Horse Health Care

Horse Health Care
Horse Health Care

Do you want to know hoof care tips and techniques?

Horses are what you call ungulates. Ungulates are groups of mammals which use the tip of the toes to support their weight when moving. Most of ungulates are hoofed animals- such as horses, donkeys, zebras, camels, giraffes, and deer.

A hoof is the tip of a toe of an ungulate. It is strengthened by keratin, in the form of a thick, hard covering. The sole of the hoof is somewhat hard and rubbery, but softer than the outside. There is also a hard wall formed by the solid nail rolled around the tip of the toe. The whole weight of the horse is carried by the soles of the hooves and also, the edges of its walls.

Horse’s hooves grow but are constantly worn down thru continuous moving. The average weight of horses is often more than 1000 lbs and it is only supported by its four hooves. A horse is valued because of its strength and ability to carry humans and objects for pleasure and work purposes. They are prized for their mobile function. Needless to say, a horse with feet problems can be rendered useless.

There are three hoof care tips to consider with hoof care for horses – cleaning, trimming, and shoeing.

Cleaning

In most things we do, hygiene is priority. It is very important to clean the hooves of your horse especially before and after riding. Every horse owner must have the essential tool, the hoof pick. It will be your best friend in horse grooming particularly with the animal’s hooves.

It should be mentioned that even horses that are not at all ridden should still be subjected to hoof pick grooming to prevent thrush. It should be done daily. A horse with wet hooves is very hard to maintain.

Trimming

As earlier mentioned, hooves are continuously growing. Thus, they need trimming to keep them in good shape and to keep the horse in good form. Trimming should be done about every one to two months, depending on the use of the animal and the conditions it’s kept in. Trimming can be difficult and it requires considerably skill. Trained farriers should be the only one to do this task to prevent incorrect trimming.

The most common mistake of the inexperienced is trimming the wall too short. Paring of too much sole is just like cutting your nails too short and can create lameness in the animal in addition to pain. Hoof care must be done by a professional as it is not a good idea to save a few pennies in exchanged for a ruined horse. Have a competent, trained farrier do the job. The expense is certainly worth it.

Shoeing

Can you imagine doing hard manual labor without any footwear?

We use footwear such as shoes because we need protection for our feet. Horses are no different. Even though horses have naturally strong and durable feet, they still need to be shod if they are doing a lot of work.

Some horses may have relatively flat or weak hoofwalls, or simply not fit for hard labor. Such horses need shoes even they are not for functional work purposes. It is better to consult a vet or a farrier about this, as whoever is doing the corrective shoeing must really know their stuff.

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UK ruff price of keeping a Horse?

Since I was a child I have loved horses. I dont own any land so I plan on renting.

Can you tell me how much it costs to keep a horse, from food, health care, bedding, etc

thank you
JEANETTE S what was the point of that answer? I werent on about straight away I need to learn first, so please, next time dont be so childish

If your horse is in 24/7 a bale will last 1 day, or 1.5 at best. If he’s out during the day then 1 bale will last 2 days, 3 at best.
One haynet is 3 slices of hay; this is half a bale.

Dentist visits are usually £35 a time, every six months.

How about livery? Where will you keep the horse? Here’s a breakdown for my TBxID (I chose him not my TB as my TB has remedial shoeing and other expensive mgt.)

Livery – £172 a month = £2064
Shoes – £45 every 5 weeks = £450
Worming – £15 a tube, 4x a year = £60
Insurance = £880
Vaccinations = £80 (£40 call out, £40 vaccs)
Feed – 1 x £12 bag and 1 x £9 bag each month = £252
Supplements – Garlic at £8 month, Biotin at £9 a month, Feed balancer at £18 a month, pro biotic at £20 month = £660
Bedding – Straw at £2 a bale, 3 bales a week (I have daily turnout) = £72
Rug cleaning and reproofing = approx £100 a year
Dentist – £25 (we have a group visit so its cheaper) every 6 months = £50
Hay is included in my livery.

Total = £4668 – in reality it is more because I have my diesel to and from the Stables, wear and tear on my horse trailer, diesel to and from the farrier, clipping/sedation expenses and of course any injuries/illnesses which require veterinary treatment. I budget about £6000 for him.

ADD: Jessie; my horse has poor feet hence being shod every 5 weeks. As you said, some horses can go up to 8 weeks between shoeing/dressing.
I too have the ‘backman’ out every 6 months at around £50 a time. I have an annual check from the vets too, costing around £40 (plus callout)

Horse Care & Buying Tips : How to Choose a Thoroughbred Horse

Horse Training

Horse Training
Horse Training

Horse owners should understand an important element about their horse that will make training them easier and more successful.

We are talking about your horse’s brain. Your horse’s brain has two halves that are not connected. You’ve probably heard trainers say, “be sure to do both sides of the horse”. What this means is whatever technique you do with your horse then you must do it on his other side once he gets it on one side. In other words, if you get him used to a plastic sack on his left side then you have to do it on his right side. Why? Because his left brain side does not communicate with his right side brain since they are not connected.

