Larry Bailey Horse World

Larry Bailey Horse World Teaching ,training and coaching for over 60 years. All disciplines all breeds. "Live a better life with horses"

It is with a broken heart that I am letting our Facebook community know that Larry Bailey passed away very peacefully on...
06/15/2024

It is with a broken heart that I am letting our Facebook community know that Larry Bailey passed away very peacefully on Wed June 12 2024. after a monumental battle with 2 cancers.
He leaves behind an amazing legacy with the horse world that spans generations of people and horses. I hope I can write a fitting tribute to him in the days to come that embodies the incredible man and horseman he was...

Sept. 2 1949 - June 12 2024

Our client enjoying her new mare...
05/11/2024

Our client enjoying her new mare...

This lovely mare has arrived to her new home in South Carolina! CONGRATULATIONS Mary and Rob Baney!
04/24/2024

This lovely mare has arrived to her new home in South Carolina! CONGRATULATIONS Mary and Rob Baney!

12/16/2023
12/16/2023

Beautiful winter view of Roaring Brook Falls in the Adirondacks


Created w/ Eos R + 150-600 Sport .official X-AirCross2



💔💔Last night we lost my bestest girl Buffy...we are so heartbroken but filled with the absolute amazing memories she gav...
05/24/2023

💔💔Last night we lost my bestest girl Buffy...we are so heartbroken but filled with the absolute amazing memories she gave us. She loved every living thing and her beauty inside and out was apparent to everyone who knew her. She was the sweetest horse I've ever known and stole my heart from the first day I met her... she returned back to God and heaven where I knew she had always come from because she was my angel here on earth....
2003-2023...

A time when horse shows had lots of spectators in the stands!
02/09/2023

A time when horse shows had lots of spectators in the stands!

Years ago....
02/09/2023

Years ago....

King... one of the best horses I ever had!
02/09/2023

King... one of the best horses I ever had!

01/26/2023

Throwback.. Larry riding a very young Sh**un

01/24/2023

Maria Ziobron Nichols great memory with you and Sammy

10/31/2022

“When I bestride him, I soar, I am a hawk: he trots the air; the earth sings when he touches it.”
― William Shakespeare

When looking for bits last week which is a habit of mine, as a consultant I'm asked to visit facilities to help in all k...
10/25/2022

When looking for bits last week which is a habit of mine, as a consultant I'm asked to visit facilities to help in all kinds of areas. But the tack room tells me a lot. Like training philosophy, condition of bits, the wear on the mouthpieces Etc.

The craftsmanship of bits today is a serious problem. The tack shop I was in last week was in Camden South carolina. Camden is a small town that is centered around horses and horsemanship. Lots of fox hunting and Steeplechase racing this environment is all about history and history saves time. With history you have principles and basics.

Picking the correct type of bit for each horse, each discipline requires a complex understanding consisting of how the bit operates in the mouth how the bit should fit in the mouth what the purpose of the bit is and is it built to do that and on and on. And after all the aspects of what the bit will mean to the horse the actual manufacturing of the bit the balance of the bit, the evenness of the cannons, the balance of the weight left to right side and on and on.

So the next time you go to look for a bit remember the picture of this old fart who has 60 years of experience of picking bits still takes a long time to pick one out!

❤❤❤from Tracy, Gisele, Spring and Buffy!
09/02/2022

❤❤❤from Tracy, Gisele, Spring and Buffy!

The girls enjoying their day!
08/31/2022

The girls enjoying their day!

A must read...
08/04/2022

A must read...

Boots and bandages - are we harming our horses as we try to protect them?

Bandaging and booting our horses is becoming more and more popular, especially with the popularity of matchy matchy sets. But are we doing more harm than good? Most people will have come across the articles in magazines and comments from vets saying they are, and yet still they become more and more popular. Why is that? Why do riders still cover their horses in thick fleece bandages or fluffy boots despite the dangers? Tradition I suppose. Wanting to fit in. Or just habit, some will feel like they haven’t finished tacking up if they haven’t put the boots on.

I know this isn’t about dentistry (for which I apologise) but I am a vet first and foremost, and as a dressage rider I am asked why I don’t use bandages all the time. I’ve written about this several times now and no one pays attention, so rather than stating facts and quoting research, I’d like to take you through my journey of discovery, please bear with me. Facts and papers are at the end.

