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Hoof, Body & Soul, Part III: Mission Impossible

Hoof, Body & Soul, Part III: Mission Impossible, unedited, by Gudrun Buchhofer. Blog 41, case # 41

CHAPTER 1

Atrophy, the fundamental cause for most all hoof pathology and upper body injuries

Fault in the conformation – standing under/standing out, x-legs



I found the underlying issue for most all conformational faults to be atrophy of the back of the foot.




Case # 41

Naomi

trimmed from yearling (2001) until she was twelve years old (2012)

and from November 2018 until March 2023 (Naomi foundered and I had the opportunity to work on her hooves. There will be an extra blog later on laminitis cases)

2001 — photo: Gudrun Buchhofer

I bought the paint filly as a yearling with x-legs in the front and toed out hinds. I actually found her being tied to a tree. Her feed and water buckets were empty and tipped over. Naomi had never been trimmed before and I can safely assume she had been restricted in movement living by that tree.

(My Quarter Horse filly to the right, Indian Summer, was born outside of the run-in-shelter in this rocky environment. She is three months old in the picture. Enlarge the photo and you can see that the new and divergent hoof is close to the ground — properly discarding the newborn foal hoof. Please read Indian Summer’s story in part II: My Search for the Truth of my book Hoof, Body & Soul, 13-23.

On track in my first Paddock Paradise in 2007 — photo: Gudrun Buchhofer

Naomi lived in a Paddock Paradise with 24/7 freedom in the company of other horses. She was trimmed every six weeks and her legs straightened.

2012 — photo credit: Kathy Weaver

 

Naomi was an amazing kids pony for the last twelve years of her life with straight front legs. She was put to rest at the age of twenty-four due to breathing issues. ♥

 

Stay tuned for the upcoming cases (under my care for up to 20 years) in this blog series as a replacement for the unpublished part III: Mission Impossible of my trilogy Hoof, Body & Soul.

What did all my client horses over the last 20+ years have in common? They needed to heal from atrophy of the back of the foot as well as other atrophied hoof structures.

Q: Why do we need to change the upbringing of our baby horses and donkeys? A: To prevent senseless suffering.

Gudrun Buchhofer