equine lameness and corrective hoof trimming took me all over the US to mentor with other trimming instructors.
Overwhelmed with customers, I began offering workshops teaching the craft to others, and published a professionally filmed DVD, Discovering Your Horse’s Natural Hooves – How to Trim the Barefoot Horse.
Missy, at 23 has seen many horses move into her pasture, most with hoof ailments that destined them to be euthanized - each rehabilitated back to soundness without shoes.
Helping horses has become a passion that evolved into an official non-profit equine rescue called Rainier Equine Hoof Recovery Center. My horse saved my life so I could save the lives of many equines!
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
Monday, September 12, 2011
September 2011 Hoof Trimming Clinic
Sunday, August 21, 2011
Rehabilitation of OTTB
Thursday, June 23, 2011
My Advice for the New Trimmers:
Recently I was contacted by someone interested in becoming a professional barefoot trimmer. I responded with this email only slightly modified for blogging.
I applaud you for removing yourself from that shoeing course. People are so interesting when it comes to shoes. Yesterday, I attended a local barrel racing competition. I was there to trim a customer’s horse who lives a ways from me so we met there for this appointment.
She had sold one of her horses to another competitor some months ago and that horse happened to be there as well. I was introduced to her former horse’s new owner and the horse had shoes on. That owner smiled in my face and bragged about how he fixed his horse so its feet never hurt and he could ride him anytime he wanted.
My customer and I walked away and under my breath I muttered, continuing his line of thought, “Screw the horse, it’s about me getting to ride, right!”
We had just been discussing how ALL farrier reference books recommend frequently allowing the horse some time out of shoes. Why would that recommendation be in those books? Because it's well documented that shoes damage the hooves over the long term.
I get so tired of hearing, “My horse can’t go without shoes.” Well, could that be because the shoes have wrecked your horse’s hooves and now they are too weak to support themselves?
I often hear that the walls of hooves left unshod will wear faster than the hoof can grow it. That's true when the hoof is trimmed incorrectly which most are, but not true if the hoof is correctly trimmed and growing at a healthy angle with healthy connective tissue (laminae).
I saw an ad recently showing 3 different hooves, all very poorly trimmed and 2 shod. The ad was for this band that is tacked around the outside of the hoofwall to relieve pain. But the hooves wouldn't be in pain if they weren't so poorly trimmed and shod. And the band does nothing except mask the pain caused by the condition the hooves are in. Why not just fix the hoof with the trim? I never can get that logic. Wreck the hooves and use "this product" to mask the pain so you can ride the horse which will continue causing damage to the hooves until the horse can't even support its own weight, then put it down. Common Scenario.
The same can be said for some shoeing systems-such as NBS. I've heard that even the developer of that system wished he'd had never shared it because it's so unnatural for the horse. The few farrier's who are competent at applying those shoes do okay, but there are so many out there applying that systems who really botch the hooves up horribly and leave horses in serious trouble. I've pulled so many of those NBS shoes off dead lame horses, I get angry just catching a glimpse of one of those shoes on or off a horse!
So where you live tells me you are up against more peer pressure to go with shoes than I am in my area. We do have quite few open-minded horse owners in this region. Unfortunately not enough compitent trimmers to care for all the owners who want to go barefoot, but that's a good problem to have in some respects.
At that barrel racing event, I ran into 4 of my customers whose horse are barefoot and all raved about how well their horses are doing without the shoes. That’s always nice to hear. And other’s here it as well and begin questioning their line of thought regarding hoof care.
There is a lot to learn when considering to trim professionally. Not just because you’ll need to know and understand everything that can go wrong with transitioning hooves from shod to bare, but because you’ll have lots of questions to answer.
My DVD shows the natural maintenance trim from start to finish on several horses and a donkey. So it is also a good place to start. It’s professionally filmed in High Definition and I’ve been told that it is one of the best (hoof trimming) teaching DVD’s available. DVD's by other professional trimmers are packed with great info, but it’s difficult to see exactly what being done with the tools on more "homemade" DVD’s.
Much of what I feel I know to be right about natural hoofcare, I learned from Pete Ramey, and from my own research. I was able to get into a trimming clinic with Pete when he visited our area back in 2004, I believe it was, and then I went to Georgia the following year to learn from him directly. With only 2 students (one from the U.K.) we were fortunate to get one-on-one instruction. That will not be a part of any other professional trimmer's training as he only offered a couple of those clinics that I know of. I realize how priviledged I was to be part of one of them.
To really become the best professional trimmer you can be, I recommend avoiding any organization that dictates your trim and threatens to toss you out if your trimming methods don't adhere exactly to what they teach. Different hooves call for different trimming strategies. Learning to read hooves and knowing how to approach each one with your tools is the better than a one-size fits all trim when you're rehabilitating hooves.
Apply for a membership with the AHA American Hoof Association so you can be in contact with many other experienced trimmers. As you go, you can work on getting certified by that organization. It’s not a school, it's a screening organization to filter the hacks and only certify the true professionals and list them on their website.
Take everything you learn from each person and toss out what doesn’t seem right and stick with what does. Just like horse training - which you'll want to also become adept at. In most cases, you can't trim a horse who refused to allow you access to the bottoms of their hooves. (Although there are times when you do have to trim a horse without gaining access to the bottom of his hooves.) Let me just say, you will have to weed through a TON of misinformation.
