I've had that happen when old nails were broke off inside the foot when pulling the shoe and there was no external evidence that a piece of the nail was left behind. What's worse is when that happens and it deflects the nail you are driving into the lamina instead of to the outside.
You're nail holes could've been over the wall. Kegs get a little flimsy up in that size range. I also use E6 in 4 and 5 sizes.
Those are areas where the wall had separation. Owners only have him done around 10 weeks. I cut away all the "feathers" in the wall each time. Not saying they were perfectly flat but certainly not that gapped.
Kim nailing is the easy bit, but you need to prep the foot better your fitting needs to be better then everything falls into place
I thought that at first but 5 out of the 6 holes ? That's when I started thinking something was going on with the nails.
Kim as Smitty said you need to learn to prep feet, the foot doesn't stop at the heel quarters. Dress the whole foot from heel to heel and learn to put some shape into feet from the bottom before you dress from the top. It makes everything easier. I don't like the grinder roll in the toe. The toe in a keg that big is already to weak IMO, grinding it makes it worse. Use a rocker or a french roll
You could tidy up your job more by better use of grinder,linisher,rasp when boxing those shoes. they look like you came at them with a chisel now if you post your next pic try and put some of these things right then your moving forward
Kim the quarter bends on the shoe are to far back, says to me the shoe is to small or not pushed back far enough. (in this case not back far enough) It is a eureka when you discover it and makes all aspects of shoeing easier. all of a sudden you can nail a shoe on better, finish it better, it stays on better and the horse goes better.
yes; but you see this here on our drafts and drafts/crosses........but I don't think is always what is good for the horse?????? Yes???
Kim, if you start noticing that you're working harder to get your foot flat, that often means it's time for a fresh rasp. Same thing when it seems like you're taking longer on each foot. Rasp wear, by nature, is insidious. Regards
I don't believe in that natural rasp crap . . . but I have had good results sharpening my rasps with hydrochloric pressure.