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Hoof, Body & Soul, Part III: Mission Impossible

Hoof, Body & Soul, Part III: Mission Impossible, unedited, by Gudrun Buchhofer. Blog 75, case # 75

CHAPTER 1

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





Body & Soul



Case # 75

Drifter

trimmed from June 2018 until present 2026

 

photo: CK Photography


I started the Quarter Horse gelding when he was three years old. I clearly remember Drifter to be very quiet and insecure in his body.

All four hooves were atrophied in the back; there was lack of internal structures, lots of bruising, atrophy of the white line; the feet were not under the bone column; he was camping outside of the body line with the hinds which raised his bump high (making him stiff in his hips); he had muscle tension up into the tail bone, tension in his nuchal ligament, issues with his TMJ (causing injuries to his front incisors).

Drifter's young owner took a course in the Masterson Method of Bodywork to be able to help her horse. Drifter's hooves are trimmed every six weeks. His heel bulbs filled out by the end of 2023. As well at the end of 2023 we noticed a couple micro abscesses around the hock of the right hind which, most likely, were release of ossification. By 2024 we also recognized clear improvements in his body and his TMJ. Dental work was done and he was seen by an equine massage therapist.

 

Left hind pre-trim December 2020

 

Left hind pre-trim December 2020

Left hind post-trim November 2022

 

Left hind post-trim October 2019 — the bulbs are white in color as we have seen in other horses with atrophy in the back of the foot

Left hind pre-trim August 2021 — the bulbs are still white in color

Left hind pre-trim October 2024

 

Right hind pre-trim October 2019

Right hind pre-trim November 2021

Right hind pre-trim September 2022 — bulbs are increasing in mass

Right hind pre-trim August 2024

 

Left front pre-trim October 2019 — he was leaning on the lateral side and wearing his toe; the bulbs open up and begin to increase in mass

Left front pre-trim May 2024

Drifter was always leaning on the lateral side with both fronts and wearing his toes. The medial wall was always higher. Since true heel emerged on the medial side in January 2019 the right front hoof is more and more balanced medial/laterally. Pre-trim photos show the difference in balance from side to side.

Right front pre-trim January 2019 — true heel has emerged on the medial side

Right front pre-trim January 2019 — true heel has emerged on the medial side

Right front pre-trim August 2022

Right front pre-trim November 2023

Right front pre-trim June 2024 — the hoof is showing the “natural thumbprint” in the center without me ever touching his frogs with a knife

Right front pre-trim May 2025

 

Drifter's hooves did a lot of healing: the central sulcus of the frogs filled out, internal structures increased, bruising faded away and the hoof capsules shifted more under the bone column of the legs. Although I expect Drifter's hooves to further heal and balance they present natural beauty today.

Left front pre-trim November 2023

Left front pre-trim March 2023

 

Right front pre-trim May 2025

Right front pre-trim November 2025

 

Drifter and his owner perform in barrel racing and pole bending. They also love long rides over rocky trails. Drifter performs entirely barefoot and never had any hoof protection whatsoever on his feet. His diet (mainly good quality first cut hay) and his environment (a huge paddock with only very little green grass) were constant in all those years. Drifter lives in a herd with other horses.

photo: CK Photography

remaining photos: Gudrun Buchhofer

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