missyclare
Posted : 3/17/2013 4:13:02 AM
Ha, ha, I must the Canuk and its late here and feeling a bit loopy myself, lol! The reason she trips on the rocks is because they hurt her feet, simple as that. It is pain that causes the stumbling, even in the face of her being a distracted youngster, though I wouldn't rule out excercises to make her more aware of the ground and watching where she puts her feet on cue, until she learns to always be careful. She'll need a good balanced trim every 4 weeks and homework to get on top of the pathology instead of perpetuating it. You'll need to do your homework of fighting thrush and promoting movement to develop a stronger hoof. Pea gravel is an excellent developer (4" deep) spread around the water tank, doorways, gates, loafing areas. When you put a ruler across the bottom of the hoof and measure down to the bottom of the groove at the tip of the frog and you get anything less than a 1/2", then protection of boots and padding are must, 22/7 with time to dry out. P3 will not remediate from changes caused by inflammation, it will only destruct. So, boots are an important investment in her future hoof health. They will also greatly promote concavity and will find you "arrived" much sooner. Whether its laminitis, or long toe, the effect is similar. With laminitis, the white line around the sole gets darker than creamy yellow and looks inflamed, is letting the bone go down on thin sole. (white line stretches wider than 1/8" all the way around the hoof.) With a long toe, the torque at breakover pulls the toe oval shaped, thins the sole, stretches the white line in some places and lets the bone's nose down on the sole again. Both of these scenarios are great sources of pain and both of them mean that balance is needed in the trim and that there isn't enough concavity to protect the bone and boots are needed. Another source of pain is flare. The chipping is her self-trimming and trying to get rid of the overgrowth. The cracking is a more serious scenario of the chipping. Flares hurt! Like bending your finger nail backwards and walking on it. Disengaging the flare with a good maintained bevel will give immediate relief, even right away with the licking and chewing the second you set her hoof back down, not to mention the noticeable flow she has in her stride while walking away. Immediate relief. Always fight thrush. Nothing can build and develop if its being eaten away. Consider pea gravel (4" deep) in gateways, around the water trough, loafing areas...great developer. You want her to have rock crushing feets out there on the trail, then get her to do homework on rocks when she's not on the trail. (her homework) If she doesn't have a 1/2" of concavity or more, then she needs boots on the trail and most of the day if not on gravel. (boot during the day whether riding or not and off at night in the stall kinda of scenario) It will take a couple of months or more to grow a thick sole again, provided she has good balancing trims, keeping the bevel maintained, good nutrition to feed a stronger hoof, lots of movement in boots to promote concavity and protect. A slow introduction to grass in the spring and a muzzle if needed with a full compliment of hay at night. It could be that she is wearing the pathology of laminitic effects of past years on her feet. Horses can sit on the edge of founder for years. Regardless of all 3 pathologies, (laminitis, flare and flare forward) these measures mentioned above will have her walking away from it for evermore and laughing in the face of those rocks....barefoot. She's young. She doesn't have the serious/detrimental pathology that older horses have.....go for it...develop the hoof that will be rock crushing and laugh in the face of ANY nasties for the rest of her life. Hope this helps.....