After owning Cal for 7 years I am very proud and pleased to announce that I have another self trimming horse!!
And once again, now it’s a reality, I’m wondering why it took me so long to understand that even funny feet Cal could be a self trimming horse.
For any self respecting hoof nerd, a self trimming horse is the ultimate aim. The self trimming horse has a perfect balance between wear and growth, balances his own feet through work to the shape that suits him, and is sound in the work he does.
I never thought Cal could be a self trimming horse, until my barefoot life seemed to come full circle.
I’ve written previously about how my barefoot journey began
And about my trials and tribulations with funny feet Cal
Including the point where we thought we had really cracked it.
but all along, I was operating from within a false paradigm, despite hoof geeking obsessively all these years!
I thought a horse’s hooves had to be good before he could become a self trimming horse.
Barefoot beginnings
Now, I started my barefoot journey thanks to Sarah of Forageplus. Sarah wrote a book with Nic Barker (of Rockley Farm rehab fame) called Feet First
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Feet-First-Barefoot-Performance-Rehabilitation/dp/0851319602
which was the original barefoot bible for those brave souls bucking the trend in the late 90’s!
Diet
It was early days- barefoot horse owners were considered eccentric freaks. Sarah drove around the county to trim clients horses with a huge tub of magnesium oxide in the back of her jeep and a set of scales. Who knows what the police would have made of her white powder delivery round?
We didn’t know as much about best nutrition for healthy feet as we do now, although we knew diet was the key.
As was work.
Exercise
When I transitioned Paddy he was being looked after by Mel the polo groom. He did at least 5 miles daily plus whatever I did with him in the evenings and weekends. And luckily, due to the facilities locally, he was able to do that comfortably from the first day his shoes came off. Glass smooth tarmac really is the best surface for conditioning rock crunching feet!!
Hoof boots were really hard to buy, really clumpy and mostly imported from America and made for little horses with dainty feet. I didn’t bother for Paddy- he never needed them.
Then along came Cal. He arrived from Ireland in the most horrific set of shoes. Looking back I’m really not sure how I didn’t spot the really funny feet.
I can’t find any early feet photos but believe me the whole of the hoof capsule sat in front of a line dropped down the cannon bone!!
This photo is from about 18months after I bought him. In that time he had fractured a carpal bone (in shoes) tripping over that toe, and was about a year into his barefoot rehab.
Now you would never say that foot could belong to a self trimming horse would you?
Environment
Shortly after this photo was taken we bought our own place and started applying everything we knew about creating the perfect feet. We had our six acre field which we proudly put a track around, our very own #paddockparadise
I mineral balanced to our now steady supply of late cut meadow hay, and then later Haylage.
We soil tested and actually applied the chemicals as recommended by the Albrecht protocol.
We tried to do our rock crunching milage around the fabulous #Delamereforest and surrounding area.
Trim
and we kept looking for the perfect trim that would finally turn that peculiar set of feet into something functional. I went through a posse of trimmers over the first few years. Sarah wasn’t trimming much as her business grew, so we needed an alternative. My first choice wasn’t flexible enough to fit in around my hectic work schedule. The next was lovely but then got poorly and needed a couple of operations. I went back to a UKHNCP trimmer for an alternative view. The alternative then moved down south! I sought a couple of second opinions, one of whom did a really radical trim which left him sore for weeks. Then I eventually met Emma Bailey, who is a good listener, really knows her nutrition and is always keen to discuss with and learn from all horses and clients. She is also good friends with Nick Hill and Ralitsa, the holistic vet, so we got 3 heads to scratch.
We went through gentle trims, more invasive trims, leaving the flares, taking the flare off, trim the bars, leave the bars, attack the toe, swipe the heels… yet no matter what we tried, the feet improved a bit month by month yet remained stubbornly slipper like
With thin soles, shallow collateral grooves and little heel height.
He was surprisingly functional over the years, despite the feet looking flat and poor, he has worked hard on all surfaces except stones and we have had some great fun
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL55sjNB8nhYVHUrASlthXCJkdGsqql_RF
Then Emma went on a workshop with Nic Barker and my barefoot life came full circle.
Any self respecting hoof nerd will know of Nic’s seminal blog piece ‘Celery’
http://rockleyfarm.blogspot.com/2011/04/dont-even-think-of-touching-that-hoof.html
And in the most recent blog follow up on that theme, not much in her learning and experience has changed
http://rockleyfarm.blogspot.com/2018/09/put-down-rasp-and-pick-up-celery.html
Now I always have believed in self trimming horses! Paddy was essentially self trimming apart from a check every 3 months, and a touch up for trips out, and Rocky looks like he will go the same way, but for some reason, it had never occurred to me with Cal. How could those pathological feet possibly become healthier without help?
Luckily Emma is a good listener. She cane back from the workshop and basically waved a rasp at all 3 horses. And told me to get out there and work them and see what occurs.
And guess what?
Cal’s finally growing the feet he needs.
Yes -there is lots of bar- he obviously needs it.
Yes -theoretically you could tighten the foot up to the white line…but it opens up again more or less straight away.
Yes -there looks like some flare from the top but from the bottom they are actually not too bad.
And yes- that toe can still come back, and it does, a few gentle swipes every time I ride.
And best of all- look at the depth of those collateral grooves!! That is new and special and exciting!
Now I’m not saying he’ll never get trimmed again. Those toes need touching up, as do any cracks and chips.
But the more we trimmed, the more hoof he grew, but exactly the same foot! Now we are not trimming so persistently, the foot is growing more slowly but is also building itself up, from the inside.
And so I’ve come full circle, back to celery – in a healthy horse, barefoot is never all about the trim.
I think I finally have a healthy horse- that’s been another journey, getting the diet right, and now we have stopped messing around ‘fixing’ his feet, we seem to have acquired another self trimming horse.
I’ll leave you with the Rockley rehabs for inspiration. The feet in this barefoot ‘hoof porn’ film are all self trimming, and all incredibly functional.
N.B. Until you’ve seen a horse move and the hoof land you cannot judge the level of function.
http://rockleyfarm.blogspot.com/p/barefoot-in-slow-motion.html
Is your horse self trimming?
Does it land heel first?
If not, have you ever thought that less could be more?
I LOVED reading about your self trimming horses. I’ve raised Appaloosa’s for MANY years. I finally decided to only keep the ones that “self trimmed” and so those were the ones I bred. (I sold the ones that could not self trim – I didn’t want to be breeding that into my Appaloosa’s.) Now I no longer breed Appaloosa’s (haven’t for a few years) but I still own the Granddaughter (she’s about 20 now) and the great granddaughter (she’s in her teens now) of my very first Appaloosa I owned as a kid. These 2 mares have only had their hooves trimmed when they were were very young (1 to 2 years old each) while at a trainer’s. Other than that, I have never had their hooves trimmed, nor do they wear shoes. (But then, I don’t ride anymore so it’s been many years since the old one was ridden and the younger mare has never been ridden.)
These mares both have really nice looking hooves most of the year. There are times when they get kind of “scraggly looking” hooves, but it wears off and many people who see them think they have been “well trimmed” and are impressed with how good their hooves look.
Unfortunately, when I tell anyone that I don’t have their hooves trimmed, ever, I am often accused of NEGLECT (and even had someone threaten to turn me in).
I’m very glad you have the guts to put this out there for all to see/read. GOOD FOR YOU. I plan to share your articles on my FB pages (I hope that’s ok with you).
Thank you again for sharing your experiences.
Thank you so much for sharing your story too- I love Appys- they are still pretty rare in the UK.
Please do share away- let’s change the world one idea at a time 😀😀