Rewind 12 years and I was in my final year at vet school. Prior to and during vet school I had a horse and we did dressage. I had planned to ODE but this horse pulled every tendon and ligament known to vet kind. He spent more time out of work than in. Each time I would up my game with the latest boots/bandages on the market. From fluffy boots to wraps to sports fetlock boots, fleece bandages to gamgee and cotton to the half fleece/half elastic bandages. I learnt new techniques for better support, figure of 8 bandaging to cradle the fetlock etc etc. I’d been there and done it. My collection was extensive.

Right at the end of vet school I had my rotations. I chose Equine lameness as one of my options. During in this I very vividly remember a wet lab with Dr Renate Weller where she had a skinned horses leg (showing all of the tendons and ligaments) in a machine that mimicked the pressures a horse applies to their limbs. She took us through walk, trot, canter and gallop, loading this leg so we could see the inside workings of the horses leg without the skin. It was fascinating I can tell you, and I very clearly remember thinking about my horse and wondering how on earth we are suppose to support this limb when it undergoes these incredible forces! Half a ton of animal pushing down a tiny spindle of a leg held by tendons barely thicker than my thumb. Craziness!

Fast forward just a few short months and I was a fully qualified vet in the big wide world. I attended my first BEVA Congress and during the break I wandered around the stalls looking at the latest inventions and technologies companies bring to these gatherings. Here I came across a company with the Equestride Boot which caught my eye. Now if you haven’t seen this boot, it’s wonderful and I’ve since used it a few times in rehabbing very severe tendon and ligament injuries with great success. The boot is a carbon fibre boot that stops the fetlock dropping, which stops the tendons and ligaments being fully loaded while they heal. This boot is super strong. You couldn’t ride a horse in it as it is limiting the range of motion so much, but they can move about easily enough at the lower settings to rehab etc. The guy on the stand (I’m afraid I can’t remember his name) showed me their research and in the straight talking Irish way explained the stupidity of expecting a thin piece of material to support a horse. And of course it can’t! Literally no bandage or boot (short of this very expensive carbon fibre rehab boot) is capable of reducing the amount the fetlock drops. Thinking back to Dr Weller’s demonstration, I could very clearly see how ridiculous I had been to ever believe a scrap of material could do anything to reduce or support that pressure.

But the boots/bandages don’t actually cause any harm do they? Surely it’s ok to use them on the off chance they might help and if we look good in the meantime, great! Well, not long after this, research started appearing that got me very worried about my bandage collection. Heat. Anyone that uses bandages and boots will not be surprised to see sweat marks under their bandages/boots after they’ve been removed. They trap a lot of heat. The horses body and legs generate a lot of heat when working. The tendons/ligaments in the leg, along with an increased blood flow generate ALOT of heat. Fleece bandages/boots in particular, hold this heat in the horses leg. Very few boots and virtually no bandages (especially if you use a pad under) allow the legs to breath adequately. This heat is easily enough to kill tendon/ligament cells. Each tendon/ligament is made of thousands and thousands of cells all lined up end on end and side by side in long thin spindles. They stretch and return to their original shape and size like an elastic band, absorbing and redistributing the pressures applied from further up the leg and from the ground impact below. All of these cells must work together as one to do this effectively.

Just a little side step here to explain how tendons/ligaments heal. A tendon/ligament cell can not be replaced like for like. They always heal with scar tissue. This is why reinjury is so much more likely if a tendon/ligament is blown. The fibrous scar tissue doesn’t stretch, it isn’t capable of stretching or absorbing the impact of a horses movement. It will always be a weak spot. In a full blown sprain/strain the whole (or most) of the tendon has been damaged. But this heat injury might just kill a few cells at a time. Those few cells are replaced by fibrous scar tissue, then next time a few more etc etc. Like a rubber band degrading over time the tendon/ligament loses its elasticity and eventually goes snap. Then you’ve fully blown a tendon/ligament. The injury didn’t start to happen at that moment, but that was the final straw. The damage adds up over time, each time thermal necrosis (vet word for cell death) occurs.

