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Re: [RC] tripping horse - Sharon Levasseur

Why does heel pain cause folding in the rear?
-Sharon L.


Quoting Don Huston <donhuston@xxxxxxx>:

Many times a horse is tripping in the front or folding in the rear
because he has sore heels. Sore heels makes a horse shorten his
stride and set the hoof down toe first. Watch your horse walk on
level ground and see how he sets his front hooves down. Healthy
hooves land flat or slightly heel first at the walk. Many other
things can make a horse shorten his stride and land toe first like
chronic tight or sore muscles, old injuries, too tight girth, too
tight or binding breast collar, saddle bars jabbing the shoulder
blades to name a few. If he walks toe first with or without a saddle
its probably heels, muscles or injuries. So check'um over, squeeze,
poke and flex for sore parts, loosen your gear, swap saddles and
pads, etc. If all that stuff is okay then I would get a hoof tester
(big pinchers) and start on the rears cause they are the most likely
to NOT be sore. You start out lightly pinching all around the hoof
using the same amount of pressure. Start on the front of each hoof
and pinch between inside (not on) the shoe on the sole and outside on
the horn without causing the horse to flinch. Pinch around and along
the quarters and last on the bar next to the frog at the heel. Do the
other side of the hoof. Then up the pressure a little and go all
around again. Keep upping the pressure until you get a consistent but
slight flinch. Try the other rear and see if the pressure is about
the same. Try to remember how the pressure feels on your palms
against the pincher handles. Move to the fronts but start lightly
again, if the heels are sore the horse will flinch way before you get
to the pressure you had on the rears. Tripping can be fixed and
finding the cause is half way to fixing it ;-).
Don Huston

At 09:14 PM 6/13/2006 Tuesday, you wrote:
My husband has a Tenn. Walker that trips.  Last ride the horse
tripped so bad (while walking), when I looked back, both horse and
husband were flat out on the ground.  This is the first time the
horse has gone all the way down, but he skins his knees a good 2-3
times a year.

When my horse trips, I tend to give him his head, so he is not
slamming his mouth into the bit, my trainer suggests I keep pressure
on the reins, that it will 'catch' him and also make him realize
that tripping really does hurt and maybe he will be more careful.
Ideas????

Just curious, would you all rather have a horse that trips, or one
that does 180s?  (This is the debate in our household.  Maybe we
need different horses?...Life insurance?....Saddle seat
belts?.....Velcro?....)

-Stacy

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Replies
[RC] tripping horse, Stacy Baxter
Re: [RC] tripping horse, Don Huston