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Horse Toes Out In Front - Question

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  • Horse Toes Out In Front - Question

    I am pony shopping - just looking for a project for the summer. Just a quiet QH type pony to train and resell later. I found a 6yr gelding that is the right size and temperment. Built okay - except that he toes out in front. He looks like he has had some interference issues with his fetlocks from the toeing out. Very minor swelling on the inside of each front foot. Not painful and he was sound. His feet are long and he did not hit himself while I will lunging him that I could tell. I think some minor (very minor) correctional shoeing would help and then riding him in boots would help but should I be concerned about the fetlocks?

    Thanks, Bopper

  • #2
    yes...

    I'd want to see x-rays

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    • #3
      He is past the age of corrective shoeing and trimming, the bone is set and messing around too much will just make him sore. Shoe him level - tape measure level, pay close attention to the angles and put him in aluminums. You are still going to need shin boots just in case he does whack himself.
      Founder of the Dyslexic Clique. Dyslexics of the world - UNTIE!!

      Member: Incredible Invisbles

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      • #4
        That is one conformation fault I won't touch.
        "Kindness is free" ~ Eurofoal
        ---
        The CoTH CYA - please consult w/your veterinarian under any and all circumstances.

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        • #5
          That is one conformation fault I won't touch.
          Ah, yes--but is it a conformational fault or is it the way the pony has been trimmed? If the pony is not landing flat it could be he's trimmed improperly. Are his knees straight or do they turn out as well?

          Pick each front foot up and cup your hand under his pastern loosely so you are looking at the back of his pastern--now look at the back his hoof. Is his hoof straight, or is it crooked? If his hoof is crooked then his leg is crooked. I would pass in that case. If it's straight then he's not trimmed correctly.

          I agree that he's past the point of correctional trimming but his gait may be improved by creative shoeing. You have to shoe his foot so its under his leg to support his body. Unfortunately that takes money and the more you spend on this pony the less profit you will make.

          If you do what I told you to do and you think he's not trimmed right I would definitely have the vet out to x-ray those fetlocks before buying him as part of the PPE (and I would recommend at least a basic PPE if you are going to try and resell him--heart, lungs, eyes and palpate legs). Hard telling what he's done to his ankles if they are swollen. You don't want to end up with a pony you can't give away, do you?
          "Don't blame Hogg or the other teens. The adults are supposed to know better. If only we could find any." ~Tom Nichols, professor of national security affairs at the Naval War College~

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