Cast Application to a Chronically Lame Hoof

Пікірлер: 6

  • @martajoy
    @martajoy7 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing your expertise through such thoughtful teaching. Your genuine care for the horse is evident. What a difference it makes to watch you heal the hoof with such skill and concern for the health and comfort of the horse.

  • @carolburke4335
    @carolburke43354 жыл бұрын

    Awww....this man seems very nice,,,,:)

  • @Remmepark
    @Remmepark8 жыл бұрын

    Excellent video, Equicast is a wonderful product. Well done! :-)

  • @Guruton10
    @Guruton106 жыл бұрын

    Making it up as we go along!!!!

  • @reneerocheleau3416
    @reneerocheleau34168 жыл бұрын

    I love your videos! Hoof trimming is so clearly a complex and important part of the care routine. I am soon getting a 7-year-old Arabian mare and she is shod. I want to remove her shoes and go barefoot. My riding is usually long trail rides with some overnight trips. My weather is pretty similar to that of NC (Essex County, Ontario). Do you have any suggestions, recommendations, warnings, etc. for when I have the farrier come out or for my hoof care routine? FYI she is being brought to me from northern Ontario and her owners know nothing about her feet (she is shod by Mennonites, owned by trail riders).

  • @kennyjohnson9178
    @kennyjohnson91789 жыл бұрын

    Please view and comment on our latest video, made in early June 2015, in North Carolina, detailing a casting procedure on a very flat-footed and chronically lame Thoroughbred gelding. Casts are applied with the goal of protecting the hoof as the horse is allowed to grow new healthy structures, including sole, bars, hoof wall, and frog, at an accelerated pace. The benefits or advantages to casting are 24/7 adherence, with no owner maintenance required, and the cast is air/water permeable.

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