A Modern Look At ... THE HOOF
252 pages
English

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252 pages
English

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Description

Keeping horses comfortable and sound can be a complicated and often times stressful process not only for the owner, but also for hoof care professionals. The author started her learning journey out of personal frustration with these issues. Her goal was initially just to find solutions for her own horses. Eventually her hoof research provided results applicable to every horse. A must for anyone (owners, trainers, trimmers, farriers, and veterinarians) wishing to be well-versed in the hoof, readers will without a doubt gain new insights from this book on topics not found in other hoof related publications. This book is a new look at the hoof, focusing on a detailed look at its morphology (shape) and function, and discussing implications for how the hoof should be trimmed and cared for. The information is backed up with the presentation of accurate measurements from thousands of horses’ hooves, as well as examples painstakingly collected over the author’s 20 year involvement with trimming the hoof. This book contains over 300 color images, many with measurements and annotations, and will be an excellent addition to your hoof care resources.

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Publié par
Date de parution 20 janvier 2015
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781478741589
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0500€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

The opinions expressed in this manuscript are solely the opinions of the author and do not represent the opinions or thoughts of the publisher. The author has represented and warranted full ownership and/or legal right to publish all the materials in this book.
A Modern Look At ... THE HOOF Morphology ~ Measurement ~ Trimming ~ Shoeing All Rights Reserved. Copyright © 2015 Monique Craig v4.0
Cover Photo © 2015 Faye Baker. www.photogenics.biz. All rights reserved - used with permission. Interior Images © 2015 Monique Craig. All rights reserved - used with permission.
This book may not be reproduced, transmitted, or stored in whole or in part by any means, including graphic, electronic, or mechanical without the express written consent of the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
ISBN: 9781478741589
Outskirts Press, Inc. http://www.outskirtspress.com
Outskirts Press and the “OP” logo are trademarks belonging to Outskirts Press, Inc.
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Dedicated to Smirnoff with love.
Foreword: A Chronology of the Journey
Horses have always been my passion. My first experience with riding horses was at the age of six. My parents had a house in the Swiss countryside where we spent weekends and holidays. I started riding by climbing on any horse I could find, often horses that were grazing in pasture. I would spend many days roaming the countryside on horseback by myself. I eventually took proper riding lessons but I never had the same fun as the years I spent roaming the countryside alone.
I stopped riding when I prepared to go to college. I met my husband, John, in Switzerland and ended up moving back with him to the U.S. Shortly after starting university I married him. After graduating from engineering school, I went to work and started to save enough money to buy a horse. At that time, my husband was quite unaware of my passion for horses. We both loved animals; we had already collected two cats and two large dogs. My husband and I were living in Palo Alto but opted for a more countrified lifestyle, purchasing a piece of raw land on the San Mateo Coast in 1989. Our property was at the end of a very winding and narrow four-mile road with no adjacent neighbors—only the state park.
I had just started leasing riding horses in a local barn to get myself back into the saddle. My plan was to go back to Europe, spend a couple of months at a riding school and come back with a horse. The idea was to do this after we finished our house and barn! For a time, I casually looked at horses in my area but resisted the urge to buy one. One day, a trainer told me that I should go and look at a nice bay Holsteiner. What was the harm in looking? I looked at the horse, fell in love, and ended up buying a green broke five-year-old stallion in1989 --- Smirnoff. I fully knew that boarding a stallion was a bad idea, but I naively thought that building our house and barn would go smoothly. My husband and I planned everything in minute detail. We were told that we should expect to wait six months for permits. After a mere eighteen months of jumping through hoops, we finally started to break ground! We actually ended up living for two years in a trailer with no real running water nor adequate heating. Water was delivered to us by truck since we could not even start drilling for a well. We had no electricity—only a generator. Eventually we finished our passive solar house and moved in. In fact, our entire ranch ran on solar electricity. This was our pride and joy.
Smirnoff moved in with us just a little after we finished the house – a mere three years after buying the land! I felt relieved to have him home. Smirnoff had chronic lameness issues almost immediately after I bought him. He had a thorough pre-purchase veterinary exam which he passed with flying colors. I went through a slew of experts and tried many different shoeing prescriptions, but nothing worked for the long term. It was very frustrating. Sometimes it seemed to me that as farriers changed, so did Smirnoff’s conformation!
