Everyday Shoeing

Discussion in 'Everyday Horseshoeing' started by gary evans, Mar 8, 2012.

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    Platerforge Guest

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    racehorse straight off the track, pulled racing plates and shod with aluminum shoes
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    Cody Gilreath Member

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    That view makes it look like he has a lot of heel, maybe under run.
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    Cody Gilreath Member

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    Or do I need my glasses on :(

    I try to do without them...
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    slowshoe Member

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    These ones are hiding.




    Sent from my LG-P930 using Tapatalk 2

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    Platerforge Guest

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    that heel had a piece missing out of it; making that view look like that
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    Cody Gilreath Member

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    Ok.

    Well, I was looking at not only the angle at the heel, but also it appears to have a little flare back there and from my experience a flare normally is excess length on the bottom.
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    smitty88 Well-Known Member

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    the angle of the photo aint that good
    I wish people would take better photos
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    Tom Bloomer Well-Known Member

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    Need to work on your M/L boot balance - both boots appear low on the inside!
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    Gabino Active Member

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    Hey,friends. How each of you could manage this case? In your opinion,what's the origin of the problem and what's the solution.
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    Gabino Active Member

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    david a hall Moderator

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    He is beyond repair. the pedal bone is angled downwards and will have some re absorption on the dorsal and distal surface. the laminal junction has broken down, both North South and East West, this has allowed infection and long term necrosis of the underlying structures. The sole will be microns thick and no chance of getting that to grow. The suspensory is under tenssion.
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    Gabino Active Member

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    What shoeing do you proposing,David? You know I'm very interested in this type of crack.
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    david a hall Moderator

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    Some thing to stop the remains of the pedal bone being compressed against the ground. The cracks are untreatable in my experience with shoeing. Maybe cutting them out and filling may a solution. But interupted laminal junction, necrotic tissue causing the white line to allow pathogens into the sensitive areas and almost certainly granulation that will prevent normal growth of these structures means it isnt a fixable project.
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    smitty88 Well-Known Member

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    David I think that foot would come around after 4/5 shoeings
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    david a hall Moderator

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    Be nice if it did for the horses sake.
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    Platerforge Guest

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    I had one take 4 years to come around; because the horse didn't grow much foot per shoeing cycle.
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    Tejun Member

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    For financial reasons a vet is out of the question. Any advice?
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    Tejun Member

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    horsefootlines.jpg
    RED LINE=Pastern entering foot
    SECOND RED LINE ON HOOF WALL= upper 3rd of hoof wall angle doesn't match the pastern
    BLUE LINE= where i think the dorsal surface of the coffin bone is??????? (not sure guessing)
    WHITE LINE= Center line from where I think the deep flexor tendon attaches to the coffin bone (based on if coffin bone moved?)
    GREEN LINE= where I may position the future shoe



    what do you think?
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    Gabino Active Member

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    No..the coffin bone is more vertical..like a club foot. These cases of toe crack not are than simple. His study is not finished yet.

    I believe I will post this question in Booted of barefoot pages...I will get more answers than here :whistle:
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    gary evans old and slow

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    Interesting post... if only we all had x-ray specs!
    I think your blue line is way out and your white line is slightly too far back.
    I'd guess the dorsal surface of the P3 to be somewhere around here, but what do I know?
    :unsure:

    horsefootlines2.jpg

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