Practical and Scientific Horseshoeing
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Practical and Scientific Horseshoeing - Frank G. Churchill
Shoes
CHAPTER I.
PRINCIPLES OF HORSESHOEING.
The fundamental principle of shoeing is to protect the foot from breaking and wearing away at a rate greater than the growth of horn supplied by Nature, and at the same time interfere as little as possible with the physiological functions of the different structures of the foot.
That shoeing is a necessary evil has been admitted for centuries, and we find various means have been adopted for the protection of the feet—from the straw foot-pad used rather extensively in Japan to the modern American iron and steel shoes.
Eminent veterinarians, scientific horseshoers, and the most advanced horsemen have made long and thorough study of the science of shoeing, with the result that to-day a remarkably perfect system of shoeing is being practiced throughout this country.
In the shoeing of our horses. we should always endeavor to keep the feet in a condition as close to that which Nature intended them as is consistent with the amount and class of work required of the animal, the state of weather existing, hardness of roads, etc.
Every nail driven into the wall of the hoof destroys a certain number of horn fibers and thus tends to weaken the main weight-bearing part of the foot.
The shoe raises the frog from the ground and eliminates more or less the functions of the horny frog and elastic structures. This is much more noticeable with the calk shoe than with the plain or plate shoe. This is just one of the many points which should be understood and considered at the time of shoeing or reshoeing animals. How often is the shoer required to put a set of calk shoes on an animal when it is not only unnecessary, but decidedly objectionable. The horse-owner has perhaps had his animals rough
shod all winter and fails to remember that the slippery condition of the roads ceased with the coming of summer. Here he has a chance to help Nature by getting the horse’s foot down on the ground, but he continues the shoeing which does the feet the greatest harm. How many thousands of cases of lame and footsore animals could be avoided each year by an intelligent consideration of the shoeing of our horses.
Before going further into the discussion of scientific shoeing, I want to say a few words direct
to the horse-owner, the master horseshoer, the journeyman, and the horseshoer’s apprentice. But I don’t want any of them to stop with the reading of this direct appeal.
I want each and every one of them to carefully read and study the remaining chapters in this manual. If this is done, I will feel that I am repaid for many years spent in the work and study of scientific horseshoeing. And I will also feel that the condition of many of our poor horses has been improved by the practice of some, if not all, of the principles laid down in this work.
To the Horse-Owner: It is considered most desirable that every horse-owner and trainer should thoroughly understand the theory of shoeing. It is hoped that the readers of this book may be placed in a position to know when their horses are in need of the shoer’s care, and when the shoer has done his work properly.
The United States Government has at last realized the importance of proper shoeing, and every year some twenty-five officers of the Mounted Service are sent to a school for a course of practical and theoretical horseshoeing. That the service is greatly benefited thereby is apparent to anyone who may have an opportunity to examine the the feet of the army horses.
The foot is the most complicated part of the horse and is most susceptible to injury and disease.
The old maxim, No foot no horse,
is true. Nature’s work in the construction of the foot was marvelous. The horny frog, situated between the bars in the lower surface of the foot, acts as a buffer or cushion to break the jar and concussion when the foot strikes the ground, thus avoiding injury to the various parts contained within the foot. It also assists the circulation of the blood through the foot. And proper circulation of the blood is necessary if the foot is to be kept in a sound and healthy condition.
Shoeing in such a way as to keep the foot as near a state of Nature, and at the same time to protect it from too rapid wear on hard roads, should be the aim of every horse-owner. It is economy to take proper care of the feet. There is nothing saved by insisting on having heavy or calked shoes put on your horses simply to get more wear out of them. You may cut down the shoeing bill, but the veterinarian’s account in caring for your horse’s neglected and damaged feet will make it a mighty expensive practice. By allowing the feet to accumulate an excessive growth of horn, and by the continued use of the calk shoe, the horny frog and elastic structures cannot perform their proper functions. A diseased condition of the foot is the result.
Front feet, on account of the amount of concussion they receive, are more susceptible to injury than are the hind.
Contracted heels, corns, quarter and toe cracks, side bones, etc., are the diseases most common in cases where the proper shoeing of the feet is not attended to. As a result of this neglect, the animal depreciates in value, and in many cases it is necessary to lay the horse up for treatment at considerable expense and much inconvenience.
This might be avoided by giving the feet more careful attention Though it may cost a trifle more for shoeing it is money saved in the long run. A light shoe is better than a heavy one, for the reason that the heavier the shoe the more labor on the tendons and ligaments and the more readily the horse becomes fatigued. Fatigue induces stumbling and interference of the limbs.
The lightest shoe that will wear for a reasonable length of time is the best shoe to use.
The plain shoe is better than the calked, as it keeps the foot nearer a state of nature and allows the different parts to properly perform their functions.
This statement is often made: My horse cannot stand up on city pavements without calks on account of its slipping.
I have found by experience that under ordinary conditions a horse will stand up as well with the plain shoes as with calks. This applies particularly to the front feet. In case of heavy draft-horses, shoe plain in front and calks on the hind shoes. Most of the propelling is done with the hind feet.
A horse that is accustomed to wearing calks will be a little timid at first on pavements with the plain shoe, but will soon get used to them and travel easier and better than with the former.
The shoes should be removed and the feet trimmed once a month. If the shoes are not worn, have them reset. Many horse-owners think that as long as the shoes stay on the feet the horse does not need shoeing.
The average growth of a healthy hoof is about three-eighths of an inch per month. The horn fibers of the wall grow downward and forward, in a straight line, at an angle of from 43 to 55 degrees. The hoof is bell-shaped; its lower border, or bearing edge, being the greatest in circumference. The shoe is fitted to the outline of this border, except at the heels where it is fitted a trifle fuller to allow for the expansion of the quarters and heels. As the wall grows the circumference of the foot becomes greater, and in time it overgrows the shoe, causing corns, contracted feet, and other diseases. The foot is continually changing in shape, while the shoe is not.
The horse that is turned out to pasture or worked barefooted should have its feet trimmed frequently (every three weeks), as the wear of the feet is net always uniform. This unevenness of the hoof throws the foot out of its natural position and in many cases causes injury to the foot and leg by an unequal distribution of weight on the horn structures and an overtaxing or straining of the tendons and