Think of this. Your equine has an eye on both sides of his skull. His right eye is looking at what’s going on to his right, to his front right, and behind him on the right. The left eye is doing the same but on his left side. His eye’s can see what’s happening independently of each other. This means that when your horse is looking at you with one eye, you only have half his brain – thus, you have only half of his attention. If you don’t have all his attention, then you don’t have the horse.

This means if you’re about to teach your horse something, you need his attention. Think of it like this. Have you ever talked with someone and when you do they look off somewhere and then look back to you? That’s rude. You don’t have their attention. Why, then, would you allow your horse to do the same thing? There’ll be times you can’t have both eyes because of the way you’re training your horse. However, when you can have his eyes on you, then make sure you do. It makes training a horse easier and more successful.

Learn how to control your horse, eliminate bucking and rearing, and stay safely glued to your saddle even if your horse unexpectedly explodes out of control. Go to: http://www.superstarsofhorsetraining.com/

Author Andrew Curry reveals techniques, tips, and methods for working with your horse.

If i wrote a blog on interesting horse training would you read it?

i want to start a blog on interesting train, making your own treats, bomb-proofing Horses and working with rider confidence building. is this something you would be willing to read or contribute too?

an example topic would be: how to desensitize your horse to new things
i would love people to contribute their own quality tips and stories to this blog. would anyone here read it?

http://onceuponaponytail.blogspot.com/

check it out, i want more opinons!

would you like it if i featured some Y!A questions on here?

I had saved your question because I did not have time to read it when I found it.

I looked at the web site and I think it looks great. Informative stories/articles that I found interesting and I will be going back to finish the losing a horse one as I did not have time to finish it with the respect it deserved.

I also loved that you picked up the mustang question posted here a short time ago. I saw it at the time and was horrified and hope it was an attention seeking brat with too much time on their hands. But it is certainly a good conversation starter.

So in answer to your question yes I would read it.

Good luck and keep it up ;-)

Trick Horse Training – www.HorseTraining.org

Horse Oil Paintings

Horse Oil Paintings
Horse Oil Paintings

Find Li Songsong Biography and artwork at Saatchi-Gallery

Li Songsong, a young artist in the 70s, in recent years has been survey the relationship between public image and their implementation on the web. In the transition to painting these images, which are mostly old photos related characters and historical facts, that cognitive style has been extended to the practice of some artists before criticizing, exposing, questioning or satire and propaganda of a certain historical period, but used a type of imaging adopting an objective approach. In other words, the use of image-historical documents that interested, Li Songsong has apparently not been able to resolve the historical value, otherwise, is only visual point of view, which must be felt the target power, simple and direct as the story moved or transplanted onto the canvas.

This implementation not only provides a new perspective to think about historical memory, but also one of the memories of the identification in the context historical linguistics. Here, the artist emerges from a new generation approach to collective memory and personal history, and the difference of Artist of the previous generation with a different behavior and views. This position at least more self decided to tell his course and depth, so for the viewer to grasp a better understanding of the relationship between a limited public not real clean and historical image.

Li Songsong large oil paintings and his paintings are based on photographs of political events in Chinese history. There intentions personal rather than political messages, even to find and confirm their origin through their own eyes.

PROFILE

1968

• Born in Beijing China

EDUCATION

1996

• Graduated from the Central Academy of Fine Arts, Painting Oil Ministry, lives and works in Beijing

Your selected exhibitions

1. Public Works action "Horse" Tsinghua University Institute of Fine Arts, Beijing

2. Galerie 99, Aschaffenburg, Germany

3. Li Songsong Works 2001-2004 " CAAWS, Beijing

4. "Third National Exhibition of Oil Painting Museum of China" National Fine Arts, Beijing

5. "The Left Hand Right Hand: China-German Exhibition of Contemporary Art, 798 Art Space Beijing Culture

6. "China Painting Photography" Art Seasons Gallery of China, Beijing

7. Summer Show "2004" Hanart TZ Gallery, Hong Kong

8. "Some Definitions" imagined community "of Crystal City Tianjin, Tianjin

9. "Democracy forever" Plumblossums Gallery, New York

10. "Welcome, Welcome: Art-Beijing-based contemporary gallery, Tokyo

About the Author

View more information about Li Songsong paintings, biography and Exhibitions at The Saatchi Gallery – London contemporary art gallery. Li Songsong

I can not sleep until tomorrow!?

I tried … Lights on lights out, reading, Nintendo DS, music, nothing, Cat landing counting sheep, process oils, balsam sleep, sleeping pills, low lighting, television, problem solving, thinking that things paintings, text messages, the bathroom before bed, hot drinks, toast, everything! But I can still not sleeping at least until 4:00! I'm getting up at 6:00 because I have a horse and I'm wrong and ill-tempered by the lack of sleep! Suggestions?

Stay one night and the next day. Time runs out, it's time to go to bed hope you sleep. Not Never sleep with TV / sound / lights, indeed.

Commissioned horse oil painting & blood vessel black canvas