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RE: [RC] Ground Control - Smith, Dave

Karen:

It sounds like your horse goes barefoot.  I have a young barefoot
mustang who has never been shoed and has great feet.  I'm wondering
whether I can condition him and compete in endurance barefoot?  Or
should I consider using boots?  I really don't want to nail anything
onto his feet.

--Dave

-----Original Message-----
From: ridecamp-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:ridecamp-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Dream Weaver
Sent: Thursday, August 24, 2006 9:57 AM
To: ridecamp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [RC] Ground Control

At 08:59 AM 8/24/2006, you wrote:
Karen, do you still use Ground Control shoes on Chief?  (he was the
one, =
right?)  My youngest is just starting and he is beating his front =
fetlocks into bloody pulp.  We haven't been able to see him do it and I
=
think I feel it only or mostly at a walk (how weird is that?).  Anyway,
=
I tried the GC's on my older geldings and they didn't seem to work, but
=
I was thinking maybe this would be a fix for the youngest.

Hi Dyane -- I have not been using them, but if I did decide to put 
shoes back on for whatever reason they would be my first 
choice.  They need to be applied correctly in order for them to work, 
most of the time when I saw them on other horses they were not.  The 
horse needs to have a good thick hoofwall that is not prone to flares.

If you do use them, ask the farrier to file the sharp edge off of the 
bottom edge.  I had horses hit themselves with the shoes just in the 
trailer and draw blood.  Rounding the bottom edge helped with that a
lot.

I never had any of the problems reported by others with the 
shoes.  They held up well even on 5 day multiday rides.  I wouldn't 
suggest trying to do much more than and some conditioning rides on a 
set, but then you probably shouldn't expect most shoes to last longer 
than that.

The GC's only come in certain sizes, if there isn't a size that works 
for your horse there are other brands of plastic shoes that come in a 
lot more sizes and shapes.

With young horses that hit themselves -- that may be because their 
feet aren't really balanced but it could also be simply that they 
just have not learned how to carry themselves well yet.  We used to 
joke about Chief being "helicopter legs" because they were all over 
the place.  That is where doing lessons and arena work can really 
help, as it takes a long time to get a horse in shape and develop the 
muscles and mental focus to be able to move the most efficiently for 
extended periods.

Karen


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=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
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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