Five Hearts Hoof Care

Five Hearts Hoof Care Holistic solutions for iron-free hooves. Natural hoofcare practitioner based in the SF Bay Area.

I know Giving Tuesday has passed, but if anyone is feeling generous, this is a great way to support the education of fut...
12/12/2024

I know Giving Tuesday has passed, but if anyone is feeling generous, this is a great way to support the education of future hoof care providers. I have personally benefited from this scholarship fund, and just donated to pay it forward.

About the organization:
Progressive Hoof Care Practitioners is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization whose mission is to provide a supportive network and educational foundation for hoof care professionals and horse owners based on a holistic and progressive approach to equine hoof care.

Support the PHCP Education Scholarship Fund with a donation. We appreciate the amazing support we get from both our dynamic members and others interested in helping to further intelligent hoof care practices. If you'd prefer to donate by check, please mail to Progressive Hoof Care Practitioners, 659...

07/28/2024
I’m looking forward to these two webinars! Can’t recommend Paige Poss highly enough ❤️
04/04/2024

I’m looking forward to these two webinars! Can’t recommend Paige Poss highly enough ❤️

Truth!
02/21/2024

Truth!

True story, there have been many horses who have kept me up at night! 💚

“Nothing exists in isolation”
01/21/2024

“Nothing exists in isolation”

'Fascia and the fiction'
Two specimens, two before and after views. I mean AFTER removing all the connective tissue and fat to see nice muscles like from the book.
Maybe it is pleasant to the eye, but there is little left for the mind to understand all those precious connections and continuity within the body, that we should start to pay attention to.
Nothing exists in isolation, all is connected in the body. The restriction in one part of the body will travel, a long way, in many directions, but we still don't know the exact road maps.

10/19/2023

For best results, one should feed a custom mix of minerals balanced to your hay; in lieu of that, using one of these ready-made balancers can be a second-best option (see page 2):https://www.ecirhorse.org/assets/documents/ECIR-Group-DDTE-Safe-Feeds.pdf Note: these are available in the US and Canada.

10/18/2023
It’s that time of year!
04/18/2023

It’s that time of year!

DAILY CHECKS THAT MAY HELP EARLY IDENTIFICATION OF LAMINITIS.

Assuming your horse is not showing any obvious signs of laminitis (in which case you will have confined him/her and called your vet 🙂), these checks can be carried out every day and might give you early warning of laminitis or (increasing) insulin dysregulation:

1. Lead your horse on both hard and soft ground, e.g. road and grass - does your horse's stride length and forwardness decrease when you change from soft to hard ground? Does he/she seem a bit "footy" or "pottery", seem to be walking more carefully than normal or feeling his/her feet, and is this worse on hard ground than soft? When you are walking on hard ground, does your horse pull you towards soft ground, i.e. want to walk on the grass verge rather than on the road? NB these differences may not be obvious if your horse wears boots and pads.

2. Turn your horse in a tight circle around you - with your horse warmed up a little, walk your horse forward a few steps, then ask for a tight turn around you, e.g. as a 180’ change of direction, or as a turn on the forehand - does your horse turn smoothly with no significant loss of forwardness from walking in a straight line, do the hind legs cross under the belly? A horse with laminitis/foot discomfort will often struggle to turn smoothly, with the hind leg steps looking awkward.

3. Check digital pulses. Try to do this at the same time and in the same place every day - many owners check pulses when picking out the feet. If you aren’t confident finding the pulse, get someone to show you, and if it helps, mark the best position to find the pulse on your horse’s leg (with a marker pen) until you can find it easily. You can find the digital pulse on all 4 legs, on the outside and the inside of the leg, at the pastern or the fetlock. If the toe is 12 o’clock, the pulse is usually between 4 and 5 o’clock. Feel lightly with your finger/s for what feels like a strand of spaghetti under the skin (this is the digital artery), then rest your finger lightly on the artery and feel for the pulse. You can measure the heart rate here, so keep in mind that you are expecting to feel a pulse 30-40 times a minute. Vary the pressure (and position on the artery) of your finger until you feel a slight pulse/movement of your finger. A more bounding pulse than normal - that moves your finger more - may suggest a problem in the foot. Note that standing on hard ground, exercise, excitement, hot weather may all increase the digital pulse - we’ve found that some horses have more bounding digital pulses when they are expecting their bucket feed! See https://www.thelaminitissite.org/d.html
Notice also when picking out feet whether your horse shows any unusual reluctance to lift and hold up feet.

4. Check fat pads and neck crest - owners often report seeing filled supraorbital hollows or an increase in the size and/or firmness of a neck crest before seeing signs of laminitis. Also look for fat pads either side of the top of the tail, and swelling of the sheath or around the udders. Make sure a horse has his/her head up and isn’t chewing/eating when checking for supraorbital filling.
Look out also for weight gain - putting on weight is recognised as a risk factor for insulin-associated laminitis. Use a weight tape regularly, ideally weekly, at the same time of day and standing square on a flat surface, body condition score every 2 weeks, and take action if your girth doesn't tighten as much as usual 🙂

These daily checks may help you to identify signs of early laminitis, but don't play Russian Roulette with your horse's health - if you think your horse could be at risk of laminitis or might have insulin dysregulation/equine metabolic syndrome, talk to your vet about testing insulin, and take action to reduce the risk.

See posts on 12 and 14 April for Clinical signs of laminitis part 1 and 2.

For more information see: https://www.thelaminitissite.org/laminitis.html

For information and support, join Friends of The Laminitis Site: http://www.thelaminitissite.org/join-friends-of-tls.html (£12 annual donation payable).

