Selasa, 12 Maret 2013

Red - 4 week update

Red has been here just over 4 weeks and so as usual time for an update. The top photo was taken the day she arrived and the lower one is at 4 weeks. 
Spot the difference!
Sole shots of her other front foot are also interesting. When she came she had a weak frog and pinched heels and bars - they had probably been quite contracted when she was shod, though its hard to see from the historic photos here. 
She still has distorted bars but her frog is better and her heels have improved. That long hoof wall is mostly gone too - and all with no trimming :-)


Senin, 11 Maret 2013

Weekend news!

By all accounts its been a great weekend for the ex-rehab horses - despite the hideously cold weather we've had (snow here again...so spring is back on hold...).
Krista and Buddy sound as if they are improving by the day: "Just thought I'd let you know that Mr Buds went out today and didn't struggle across any stony bits!".

Katy and Rolie have started having lessons again, a year after he first went lame: "First lesson with Rolie in over a year - both knackered, but felt fabulous!"

Big Dave went home this week  - its seems very odd to only have "normal" sized horses in the yard -and I've had a couple of lovely texts from Cathy: "Had a lovely 40 minute ride this morning and he felt much better than before. Offered trot and was nice and forward most of the time...He was v good!".

Sarah and Solar also seem to be going from strength to strength, too: "Has had the best day :) Went riding up greenhill for the first time in nearly 2 years!". This is all credit to Sarah's immense determination and creativity in finding ways to manage Solar's sensitivity to grass. Whoever said it was easy having a barefoot horse?!

Well done all of you :-)

Jumat, 08 Maret 2013

Pain, proprioception, performance and patterns of movement

Some helpful person (I think it may have been Jane Holderness again!) shared a very interesting article on Facebook and it got me thinking. The article is written about human movement and biomechanics but the principles are equally appropriate when considering horses and - more importantly - rehabilitation from lameness.

"Improving your proprioception is an excellent goal for anyone who wants to improve sports performance or reduce pain. In fact, I would claim that any therapy or training method that can achieve either goal efficiently works primarily by improving proprioception. "
 The twin goals of improving performance and reducing pain are absolutely key to rehabilitating the horses who come here and I have thought for several years that the tracks and the different surfaces we use are vital.

In fact, one of the main benefits of our tracks is that they improve proprioception - its something I blogged about in 2009, as our experience with the horses here exactly coincided with the rehabilitation which Prof Jean-Marie Denoix and Jean Pierre Pailloux wrote about in their book "Physical therapy and massage for the horse".

They explain that restoring correct movement can be achieved by the horse moving over different types of terrain. The different surfaces, stimulation and sensations boost proprioception and "eventually lead to soundness of movement".
This is also why I encourage owners to work on varied terrain with their horses when they go home - and why I discourage the use of hoof-boots unless there is no alternative. Proprioceptive input is vital and, particularly following injury or long-term lameness, the horse needs the best possible proprioceptive input - and the best proprioception comes from hard-working bare hooves.

As the article points out, the proprioceptive maps in the brain depend on regular, consistent stimulus in order to keep them maintained and functioning at their best - use it or lose it!

There is a close relationship between pain and proprioception, too.

I've seen with horses who've been here that their soundness can improve rapidly as proprioception changes; nevertheless, although they are sounder, extensive damage to tissue and bone cannot have completely healed in a 12 week time frame.

Equally, trauma apparent on x-ray or even MRI is no indication of how lame a horse may be. Delicate flowers with mild injuries may be as or more lame than tough old troopers with extensive damage.
One explanation comes here, another article from the same blog:

"Pain is created by the brain, not passively perceived by the brain as a preformed sensation that arrives from the body. When a body part is damaged, nerve endings send a signal to the brain containing information about the nature of the damage. But no pain is felt until the brain interprets this information and decides that pain would be a good way to encourage you to take action that will help protect and heal the damage

The brain considers a huge amount of factors in making this decision and no two brains will decide the same thing. Many different parts of the brain help process the pain response, including areas that govern emotions, past memories, and future intentions. Therefore, pain is not an accurate measurement of the amount of tissue damage in an area, it is a signal encouraging action. "
The author is talking about the human body, but wouldn't it make sense, in horses too, that if proprioception improves, biomechanics change and stress and damage to tissue is reduced - then pain (and lameness) may correspondingly reduce or even disappear - before healing is complete?

This is a huge subject and is undoubtedly one I will come back to soon :-)

Kamis, 07 Maret 2013

Beanie - almost 4 weeks

Beanie will have been here 4 weeks on Sunday and its time to update his photos. He arrived having been out of shoes for 6 months but had a long history of lameness and remedial farriery which had not succeeded in making him more comfortable.
I'm glad to say that he is starting to slowly rebuild the back of his foot, as you can see if you compare today's photo with his original shot.
He has very flat, under-run feet with heels which have run forward; this photo from day one shows how far - his heels (which in a healthy hoof should be supporting the back of his frog) are closer to halfway down his frog.
One good sign is that his heels are now moving back though there is a long way to go before his hoof is once again fully supporting the limb. 
 





Rabu, 06 Maret 2013

The sun shines - and that means 14 hour days!

