Veterinary Advice
 

 
This is Daisy Bicking, Equine Foot Rehabilitation Specialist, giving Donum Dei, 3 weeks old, his first pedicure, or hoof rasping. For more information, go to www.DaisyHavenFarm.com

This photo illustrates the importance of early foot care intervention in perfectly normal foals. If these horses lived in the semi arid Western United States, their feet would probably be well self manicured by the hard, rocky terrain they lived on. In the North and South Eastern United States, however, horses are kept on lush green pastures which are soft and wet because of the frequent rainfall and heavy dew in the evening and early morning, or they are stabled in softly bedded, often damp and manure contaminated stalls. Consequently, the feet of horses which live in these conditions sink toe first in the soft ground, mud, or stall bedding. They become too wet, too soft, and have no sole support and no automatic toe filing removal system. These horses develop the proverbially long toe, low and underrun heels, with flat sole and thrush syndrome. The chronic thrush infection can invade the internal structures of the foot causing more destruction of soft tissue with concomitant heal pain, which is then frequently and incorrectly diagnosed as navicular disease.

So to prevent the old adage, "No foot, no horse" which is a major problem in the Mid Atlantic States, we cannot simply leave baby horses with the mothers on lush green pastures to grow up. We have to address the feet of the baby foal from Day 1. This means we have to create firm footing in some part of the babies' environment, which will allow the feet to get out of the constant wet, so that they can get hard. We have to maintain the proper hoof shape by trimming off the excess toe or whatever part of the hoof needs to be trimmed in order to maintain a symmetrical and balanced foot. It is a lot easier to grow a horse foot properly if it is maintained from birth, than to try to come back when the horse is a yearling or older, and attempt to try to fix a deformed hoof capsule and internal soft tissue structure.
 
 
       
     
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