Wow, Thank You all!!! I had already given up hope...
Okay. As for diet, she eats hay, soaked for an hour ( to get rid of eventually present fructanes), 300 grams of straight rolled oats, divided into 3 meals, and in the evening, to make it a bit more, about 200 grams dry weight of beet pulp WITHOUT molasses added, of course, 50 grams of soybean meal and 50 grams of linseed. She has been nibbling on grass all winter long, we were lucky enough to have some, so the spring grass will not hurt her, besides, out-on-grass-time is limited anyway (the usual procedure, first half an hour, then 45 minutes and so on). Then, there is not much grass anyway, it becomes dry lot after about a week with three horses on, it's only a paddock, about an acre in size. And she is in ideal condition, not overweight, not underweight, about a 4,5.
I've been reading even more about the barefoot trim, but it won't be possible, not for now, anyway, since it's required to have the horse out 24/7 in a herd. The herd I have, but out 24/7 I won't do without a shelter for them. And unfortunately there is none. So that would be only possible during the summer months.
So we're in need of shoeing her correctly. Like I said, the farrier I have now is very willing to do what I say, and when he does so, she walks just fine. But he is absolutely scared to take off heel. Without taking off heel, she, as mentioned, will bear weight on the hurting coffin bone.
The pair of shoes he made when she was galopping and trotting just fine, were very close to the ones Redden makes. But the last ones, the ones she wears now, were just not right and never became right either. I didn't like them from the get go, and I told him so. Needless to say we argued.
She had rotated in the left, now, I'm afraid, also in the right, since now she's more sensitive on the right than the left, and has been growing also a bit more heel there.
She is walking in and out of her stall during the day, slow, but she does so without being forced. IF forced, she even trots(only slight encouragment necessary). She is not much down, depending on how long she was out, she takes a nap in the afternoon, but gets up right before dinner time to do another round in the yard. Feet are sometimes warm, then next day not. It seems the first few steps are the hardest for her, after that she walks, slow, but steady, without that strange "support" from the hind legs. Turning is painful, especially to the left, she rolls back rather then turns normally.
Depending on how he trims her before shoeing, she walks absolutely clear right after, just to become worse again after about a week or so. But she does her off and on days. Strange.
I will try to get some usuable pictures tomorrow and post them. We are overdue for a visit from Pasquale right now, mainly because I had not decided as of yet which way to go.
Another thing puzzles me, tho. The barefoot people say she needs to move, Redden (sorry for mentioning him all the time[
]) says stall rest is necessary. For her mind it is for sure better to be out in the paddock with her buddies.
Oh, forgot to say, to Hunter, I am in Italy, and I am a firm believer that shoeing is not an evil and in some cases necessary, be it for protection, or corrective shoeing, but I also think that, if at all possible, barefoot is the natural thing to do.