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| Grooming and Health Advice on grooming and general health care for horses |
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#1 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: 10-02-07
Posts: 30
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Hoof care
I think many new owners do not think about how much it takes to tend to a horse. Its a big animal to start with. If you take of your own grooming, should you not do the same for your horse? I thought this might help the new people getting into Equine. Think about how good you feel after a long day, and need some downtime to take care of yourself, and that wonderful feeling you get, dont you want the same for your horse?
![]() Ten Horse Hoof Care Tips Healthy hooves are literally the foundation for everything you want to enjoy with your horse. Hoof care isn't time-consuming; it's just a matter of building healthy-hoof practices into your daily management. (by Chris Volk) 1. Pick out your horse's feet. This may sound pretty basic, but it's the single most important thing you can do for his hooves--and I encounter a surprising number of owners who think picking out the feet is the farrier's job. Your horse gets a head start on healthy hooves, and (as I'll explain) you get a chance to take early action on many common hoof problems, if you pick out his feet...
2. Establish what's normal. While handling your horse's feet to pick them out, notice their temperature; when everything's OK, they'll feel very slightly warm (more soon on what the variations can mean). Take a moment to locate the digital pulse with two fingers pressed against the back of his pastern; you're interested not in the rate of the pulse, but in its strength under normal conditions. Check the frog, which has about the texture and firmness of a new rubber eraser when it's healthy. Don't be alarmed, though, if everything else looks OK but the frog appears to be peeling off--most horses shed the frog at least twice a year, sometimes more often. Your farrier's regular trimming of the frog may have prevented you from noticing this natural process before. 3. When picking out the feet, look for signs of...
5. If your horse is shod, check his shoes each time you pick out his feet. Look for:
7. Help your horse grow the best possible hooves. Some horses naturally have better hooves than others. Your horse may already be producing the best hoof he's capable of, or the following steps may enable him to do better.
There are a couple of things you can do to minimize this pattern:
10. Protect your horse's hooves during hauling. Without covering for his heels, he can easily step on the edge of a shoe and pull it partially loose--then spend the remainder of the journey standing on the nails of the sprung or shifted shoe. Another vulnerable area is the coronet band: the rim of tissue at the top of each hoof that generates new hoof-wall growth. Injury to this area (for instance, if he steps on himself while struggling to keep his balance in a moving trailer) can interrupt hoof growth in the area below the affected spot. The solution: Either old-fashioned shipping bandages and bell boots (large enough to cover the bulbs of your horse's heels and the backs of his shoes) or good quality full-coverage Velcro-fastened shipping boots reduce the likelihood of these problems. |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: 09-08-07
Posts: 51
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Its also important to make sure your horse knows how to pick up his feet properly for ANYONE. If you are sick and your horse needs his feet done you can't be sure who might need to handle him. And hoof maintenance is much harder if your horse won't pick up his feet or you have to worry about being kicked/bitten the whole time.
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#3 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: 08-10-07
Posts: 47
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And remember to not dig in so much in the triangle part of the hoof or called the frog. It is a very delicate part of the horse that they might kick when that part is touch. A qualified farrier would clean this part of the hoof for safety.
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#4 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: 08-11-07
Posts: 63
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I doubt someone could hurt the frog with a normal hoof pick. You would need a knife to cut the frog. The frog will natural slough off pieces as it grows. These pieces can be pulled of (gently) if you want.
__________________
Quarter Horses, nothing is better! |
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#5 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: 01-01-08
Posts: 57
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This is an excellent post. It is so thorough and answers many questions about horses and their shoes. I am wondering if their is a suggested time of day to do this. Should it always be done in the mornings? Evenings? Should it be routine or can it be done whenever?
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