After I moved into my ranch, I bought two young thoroughbreds. Boris was a four-year-old ex-race horse and Gluck was an un-raced two-year-old. Boris and Smirnoff were shod on all four hooves, and neither one of them were consistently sound. Gluck remained barefoot as I was not yet riding him. Once the horses and I were settled on the ranch, I finally had time to learn everything about the hoof and equine anatomy. Hooves seemed to have so many lameness issues that at one point I started to wonder if there were evolutional flaws in the design of the hoof. This led me to read books on paleontology and evolutionary biology. I also attended educational seminars on the hoof.
I met Dave Duckett in 1992 at a farrier convention. Dave Duckett is a world champion blacksmith with an open mind. What made him very intriguing to me is the fact that he was questioning conventional farriery and that he had spent time studying feral horses. I followed his work for two years and had Dave Duckett shoe my horses for a while. I evolved my own thoughts about trimming in 1995 during the worst storm we had ever experienced on our ranch. There is some truth to the adage “Necessity is the mother of invention” -- probably in my case this could have been translated to “Absolute fear was the mother of invention”!
The month of January 1995 was a very wet month but nothing too unusual except for one horrific storm at the end of that month. We received twenty-two inches of rain in twelve hours with wind peaks of 120 miles per hour and sustained winds of 90 miles per hour. The worst of the storm happened during the night. The only paved exit to our property washed out that night. As I was checking my horses during the worst of the storm, mudslides blocked the access road to the barn. I ended up trapped there by myself for most of the night. It was too dangerous for either John or me to walk through the mud. We used our flashlights to signal to each other that we were okay. At one point, during the night, the barn started to make strange creaking noises. I went out and noticed that mud was piling up behind the barn. My only escape was through the pastures. This situation presented some serious problems. I had no idea whether the road to the pastures was actually accessible. I decided to stay put until I had no other option but to make a run for it. At around 5:00 a.m., the storm started to wind down and luckily the slides behind the barn did not worsen. I was still trapped but started to calm down somewhat.
I decided to focus my rattled brain cells on trying to figure out how to ‘build a hoof.’ My thought experiment was a pivotal landmark for my own research. Being at the complete mercy of the elements was also a life altering moment for me. I learned a profound respect for nature’s forces. This experience also changed my outlook on wanting to control events; it definitely made me appreciate being alive. The rain subsided as dawn broke. John, I, and the horses made it through the storm unscathed. The road to the pasture was completely blocked; the retaining walls behind the far part of the barn and to the pasture had collapsed. I eventually was able to tread my way back through the mud to my house. From there, John and I managed to clear a safe path back to the barn. The main exit road was repaired three weeks after its collapse. The potentiality of another storm, along with the damaged retaining walls, compelled us to move our horses to a boarding barn.
After fixing the damages, my horses were eventually moved back to the ranch in early summer 1995. We had two other wet winters after that, but we weathered them without significant problems
As life settled back to a more normal routine, I launched a research project in which I put force sensors on Smirnoff’s hooves. I used a small computer that could be secured to his body to record the stress and strain in his hooves as he moved. The information from the force sensors on his hooves let me see how the hoof capsule was behaving. I was able to let my horses move free with this equipment. This was a great advantage compared to taking data on a treadmill because I could measure capsule behavior while the horse was turning. I continued to attend hoof seminars. I met Gene Ovnicek in 1996. I was then introduced to Dr. Bowker while attending Gene Ovnicek’s lectures.
In the same year, I also met Mike Savoldi. Mike came to our ranch at my request to conduct a seminar. We have remained friends since. Mike taught me everything I know about hoof anatomy. Mike and I are still collaborating on various hoof-related research projects.
I started trimming horses in 1996, shoeing came later. Around that time, I also started to take before and after trimming photos to document my work. After the 1998 El Nino storm event, we decided that we needed to find a more horse-friendly ranch. We moved to Paso Robles in 1999 where it was possible to devote my time and energy to horses, not to weathering bad winters. John and I founded EponaTech in 1999 and introduced our software “Metron.” This software was primarily designed to accurately measure the hoof and to document changes over time. We both wanted to reduce the guessing game of assessing change in hoof morphologies. Our primary goal was to aid communication between farriers, veterinarians and horse owners. I started trimming and shoeing horses according to my approach in 2000. I mostly worked with composite shoes. I invented and designed the first EponaShoe in 2003. My shoes became available on the market in late 2004. My success stories with these spread by word of mouth. Soon, I was being asked to write articles for farrier and horse owner magazines (most are posted at www.epona-institute.org .) I also started to give lectures part time in a course on equine biomechanics at Cal Poly in San Luis Obispo, California.
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