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Introduction to Hoof Health - Mission Farrier School

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Uploaded by on Jul 16, 2007

Excerpt from the video, Introduction to Hoof Health. Mark Plumlee of Mission Farrier School introduces the viewer to Thunder, an 8 year old Mustang that ran out in the wild until he was 5. Even though he has been domesticated now for a couple of years, as a youngster, Thunder had the ultimate environment to develop a healthy foot.

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Uploader Comments (missionfarrierschool)

  • However, we applaud you for your keen interest in the maintenance of barefoot hoof management. If you’d like more information on the appropriateness of barefoot management please visit our website where we have several DVD’s on appropriate barefoot maintenance and appropriate shoeing.

  • Thunder had a soft foot, living in a wet environment. Even great feet get sore under those conditions. His owners wanted to trail ride him. And yes, they tried. The "only thing that happened" is, he got sore. We do a lot of barefoot trims, and we teach a lot of bare foot trims. Barefoot is great, until it isn't. Stimulation is good on a hard dry foot. Soreness or inflammation is never good, and can lead to degeneration of the coffin bone, and once this occurs, it is not repairable.

  • Wow what a long response.

    As for checking on digital cushions just feel between the heel bulbs the cushion in a wild horse should be as high as the lateral cartilages. In a domestic horse it is just below the Lateral cartilages. In a shod horse I have found it as small as 2mm thick which would be less than it was born with. You cazn monitor changes by feel as the horse rebuilds the back of its hoof.

    Regards

    Darren Robertson

  • Continued: And of course the huge limiting factor is how the digital cushion is arranged under the bone colum and in the back of the foot. Often there are genetic influences which inhibit any possibility of "rearranging" of the cushion.

  • Let's all just keep trying. Mark Plumlee, MissionFarrierSchool . com

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All Comments (15)

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  • how sad, he has a great foot and you'll put on a shoe. . . why? I did not see excess wear, I saw an overgrown hoof. Did you try trail riding him with those great feet first? I am sure the only thing that would happen is that he may not have needed trimming very often! I am sure he did a lot more in the wild than he will ever get domesticated!

  • Thanks very much sir you have improved my knowledge of the hoof and cleared some things up for me. Your demonstration skills were excellent.

  • WOW, Seeing that hoof really turned some lights on for me regarding the back of the hoof and the frog. What a hoof that guy has. I wish you'd post some more videos, you're about the best farrier I've ever seen. And the way you drew that coffin bone I KNEW THAT WAS WHERE IT WENT TO!!! Why do so many farrier's think there's only bone in the toe? Is it due to only seeing xrays?

  • Thank you for your comment. You are correct that nature tells the truth & nature rolls the toe as the environment trims their feet every day. In a natual environment the wall at the toe was never intended to bear weight & in fact the hoof wall is worn away from the toe quarters fwd. Gene O's studies showed this 20 yrs ago and we've seen it on thousands of horses since.

  • I heard you speak several years ago. I was very impressed with the information. My first thought was, why didn't I know this? My second thought was, why doesn't everyone know this. Thank you for making this information available. Great, great information. I hope to send my son to your school soon.

  • Wow, this is clearly the best information I have seen yet. Where can I buy the whole video?!!! Highly impressed with the quality of information shared here. Thank you for sharing this.

  • perfect example if the typical thorough bred. they are far from natural, and have the shit bred out of them. its like you having flat feet, or high arches, either way u are going to have your same feet for the rest of your life, they arnt going to change. that mustang in the video has the best feet a horse could possible get, but no sort of natural trim is going to stop it from getting foot sore while riding on rocks in the mountains, or down a road everyday.

    MP.

  • i think the hoof smith from sydney who claims to be a bare foot hoof specialist, should stop and have a good think about your job as a "natural hoof trimmer". what do you do exactly to a foot to increase the growth of DC? no matter what u do if that horse is born with minimal DC its never going increase. Continue down>

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