Hoof, Body & Soul, Part III: Mission Impossible, unedited, by Gudrun Buchhofer. Blog 47, case # 47
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 # 47
Star
trimmed from September 2017 until June 2021
Star, a French Canadian/Quarter Horse cross, was born and raised at Sherbrooke Village Museum in Nova Scotia. In 2002 he moved to my clients at the age of six. He did it all: 4H, fun shows and driving.
I started trimming Star in September 2017 when he was twenty-one years old. Some of my notes from my first trim: standing under with fronts and hinds; hind legs narrow based; hind hooves toed out and stretched out long; front hooves twisted; atrophy of the back of the foot (frogs, bulbs); weak internal structures and tension in his body.
After two months under my hoof care wings Star did not show the fault of “standing under” anymore. His stance has widened in the hind.
During the healing phase Star had several extreme divergent hooves. Whenever the new and divergent hoof took over, chunks of the previous hoof broke off in crazy patterns (showing the areas of injury from bracing and leaning). Damaged and compromised tissue was as well released through a few abscesses.
I found the peak of his beauty and healing journey was around September 2019 when he was twenty-three years old.
Star passed suddenly in June of 2021. My client had the strength to take photos of his hooves before Star was buried. Thank you for the teaching. ♥
photos: Laura Duggan
Stay tuned for the upcoming cases (under my care for up to 20 years) in this blog series as a replacement for the unpublished part III: Mission Impossible of my trilogy Hoof, Body & Soul.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