First, don't panic! Your horse can be sound again. What even vets and farriers don't understand is that poor hoof form is the PRIMARY reason for navicular pain. Even more importantly, GOOD hoof form can and will reverse the damage. How long this will take depends on the extent of the damage.
Q2. My horse has red spots through his white hooves and is sometimes sore after a trim.
What is that about?
Answer: If you horse is tender and/or has red marks through the hoof wall the most likely culprit is a laminitic flareup. This is very common and is the result of any of a variety of stresses on the horse's body. The first thing to consider is what the horse is eating. Get a good vitamin/mineral supplement and keep sugars to a minimum. Exercise with boots for comfort. Your horse can become sound and happy with proper management. Q3. Is it true that my horse will go lame if I take off his shoes? Answer:
Q4. Is it true that my horse will founder and die if I take off his shoes?
Answer:
Absolutely NOT. This is a scare tactic used by some uninformed individuals to prevent people from exposing their lack of knowledge. Not only is it not true but many horses who have been diagnosed as 'hopeless' are being cured by taking OFF the shoes and providing the horse with a proper trim, sufficient exercise, and the good nutrition needed to support healthy hoof growth.
Q5. How long will my horse be sore after I remove his shoes?
Answer:
Every case is different. Some horses will come out of shoes and never take a bad step. Others have significant internal damage and for them the transition to soundness may take many months. Still others are sometimes uncomfortable under some circumstances. In any case, if your horse is uncomfortable barefoot the best thing to do, along with implementing any nutritional, lifestyle, and treatment recommendations we make, is put BOOTS on your horse. There are numerous choices these days making a good fitting boot an option for most everyone.
Q6. My horse has a toe crack and my farrier says that shoes are needed in order to keep the crack from getting worse. Is this true?
Answer:
No. Chronic toe cracks, or any crack for that matter (by chronic we mean that the crack remains after trimming and only gets worse) is the result of poor trimming practices. The crack would and should disappear with a correctly balanced trim irrespective of the shoes.
Q7. What is the difference between laminitis and founder?
Answer:
Lots of people use the terms "laminitis" and "founder" interchangeably. Technically, laminitis is inflamation of the laminae. The laminae may become inflamed as a result of a variety of reasons including changes to diet, hormones or possibly recent vaccinations. This inflammation may pass with only slight discomfort to the horse and once the offending factor is put right the hoof is able to recover.
Founder refers to a specific situation in which the coffin bone and the outer hoof wall are no longer paralell as they should be. Typically, severe laminitis has resulted in such a weakening of the laminae that the hoof founders, in other words the coffin bone seperates from the hoof wall.
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