Friday, August 2, 2013

Starting Sassy barefoot

8-2-13

 


I started Sassy on her HGM barefoot journey today. You can find the HGM web site at http://www.barefoottrimming.com/  I am interested in this method because it seems pretty easy to do. I think I can do it.  It makes a lot of sense to me that less is more.  We simulate the ground by just taking off a little bit at a time. This keeps the hoof trimmed as if the horse walked 30 miles a day.  
 
Sassy has never been lame or had any issues with her feet.  5 years ago she did cut off her left hind outside heel bulb so there is some deformation on that hoof and frog. Sassy is 8 years old now and it has never bothered her.
 
Here are some photos of Her hooves.
 
These are the left front sole, with and without shoes. The pictures with out shoes where taken about 2 hours after her shoes where removed.
 

It is amazing how different the hoof looks after the shoes were removed. Things where so frantic I did not really look carefully.  It was hard to take pictures and keep track of what foot is witch.
 
Anyway using the HGM as I understand it I should wait 3 weeks before trimming or rasping anything away. From the above photos you can tell she is very grown out. Her bars are long and coming off. The bars are uneven, the right side is more forward then the left side.  You can see the sole ridge where the hoof wants to be.
 
From My Farrier 
 
 It was very odd to just ask the Farrier to remove her shoes and not trim anything. I told him about my experiment and he was very happy to give me advice. He believes in the barefoot theory, but he said most people do not keep up with trimming their own horses.  He told me I would have a lot of hoof to work with as her shoes have been on for about 8 and a half weeks. She is pretty grown out.  He also told me to start slow and take off less then more to begin with.   
 
I was very happy he did not think I was crazy for learning to do this for myself.
 
Here are her right front sole views.
 

 
My biggest concern with this hoof is the deep crack in the frog. she has always had it and I have treated it with NO Thrush for a while now.  I may have to try something else. You can slightly see the sole ridge, her bars are coming off, the frog is small and pinched.  I cannot wait to get my bevel on!

 
 
These are the left hind. You can see the deformed heel bulb and frog. There is some hoof wall that is a bit weird also.

 
This is her deformed hoof. It looks bad in this picture. I see it all the time so it does not look bad to me. We will see how this hoof turns out.
 
Here is the right hind.

 
So on this hoof her bars are way forward to me. I feel like her frog is pretty big, but her toe is long. Pretty much the same story on all her feet. Grown out toes pulling everything forward.
 
Left front hoof, front view.   Sorry not much flat ground around the barn only gravel driveway.

 
 
Below is the right front foot, front view.
 

 
Left hind front view is next.
 
 



 
 
Right hind front view.
 



I was planning on going to a show this weekend but I am beat. I will go to the fun show on Wednesday night! 


I think next time I will put all views of the same foot together. I will also make some type of marker to put next to the hoof so I know exactly what hoof I am looking at!   The hardest part is taking the pictures.  

Thank you for reading my hoof blog.  
 


8 comments:

  1. A very interesting experiment! I'm looking forward to seeing the transformation.

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  2. I am looking forward to following your blog! I have been using the HGM trim since February of this year. I have been SO VERY happy with the results and the soundness that my horses are experiencing. Thank you for taking the time to do this blog! It is appreciated. ;)

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    1. Thank you Jen. I hope to get the same results you have.

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  3. This is great! I love this method. :) thanks for sharing....

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  4. The only thing I found that really works on thrush in the central sulcus of the frog and is really safe is an aqueous chlorine dioxide solution (not sure what the brand name is in your area), mixed 50:50 with white vinegar. It is apparently effective on bacteria, fungus and viruses (and I think this is why it works well - the other treatments weren't able to eliminate all three). At the time I used it I was battling white line disease as well as thrush. It fixed both.
    Get zip lock bags - just bigger than sandwich size, think they're medium - place one bag inside the other (so you have a double layer of plastic, because the horse tends to puncture the outside layer with its hoof against the ground, the inside one usually stays undamaged).
    Put double bag on hoof, pour in some solution mix from bottle so it covers half way up hoof or more, tie string around fetlock/top of bag.
    Leave horses standing tied for about 20 minutes. By using cheap plastic bags I can soak every hoof on all three horses at the same time (I couldn't justify buying 12 hoof soaking boots at $90 each!)
    Remove bag, tip solution on the grass (its OK, very safe), chuck plastic bags in the bin. I treat twice a week for a month, then as required if conditions make it thrushy again.

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    1. Thanks FionaB. I will Have to look into that solution. You can see how bad her thrush is in my latest blog! I can stick the hoof pick all the way in there!

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