[RC] Hoof Separation - April JohnsonI have a question about hoof separation. My horse, Tanna, has some hoof separation along the inside of his right front foot. I knew it was happening, but I didn't think it was as bad as it really was. The separation goes deeper than I thought. When he came up lame at the trot, mostly sound at the left lead canter, and falling down lame on the right lead canter, I took him to my vet. Vet found the hoof separation goes deeper than I thought. He did some elimination testing and concluded that the hoof separation is the reason for him being lame. Vet's recommendation is to have another vet (my vet is leaving for 10 days) dremel away the outer hoof wall up to where the hoof separation stops. Then have shoes put on him to support the hoof and protect the sole right next to where there is no hoof wall. Leave the shoes on for 6 weeks, then pull the shoes and check everything and re-evaluate. Of course, no riding until this is all said and done. Here's the rub. Tanna's barefoot. I'd like to keep him barefoot. If shoes are the BEST way to go with no other comparable solution, I'm willing to do that until this problem is taken care of (1-2 shoeings), but I'm looking at other options. I can do the dremeling myself. Vet says the one reason he does it is because people are afraid of/aren't used to using the dremel. But the main reason the vet does it (instead of a farrier or the owner) is that a lot of the horses they have to do it to are scared of the dremel noise to the point of needing to be sedated so it can be done. I have used my dremel enough on the horses for neither of them to be surprised or scared of the noise and so that I am comfortable doing the work myself. Instead of a shoe, I was thinking of using some sort of hoof reconstruction material. But since I want to keep Tanna barefoot, I would need a material that would flex enough so that the natural movement of the hoof wouldn't dislodge it and it needs to hold up to being stepped on (duh ;-)). So, farriers and do-it-yourself owners, how feasible is my idea of using a hoof reconstruction material? What material would you recommend and where do I obtain it? (Please don't say, ask your farrier as I don't have a farrier.) I've put a few pictures on a webpage if anybody's interested in looking. (http://chevalendurance.tripod.com/hoofseparation.html) Also, if you have any other options to offer besides shoes or reconstruction, please offer those as well. Boots I've already thought of, but do not want to use boots all day every day for 6-8 weeks due to rubs, losing boots, and keeping the foot covered and deprived of air for so long. Nothing will probably be done until Monday because I can't obtain the reconstruction material or get the farrier to put shoes on (if I go that way) until then or later anyway. In the meantime, Tanna and Serts are confined to a 1/4 acre paddock to minimize Tanna's running around. Please reply privately to ridecamp_mail (at) jadawn (dot) com Thank you, April Nashville, TN =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Ridecamp is a service of Endurance Net, http://www.endurance.net. Information, Policy, Disclaimer: http://www.endurance.net/Ridecamp Subscribe/Unsubscribe http://www.endurance.net/ridecamp/logon.asp Ride Long and Ride Safe!! =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
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