Pony Soldier
WKR
In a lot of the country I hunt in there are countless springs. As they ooze down the hill - they freeze. A couple of inches of snow to hide these patches can create a nasty situation unless you can train your horse to play hocky. I wear cork boots to hunt in because of heavy downfall and frozen ground but what about your pony.
I once met a hunter on a ridge and the topic came up.He said he had sharp shod his horses for this problem. However when he opened his trailer the inside was a blood bath. The horses had shredded each other.
I have hard surfaced the shoes and they lasted longer but didn't make any difference on the ice rinks.
This year I used mustads frost nails on my gentlest horse. They aren't sharp but do provide increased ground pressure for better traction. However (I haven't pulled shoes yet) early inspection showed the nail heads in the back shoes had sheared off. The fronts appear to had stayed. Riding on glaze ice roads showed similar success and failure. The fronts had traction while the hind feet slipped and slid dangerously.
I will know more when I pull shoes but I don't think I will do that again.
I once met a hunter on a ridge and the topic came up.He said he had sharp shod his horses for this problem. However when he opened his trailer the inside was a blood bath. The horses had shredded each other.
I have hard surfaced the shoes and they lasted longer but didn't make any difference on the ice rinks.
This year I used mustads frost nails on my gentlest horse. They aren't sharp but do provide increased ground pressure for better traction. However (I haven't pulled shoes yet) early inspection showed the nail heads in the back shoes had sheared off. The fronts appear to had stayed. Riding on glaze ice roads showed similar success and failure. The fronts had traction while the hind feet slipped and slid dangerously.
I will know more when I pull shoes but I don't think I will do that again.