If you have found this post helpful, please consider making a donation to our current appeals to provide treatment for rescued mare Brandy and endangered breed brood mare Danae. If everyone who has been helped by one of our posts gave just £1 /€1/$1, we could help so many horses in need - thank you:

https://www.justgiving.com/campaign/Brandy

https://www.facebook.com/donate/793191228850107/185646277557164

https://www.thelaminitissite.org/appeals.html

https://www.thelaminitissite.org/donate.html

https://www.paypal.com/gb/fundraiser/charity/2332215

This!!
04/01/2023

This!!

“My horse’s feet didn’t look ANY better with a diet change [or XYZ mineral supplements] so this is all a waste of time.”

I was at a barn a few weeks ago, and someone who works there implied that hoof supplements were a giant waste of money.

While I agree that many companies might have some misleading marketing or may not fully understand what we as hoof rehabbers look for in a supplement, I still hold to the truth that diet can MAKE OR BREAK hoof rehab and for some sensitive horses, diet can mean the difference between life and death- really.

So what are some reasons why diet change might not have worked for your horse?

1. That “hoof supplement” really isn’t giving your horse what it needs.

I constantly see posts about people saying their horse’s hoof issues must just be genetic because “they’re already on a hoof supplement!”
I generally don’t recommend hoof supplements. I recommend feeding the horse AT MINIMUM the daily NRC requirement of minor minerals such as copper and zinc, and increasing if you are struggling with high iron or manganese, especially if you have a metabolic horse. Some popular supplements boast trace minerals - but might only provide, for example, 14mg of copper (yes, I’ve seen an expensive POPULAR supplement with only 14mg of copper per day,) when the NRC recommends at least 100mg per day for an 1100lb horse- and more to balance ratios as needed. While this is only one example of one minor mineral, pitifully low levels of minerals are sadly common in a lot of supplements, and without familiarizing yourself with the NRC daily recommendations, you won’t even realize these supplements are sorely lacking.

Moral of the story: you’re right - the diet change didn’t work for your horse - because it wasn’t meeting basic nutritional needs. Read labels and compare to NRC recs, and for the gold standard: PULL A HAY TEST and balance minerals to what’s actually in your hay!

2. Your horse’s diet is too high in sugar and starch.

Adding a quality supplement won’t do much if your horse is basically eating an all candy/junk food diet at meal time! Excess sugars and starches that aren’t being utilized by exercise or work can wreak havoc on the horse’s system. And this may be controversial, but most horses eating enough quality forage don’t need grain - and some sensitive or metabolic horses downright can’t have grain without having a direct effect on their hoof health and soundness/comfort. For sensitive or metabolic horses, the feed should be less than 4% starch and less than 10% ESC+ starch combined.

Moral of the story: just because a feed is marketed as “low starch” or safe for hoof issues doesn’t mean it is! Always check labels.

3. Your horse is sensitive to grass

Tagging along with #2 above comes those horses that can have a fully forage based, mineral balanced diet, but still have stretched white lines and sensitive/sore hooves … because they can’t handle the rich grass pasture they live on. Often these horses have underlying metabolic issues that simply can’t handle the sugars and starches in grass.

Moral of the story: when in doubt, if your horse is experiencing hoof pain or chronic issues, trial off pasture or with a muzzle to see if things improve.

4. Your horse isn’t getting regular hoofcare

Throwing a mineral supplement at your horse but neglecting to get their feet worked on for months on end isn’t going to help their hoof health. Mechanical wall separation from excess length is a real thing! Not to mention that excess toe length plays a huge role in the forces acting on the palmar aspect of the hoof and up the limb.

Moral of the story: a regular hoofcare schedule is important to hoof health.

5. Your horse isn’t moving enough

While diet can help grow healthier hoof wall and laminae connection, it can’t make up for lack of stimulation/movement. A horse that lives in a stall or who stands at a hay feeder 24 hours a day while barely taking a step will likely have weak feet, even with a perfect diet. You can compare it to a person who eats the cleanest, healthiest diet, but sits at a desk all day. They may be thin and “look healthy,” but they won’t have the strength and muscle that someone who exercises regularly will have! Hooves and their internal structures need movement to be strong.

Moral of the story: proper movement covers a multitude of diet or management “sins” when it comes to hooves! Get those horses moving!

6. Your horse’s environment isn’t clean

A good diet won’t make up for a horse that’s standing in its own urine or manure all day long. While mineral balancing helps immensely with stronger frogs, the caustic nature of their own waste can eat away at even the healthiest of tissue.

Moral of the story: provide your horse with a clean area to live to minimize exposure to nasty microbes.

7. Your horse has undiagnosed metabolic issues

If your horse has chronic hoof issues despite good movement, a clean environment, consistent hoofcare, and a perfect diet, bloodwork can rule out an undiagnosed/uncontrolled metabolic problem. Testing to check for PPID (which isn’t controlled by diet) and IR (where some refractory cases can have high insulin despite a good diet) can help identify another cause of poor hoof health in order to properly treat it.

Moral of the story: a metabolic panel can rule out endocrinopathic causes of hoof issues, or at least tell you where your horse is at baseline.

8. Your horse isn’t actually eating what you think it is

Sometimes even with our best intentions a horse can leave supplements behind or refuse to eat the “bland” forage based feed we try to give it, and if you’re boarding, the barn staff may clean the leftover feed out of the tubs and unknowingly throw all the good stuff in the trash. Double checking to make sure your horse is actually eating what you’re trying to feed it can be important!

Moral of the story: make sure your horse isn’t wasting your hard-earned money by avoiding those expensive feeds/supplements!

Overall, there are many reasons for hoof issues- but before writing off a diet change as “not working,” make sure that there isn’t something above that is sabotaging your efforts.

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Crockett, CA
94525

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