MY STORY
I’ve been a low level endurance rider since the
early 1990’s. Five years ago I became worried about
the concussion on my horse’s legs. He was doing a
lot of miles and I could ‘read’ the hard 80km
rides from the tell tale rings growing out in his hooves.
He would pull up the day after an endurance ride
with puffiness and filling in his legs. So I started to
explore alternatives to traditional shoes. I went
through Natural Balance & plastic shoes, and finally
I came to the conclusion that it would be best to run him
without shoes altogether. People like Darolyn Butler Dial
were doing it successfully in the US – and winning,
barefoot – so I knew it was possible.
But in 2003 it took me months to find someone
to come and trim (as opposed to shoe) my horses. When John
Gorman removed the shoes from my endurance horse, Zapateado, he
could barely walk across the gravel driveway. John
then drove off, leaving me to it! And since he lived 6
hours away, I couldn’t expect him to come back and
trim regularly. I felt like I was bobbing around in the
ocean without a liferaft. And it was frighteningly apparent
that if I was going to go barefoot, then I’d have
to learn to trim my own horses, myself. I was really stuck.
It would have been MUCH easier to go back to shoes. But
by then the scales had fallen from my eyes. I could SEE
how shoes actually disadvantaged horses. There was no going
back. I had to condition my horse to run barefoot, and
I had to learn to look after his hooves myself.
So I organised an Equethy clinic
(www.equethy.com). There I struggled with the tools & - typically - managed
to trim just ONE of my own horse’s hooves
(along with a few cadaver legs). The next day I doubled
my productivity. But I have to admit, it was exhausting
at that stage. Then I got a hoof stand and life got much
easier. Next a decent pair of nippers. Some proper
tools. And more training. I did a week-long course
with Martha Olivo. Another two day Equethy Clinic. Then
a weekend with Pete Ramey.
Next thing I was preaching to the
neighbours and jumped the fence to start trimming
their horses. Soon word spread, and I was trimming up
and down my little high country valley.
Since then I’ve been competing successfully in
80km endurance rides barefoot. But I’ve also continued
learning about barefooting. I’ve done a second clinic
with Pete Ramey and I’ve also embarked on a traineeship
with the American Association of Natural Hoofcare Practitioners
(AANCHP). It’s a two-year program based on the successful
completion of six mentorships, and the attainment of proficiency
across a range of modules including hoof boot fitting,
horse handling/psychology and demonstrable rehabilitaton & documented
case studies in my care.
I’m an accredited EasyCare
Hoof Boot Advisor, and a founding member of the fledgling
peak body for professional trimmers, the Australian Hoof
Care Association.
If anybody had told me ten years
ago that I’d
become a horse toe cutter, I’d have laughed out loud.
But I’ve become passionate about what seems an odd
area of interest, because I can see how horses with proper
hoof care have a much better level of wellbeing. Also,
its possible to make a difference to many horses, taking
them from virtual cripples to happy, healthy horses, based
on regaining healthy hooves. |