You don't have to agree with every trimmer out there. You have to do much of your research on your own. I don't agree with some of the trimmers for whom I have the highest respect.
Take abscesses for instance. I honestly believe I’m one of the few professional trimmers out there who really understands abscesses. I don't believe they are caused by trauma/bruising. And there is no such thing as white line "disease" or "infection." Those terms imply that there may be a cure. Laminae is either live and healthy or dead and gone and there is no cure for what is no longer viable. So soaking in chemicals in our attempts to cure WLD is probably only going to damage the healthy laminae attachement that is trying to grow to the ground with new hoofwall.
WL separation is that is caused by flare. Flare walls cause stretching of the white line which can lead to separation of the white line (dead laminae) and then leaves the hoof vunerable to abscessing either in the wall or the bar. When I trim an abscessed hoof, I see what we have come to term as WLD. But as I said, it's not diseased, it's dead.
When a hoof is affected by an abscess in an overgrown bar (bar is an extension of hoof wall) the abscess often invades the much of, or the entire hoof. Abscesses can cause problems in a hoof for years if the horse is shod and even after it goes barefoot can take years to completely fester out. Not usually, but I have seen that situation and the cause if typically flare.
WL separation is that is caused by flare. Flare walls cause stretching of the white line which can lead to separation of the white line (dead laminae) and then leaves the hoof vunerable to abscessing either in the wall or the bar. When I trim an abscessed hoof, I see what we have come to term as WLD. But as I said, it's not diseased, it's dead.
When a hoof is affected by an abscess in an overgrown bar (bar is an extension of hoof wall) the abscess often invades the much of, or the entire hoof. Abscesses can cause problems in a hoof for years if the horse is shod and even after it goes barefoot can take years to completely fester out. Not usually, but I have seen that situation and the cause if typically flare.
Review: Flare, (not "flair" as some trimmers spell the word:0) stretches the white line to the point of separation of the white line, then abscesses get their start either in the white line of the hoofwall, and/or the white line of the bar which is an extension of the wall.
An abscess in the bar can affect the entire solar papillae, which causes the sole to separate from the hoof, but new sole develops underneath the sloughing sole - like a blister. Simple!
Bar abscesses are so often misdiagnosed as navicular, founder, white line disease and a myriad of other hoof disorders which then puts a horse into corrective shoeing or an early grave. So sad. But we are here to fix that!
All my best in your journey into a profession that is basically not accepted by the majority of horse owners, farriers, or vets, because we humans get so stuck in what they do because it's been what they've always done.
My best advice is to try to get to the horses while they are still young. Before the damage has been done...
...and have fun!:0)
pat
pat
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Hoof Care Professionals and You
As barefoot horses become more popular, which is awesome for the horses! More and more barefoot trimmers are getting into the business. Most have had lots of training and experience and are very good at what the do. Some are not as well trained or experienced and not so good at what they do. It's a horse owner's responsibility to pick up their horse's hooves and examine them frequently and ask questions if what they see doesn't appear to be right. Just as there are good and poor farriers/horseshoers, we are all hoof care professionals and some don't have the knack for it that others do.
Some don't recognize hoof issues like founder and abscesses and hoof ailments are often misdiagnosed so it's the owners responsibility to determine when a veterinarian should be called in to check their horses.
Hoof care professionals, in some cases may know more than your vet about hoof related illnesses, but we are NOT veterinarians and it's not even legal in the state of Washington for hoofcare professional to diagnose problems like laminitis/founder. If we suspect serious hoof issues, we need to recommend a vet be called in.
I have to write this because I'm seeing so much of the opposite going on and walking into cases with horses who have been under a farrier or trimmers care for months even years and finding issues that are usually associated with serious neglect.
Ultimately the horse's hoof care is the owner's responsibility. If you don't like what you're seeing call for a second opinion. If that bothers your hoof care professional, replace him/her. Second opinions are typical in other fields and we shouldn't feel guilty about making sure our horses are getting the best care possible and that our money isn't being wasted on anything less. If your trimmer/shoer objects, get's angry and quits, or assures you that they already know it all, then they don't know what they don't know and they are the most dangerous ones to have working on your horses!
Some don't recognize hoof issues like founder and abscesses and hoof ailments are often misdiagnosed so it's the owners responsibility to determine when a veterinarian should be called in to check their horses.
Hoof care professionals, in some cases may know more than your vet about hoof related illnesses, but we are NOT veterinarians and it's not even legal in the state of Washington for hoofcare professional to diagnose problems like laminitis/founder. If we suspect serious hoof issues, we need to recommend a vet be called in.
I have to write this because I'm seeing so much of the opposite going on and walking into cases with horses who have been under a farrier or trimmers care for months even years and finding issues that are usually associated with serious neglect.
Ultimately the horse's hoof care is the owner's responsibility. If you don't like what you're seeing call for a second opinion. If that bothers your hoof care professional, replace him/her. Second opinions are typical in other fields and we shouldn't feel guilty about making sure our horses are getting the best care possible and that our money isn't being wasted on anything less. If your trimmer/shoer objects, get's angry and quits, or assures you that they already know it all, then they don't know what they don't know and they are the most dangerous ones to have working on your horses!
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