Yearly misery

Joined
Dec 31, 2021
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2,219
Location
Western Montana
Today I finished shoeing my horses in preparation for open day of big game this weekend. Every year for nearly every year since 1980 I have had the pleasure on shoeing my horses. As I get older it gets tougher. I have one old girl that's easy. One that is a challenge. And one that causes me nightmares.

She pulls back, rears up, falls down and throws herself against the main post in the barn. This is usually confined to the front feet. I have used a 'be nice' halter, a lariet around her ribs, an hour in the round corral and a few other things.

Finally I used half of a hobble with a rope and tied the hoof /leg up around her neck. That stopped the insanity - this year. Without the ability to set it down she wouldn't rear up. That allowed me to nail on the shoe - safely.

Short of drugs I don't have a solution to this nightmare. I'm open to suggestions if anyone has any.
 
She is mostly morgan with a little paso. She has a pull back problem and has had it since I bought her. Probably why I got her so cheap.

Other than that she has been pretty good for riding and for whatever reason I can take the shoes off without a conflict or at least not as much.

She is about 10 years old and I have had her for 4 years.
 
Jealous you know how to do your own shoes. Our current farrier is getting worse and worse at attention to detail, wrong size shoes. I hate finding new ones.
 
Dormosedan is $30 or so a tube. Chances are she will need a partial tube.

We have one old gelding that is on a joint supplement but still pretty stiff on his backs to trim/shoe. Dorm gets us through. He hates the taste though. I combine the partial tubes to get his normal dose every other tube or so.

If you are able the IV dorm is cheaper per dose.

She could be stiff/sore. I’ve found if a little hard work moving feet laterally or yielding hinds with energy and coming right back to the feet in the same location doesn’t fix the issue or the horse gets more committed then it’s probably a pain response instead of attitude. Not a farrier but I’ve had to put in a lot of work to get my horses good with their feet and I can get by when needed to trim or tack a shoe back on. The sessions might be slow improvement for a week or two then still take time.
Could be confidence from one bad experience in the past. Try smallest effort gains to build her confidence.
 
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