“No foot, no horse” is true for any horse in an athletic career. Owners and riders often wonder if their horse is shod properly or how to tell whether he is or isn’t. Stephen O’Grady, DVM, MRCVS, of Virginia Therapeutic Farriery, says that knowing the basic principles of farriery can be helpful. “If you consider the anatomy of the foot, biomechanics and the principles of farriery, you can come up with a good concept of how a certain horse is or should be shod,” he says.
“Textbooks for veterinarians and farriers describe the normal foot, but we don’t really know what a normal foot is,” says O’Grady. What’s normal for one horse may not be normal for another.
Guideline 1: Hoof–Pastern Axis
“We must take breed into consideration, the ground…