White Rock Performance Horses LLC

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Lillian Evaniew-Phelan
Equestrian Judge & Clinician
Equestrian Canada Dressage Judge,
HCBC Dressage and Western Judge
USEF WDAA R Judge
USEF R Western Judge
AQHA WD Judge
WSDAC
NSBA, IBHA, ABRA, POA, ASHA, Judge
AQHA Prof.Horsemen

Such shocking news to hear Bob Avila passed away. He was a True Horseman. So thankful I had the opportunity to go to man...
11/10/2024

Such shocking news to hear Bob Avila passed away. He was a True Horseman. So thankful I had the opportunity to go to many of his Clinics and watch him compete when I was young up coming trainer living in Nevada. He was my Hero and definitely set the bar high, I inspired to train like him.
My condolences to his family. The horse world lost one of The Great Ones🙏

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11/08/2024

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10/30/2024
Super Dressage Symposium today đź’•
10/27/2024

Super Dressage Symposium today đź’•

Fall Symposium Clinician
October 26/27 2024
Team Strategy Pathways Presents.....

International Dressage Trainer Dieter Laugks

Dieter Laugks is a international successful Dressage Trainer and Rider. Further on he is one of the most experienced Lawyers for Horse Law in Germany, running the Law Firm Laugks & Westhoff in DĂĽsseldorf.

He started his Dressage Career at the German Olympic Committee DOKR in Warendorf, training several years with Harry Boldt.
He was German Vice Champion Dressage and became three times Rheinland Dressage Champion.

He has been Member of the German Dressage Squad more than 10 years with 4 different Horses and won several Nation Cups with the German Dressage Team.

Dieter Laugks is one of the Top Trainers in the Dressage world. He was Trainer of British Fiona Bigwood up to the Olympic Games in Athen, made Sonja Bolz winning the First Piaffe Förderpreis in Germany for U25 Riders. He led Austrian Diana Porsche within 4 years from L-Level up to being No. 1 of the FEI World Dressage Ranking for U25.
In the USA he was training Diane Creech and Yvonne Losos de Muniz during the Wellington Season 2016 and has been Trainer of Charlotte Jorst in the USA 2016/2017.
Currently, as a trainer, he brought the Canadian rider Ryan Torkkeli into the international Grand Prix sport within 2 years. After Ryan Torkkeli competed in a Grand Prix competition for the first time at the end of 2020, he took part in the 2021 CHIO Aachen and in 2022 at the World Equestrian Games WEG Herning with the Canadian team on the horse Sternenwandern trained by Dieter Laugks.

Looking forward to judging the Ranch Riding, and Working Western classes
03/10/2024

Looking forward to judging the Ranch Riding, and Working Western classes

Looking forward to Florida and Judging
01/30/2024

Looking forward to Florida and Judging

Looking forward to judging
01/30/2024

Looking forward to judging

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03/28/2023

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12/23/2022

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05/15/2022
Hoping for change!
04/27/2022

Hoping for change!

I went for a little walk around the local show park yesterday during the season opener hunter/jumper show. I try not to look down at horse feet unless someone asks for my opinion, but despite my best efforts, I couldn’t stop noticing that most of the horses there, from the low level hunters to the 1.20m jumper class I watched for a while are very obviously NPA and/or showed obvious signs of caudal failure. NPA means “negative palmar angle” on front feet or “negative plantar angle” on hinds. It means that the back of the coffin bone is lower than the front. It is supposed to be the other way around! A normal palmar/plantar angle is 2°-10° yet soooo many horses work on feet with palmar/plantar angles of less than zero. It is so common that by most people it is seen as normal. Caudal failure means structural collapse of the caudal (back) part of the foot.

Horses may not be obviously lame with this condition, however there are often subtle signs. Reluctance to go forward, forging (stepping on or hitting the backs of the front shoes with the hind feet), overreaching, not tracking up, refusing jumps, bucking after jumps (because landing hurts), lack of hindquarter engagement, decreased gait quality all around, behavioural issues under saddle, etc. These symptoms can be easily mistaken for other things or riders and trainers can tend to use punishment to try to change some behaviours that have their root in hoof pain. It is also very hard on the legs and most specifically the DDFT (deep digital flexor tendon) and navicular area of the foot because of the biomechanics of a foot with an improper angle cause increased friction where the DDFT runs under the navicular bone to attach to the back of the coffin bone. This is why low heeled horses are at increased risk of developing navicular syndrome.

We need to retrain our eyes to know what is normal. We also need to realize that asking horses to work hard when their feet are a mess is not fair and causes sometimes irreparable damage, both to their feet and to their opinions about working.

How do we fix it? First we need to acknowledge that NPA is a systemic issue in farriery and we need to change the way we trim and shoe. Owners need to recognize NPA and find a farrier who recognizes NPA and knows how to fix it. Farriers need to stop trimming off the back of the foot and add frog support to our shoeing packages. Frog support needs to be normalized. More than one client has remarked to me that if we put frog pads on the horse, potential buyers will think there is something wrong with the horse. This is because what is normalized currently in farriery are open heeled regular metal shoes, which are a huge part of what causes NPA. When we lift up the foot off the ground and provide no structural support to the frog, the center of the foot collapses. This is a very simple concept, yet we are still doing things the same way we have always done and expecting a different result. This is the definition of insanity and it is killing our horses slowly. If I help to change only one thing in my time as a farrier, I hope for it to be this.

For reference, normal/ideal angles are generally as follows:
Hairline: about 20°
Dorsal wall (toe): about 50-55°, steeper on some breeds
Heel: equal to toe angle or perhaps 5° less than dorsal wall

This horse’s toe is close to 50° however the heel is 23° lower than the toe and I could not even measure the heel at the back because the bulb is sitting on the shoe! I had to measure it where I could see the angle of the tubules on the wall. The hairline is far too low. This foot is not helping this horse at all and this horse is one of many. I might get some angry messages for this, but we need to acknowledge that most of our performance horses are NPA and/or have some degree of caudal failure and then then we need to do something about it.

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Addendum: This post has pi**ed off some people. Fair enough. It’s also been shared all over the world, which has been great and also quite the experience. Wayne over at Progressive Equine has been writing about caudal failure and NPA for a few years now, as have others. This topic is not new. For whatever reason, this post in particular has caught peoples’ attention.

What I ask of those who are angry about it, or indignant that I dared to challenge the status quo is this: if you think I’m wrong, ok. Go prove it. If I’m wrong, why are you angry? If I am wrong, then this post is irrelevant to you and irrelevant to your work and there is nothing to be angry about. I did not (and will not) name any particular farrier. Who did the job is not even relevant, because this problem is not about one person. I am not trash talking anyone. I am saying that there is a systemic issue in how farriers are taught to trim and shoe and that it is on us, as a group, to correct it by continuing to learn and grow. That is my perspective. If you think I’m wrong then disregard it. And yes, some horses manage in regular shoes and to the owners and farriers of those horses I am glad for you. For everyone else, maybe what I wrote here will help you. That is all I am trying to do.

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Okanogan, WA
98849

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