Its been incredibly busy here over the last couple of weeks - horses coming and going but  the real novelty has been dry weather - finally - after last year's wet summer, wet autumn and totally disgusting winter.
Its hard to believe that on Sunday morning it was so cold that all the water was frozen. By contrast, yesterday was the first day of spring; the temperature shot up and for the first time this year even the clipped horses had their rugs off and the sun on their backs during the day :-)
The dry weather has been a godsend; exercising the horses has been much pleasanter and it has also  meant that I've been spending every spare moment on the tractor to get the fields rolled and - with Edward's help - the muck spread. Its worth the long days to see the fields transformed and ready to start growing grass!
Its supposed to start raining again for the rest of this week  - and sometimes once it starts it just doesn't stop - but I should have a bit more time for blogging at least...

In the meantime, check out  http://buddysbarefootadventure.blogspot.co.uk/ for news on Buddy and Krista's adventures in their new barefoot world :-)

Selasa, 05 Maret 2013

Rolo and Ruby

Two new horses arrived at the weekend - Rolo and Ruby, both coloured cobs and both with pretty nice-looking hooves...
This is Rolo - lots to like, don't you think?
Sole shots not looking too shabby either...
...but his medio-lateral balance needs to improve. He has been out of shoes for several months and it it will be fascinating to see how his feet change over the next few weeks. 

On MRI Rolo showed up as having a host of issues, including bilateral DDFT, collateral and impar ligament damage as well as pedal osteitis but at the moment he looks like a horse who is more than capable of growing a healthy hoof.
This is Ruby who, like Rolo, has decent cob feet. Her current lameness is fairly subtle but she has developed a dish in front and like Rolo has a medio-lateral imbalance.
This is actually her better foot but it will only be once her feet start changing that we can start to compare where she is with where she is going! Her feet are flatter than Rolo's and though her frog is OK...
She has been landing toe first for a while, as you can see from this caudal shot. 

Senin, 04 Maret 2013

Word from a new blogger!

There is more to blog about than I can possibly fit in though I will try to pack in a lot over the next week...Still, today's blog had to go to Bryan, who arrived here last February and has made many appearances on this blog since then. He has been back home for a long time now and has been showjumping and hunting barefoot ever since.

Bryan and his stable mate, Wendy Raptor, are old hands with new technology and thanks to owner Charlotte are also all over Facebook, but clearly Bryan and Ellie are turning into a real team :-)

"It looks like my 14 year old god-daughter Ellie is following in my footsteps in more than one way - and here is an excellent blog she has written on yesterday's activities. 
What an amazing day!! Big barefoot one eyed Bryan (one of Charlotte's horses) hunted for the first time this season only ever with Charlotte. This horse is extremly lucky to have an owner like Charlotte. Bryan went very lame just over a year ago and every vet she had out to look at him said 'the only thing you can do for him is to put him to sleep' but no, this horse was too special for her to just loose. Therefore Charlotte found a place in Exmoor called Rockley (Nic Barker) where lame horses are taken to go 'barefoot' (no shoes). After a while at Rockley Bryan was sound and ready to be slowly introduced into work again. When Charlotte first bought Bryan he was a very ordinary Showjumper with a normal stride, flat work, jump etc. but, after being at Rockley he has changed literally from one horse to another. In a big field today Bryan and I got slightly left behind from the rest of the field and in order to catch up we trotted, however this was no "ordinary" trot this was an extended trot, but some how not an average extended trot. Charlotte told me that he had never done a trot like that before he had to have his shoes off. This horse felt like he had been reborn.

What a laugh today was!! Terry (whip) and Arnold (his trusty steed!) were telling endless funny stories and jokes (well not so much Arnold, he was more happy listening). Even Rupert(AVH chairman) and Piran (his horse) cracked up a rude joke!! (which won't be repeated!!)

Before today Bryan and i haven't really had much time to get to know each other. But, after a 6 hour day covering just over 18 miles jumping ditches, tiger traps, rails into woods hedges onto roads (more info on the hedge later) and something else which I'm not too sure was!! we soon trusted each other a good sight more than we ever have done before. I can even say i know how to stop him from running off with me!! Result!!!

The Hedge.
We were in a field near a road, Oli (whip) was trying to walk through a hedge and down an extreme bank onto a road. Charlotte (now field mastering by this point!) said to the field "let's go down to the gate" so we went down to the gate at the bottom of the field and we find the gate is locked, fortunately just back up towards the huntsman there was like a very low gap in the hedge so Charlotte says "right lets go through here instead". Wendy (her horse) won't go through the gap, so another member of the field tries but his horse wont go either. Just as the others were turning around to find another way, I walked Bryan up to the gap (by the way when Bryan is worried or confused he tends to move to his blind side which is on his right, and the bigger part of the hedge is on our right). By this time he was very confused so instead of just walking through the gap he went right to the bigger side of the hedge and leapt into the air and popped over the hedge onto the road where we were meant to be. Charlotte turned around to see where we had got to and soon turned back to go through the gap, just not in the same style as Bryan had done!

Thank you Ashford Valley Hunt for such a good day can't wait untill next season!!