So if using boots/bandages can not offer any sort of support, and using them generates heat that slowly damages the tendons/ligaments until they give way. Why use them? Protection. This is the only reason to use boots. To stop the horse brushing, injuring themselves catching a pole or over cross country. But for goodness sake make sure your boots are breathable! If the horse is sweaty under the boot but not above or below, the boot is not breathable enough. And don’t use fleece bandages just because you like the colour. These fleece bandages are the worst at holding heat in the leg, way above the threshold for thermal necrosis to the cells of the tendons and ligaments. If your horse doesn’t need protection, don’t use boots. I haven’t for the last 12 years and *touch wood* I haven’t had a single tendon/ligament injury in any of my horses. I will never go back to boots or especially bandages now. I don’t use them for schooling, lunging, jumping, travelling, turnout, stable, in fact I don’t use them at all. Ever. But I don’t hunt or XC.

I hope you have found my story useful and can make informed decisions on boots and bandaging going forward.

For more information on the Equestride boot and their research into support offered by boots and bandages, visit http://www.equestride.com/ and https://www.equinetendon.com/services/equestride/

The horses leg under the compression machine at the Irish Equine rehabilitation and fitness centre https://fb.watch/cmVMt6-iOJ/ (I highly recommend you watch this incredible video. It clearly shows the amount of force the leg goes through and demonstrates the real purpose of boots)

Other relevant papers-
https://equimanagement.com/.amp/articles/horse-skin-temperature-under-boots-after-exercise
https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/8f15/0ea480edca142260d01f419f80d2e7e7fb29.pdf
http://www.asbweb.org/conferences/1990s/1998/59/index.html

Edit 1 - I am getting asked about stable wraps very frequently. This post is about riding, the tendons and blood flow create heat which is trapped by bandages/boots during exercise. This doesn’t occur in the stable stood still. If the horse has a strain/sprain resulting in inflammation, then there is an increase in blood flow and there is heat being created. In this situation you should not be bandaging. But if it’s cold and an old horse needs stable wraps to keep the joints warm and improve sluggish blood flow (filled legs) you can use the heat trapping to your advantage. But you need to be careful in summer.

Edit 2 - the other thing I’m being asked about is compression. Compression DOES NOT control inflammation. The inflammation still occurs, but the swelling can not escape the bandages and the increase in internal pressure reduces blood flow, causing ischemic damage. Like laminitis within the hoof. The hoof capsule prevents swelling so the inflammation expands inwards and cuts off the blood supply. This is why laminitis is so painful and difficult to treat. Compression is only useful in the case of leaky vessels, for example reduced blood pressure, reduced movement so the blood isn’t being pumped backup the legs, or osmotic imbalances eg low protein with diarrhoea. In these situations, compression of the legs can encourage blood to return to the vessels and continue circulating.

05/25/2022
Sign up for a free 20 min complimentary live stream lesson with Larry available through the month of January! “Live a be...
01/04/2022

Sign up for a free 20 min complimentary live stream lesson with Larry available through the month of January!
“Live a better life with horses”

Larry Bailey
704-300-7489
PM on Facebook Larry Bailey Horse World
[email protected]

INTRODUCING LIVE STREAM LESSONS                           Get the help you need now!Introducing live stream lessons, coa...
01/02/2022

INTRODUCING LIVE STREAM LESSONS

Get the help you need now!
Introducing live stream lessons, coaching, and training with Larry Bailey! Get the help you want and need on your schedule. Now is the time to take advantage of this new technology to help advance your horsemanship anytime throughout the year no matter where you live.
Customize your own program
Those who know Larry and his life with horses already are aware he can help the most beginner student to the very experienced horsemen. His 60 years in the horse business spans dressage to reining, jumpers to western pleasure, hunters, English pleasure and more.. even circus horses! Sign up for a free 20 min complimentary live stream lesson with Larry available through the month of January!


Lessons $45 for 45 min session. And training and coaching start at the same pricing.

“Live a better life with horses”

Let us show you how easy it is to get started!


Larry Bailey
704-300-7489
or
401-222-9046
PM on Facebook Larry Bailey Horse World
[email protected]

The long awaited first book by Larry is on its way...2/3rds done and just finished the cover (after a number of iteratio...
04/13/2021

The long awaited first book by Larry is on its way...2/3rds done and just finished the cover (after a number of iterations)..Look for copies to be ready by July or sooner. Here's a peek at the "approved" cover.

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Loris, SC

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