3equines
Posted : 6/19/2010 9:34:18 AM
I would call the farrier back out to investigate!
Is there any heat coming from around a certain hoof or just above the hoof? If there is a hot nail (infection from nail in the sensitive area behind the white line), stone bruise, or abscess then one hoof would feel hotter than the other, with a pounding pulse. The best you can do in the meantime would be to give your horse Bute or Banamine twice a day and try cool epsom salt soaks (easier said than done) or running cold water from a hose over the hoof for 10-15 minutes several times a day.
If you let your horse's feet go too long between trimmings and shoeings you are inviting all kinds of complicaitons. The horse can start walking unnaturally on long toes; the tendons and coffin bone can move to compensate for this, and the sole will grow thicker in the distorted areas where perssure is being placed. When the hoof is trimmed waay back to a 'perfect' hoof then a lot of tender sole is exposed and the horse also is forced to place its wieght on a new area and use the stretched tendons differently.
When BF and I have to handle a horse that is way overgrown in the hoof (thankfully none of ours but the Haflingers I get in my care for training have horribly neglected feet when they arrive) then we do not take all of the overgrown hoof off at once. We will trim in 2 to 3-week intervals, to give the horse time to adjust to walking upright again and let the sole harden. Usually there is so much extra toe that we can actually set shoes every 2 weeks and trim off up to the old nail holes each time.
I will have some pictures of an anonymous horse soon, we are taking on a new one who has not been trimmed since last summer. This, of course, is an extreme case.