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I was recently called to check a horse a bit of a
drive from me that was lame in his right front foot. This horse had been barefoot his
whole life and was now in his late teens. Tom was new to horses while his wife had grown
up around them. Tom purchased Chance to start riding, a good choice, Chance was sound,
seasoned and dependable and needed more exercise then he was getting.

When Tom went to buy Chance, the owners insisted
that Chance needed shoes because the ground was too rocky and he wouldnt hold up.
Well he was shod and after a short time went dead lame in his right front. He
progressively got worse, until his was darn near unable to put any weight on his right
front. He put so much of his weight on his left front that if he hadnt been barefoot
for all those years he probably would have foundered. The shoes were pulled but he just
could not put weight on his right front. His left front began spreading to support the
weight and when I saw him the left was probably close to two sizes bigger then his right.

I trimmed the right front by only removing the
chalky sole and the excess horn and took the bars down some. I also took the heels down to
just above the plane of the live sole. The toe callus was nearly non existent so that was
left alone. The left front was spread very wide and the toe callus was large and tick. I
removed the chalky sole and trimmed the heels down a smidge and the bars down to near the
sole. The front of the foot I left alone except to take the horn down to just about a
sixteenth above the live sole. The callus was in good shape, I determined this by a light
pass pf the knife and saw that the consistency was fine grained and held together. I trim
pretty conservatively so when I finished, the left front was longer then it would normally
be. However the callus was thick and in good shape so I left it to help support the weight
of the horse. The next trim that would all be coming out and the hoof would then look
normal. When Chance walked his limp was noticeably less. Going up hill was much easier for
him then before.

I got a call from Tom three days later and he
informed that me that Chance was now dragging him around the barn area and eating every
scrap of hay he could get. The other horse owners couldnt believe he was the same
horse. Needless to say Tom and his wife were extremely happy and now I get the honor of
trimming the rest their horses. I love this stuff; helping horses is both rewarding and
humbling.

May the Horse be with you,
Chuck Mills
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