The Horse That Lost Its Hoof (Hoof Restoration)

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  • Опубликовано: 1 мар 2023
  • Hi I’m a farrier from the uk today I will be shoeing Florence.
    Florence lost her hoof six months ago running in the field. We have been working hard to get her hoof back healthy.
    Don’t forget to like and subscribe to my channel as I upload horse shoeing and trimming videos on a regular basis.
    Hope you have a great day and I’ll see you on the next video 🤙
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Комментарии • 788

  • @Peterthefarrier
    @Peterthefarrier  Год назад +1288

    I understand some of the confusion that people have with this video.
    When I got to this Horse six months ago, I was not able to do a recording. The owner was under a lot of stress with the situation and it would not have been very professional of me saying hey, can I just record this?
    unfortunately, the best I could do is show you the damage that was done and where we are at now.

    • @emmaorlich7427
      @emmaorlich7427 Год назад +62

      Thank you very much! It seems to me as Florence hoof looks much better now. What a horrable Situation! 😱😳🤯

    • @Autumnpearly
      @Autumnpearly Год назад +15

      They usually don't when done properly

    • @AgentRains
      @AgentRains Год назад +18

      Understandable but helps to tell us more information I'd u want new interested viewers. Like me lol

    • @johnthomas4620
      @johnthomas4620 Год назад

      ​@@emmaorlich7427 4l6rLZUwFDAwe C300

    • @MissHellybaybee
      @MissHellybaybee Год назад +65

      I'm just curious, how did you treat the foot when her hoof fell off? Did she have to have it covered or anything? Didn't it bleed? That's such a lot of hoof to lose

  • @WindsofChange
    @WindsofChange Год назад +1326

    I didn't even know that they could lose their ENTIRE hoof and survive, let alone grow it back. If my horses hoof would have come off I'd have been inconsolably hysterical.
    (for the intellectually stunted out there, we're talking about the ENTIRE hoof wall, not just a piece. I am aware, given enough time hoof grows back- DUH!!!! This is a conversation about if a horse loses the entire hoof wall what one does THEN because hoof would take a very long time to grow the entire thing back new and in the meantime you have bare internal hoof structures that are entirely unprotected. So if you're here to give everyone the obvious advice that hoof grows back....you're right off the bat the one that is an idi0t.)

    • @thisirishcobcan
      @thisirishcobcan 11 месяцев назад +96

      It generally happens when horses have had laminitis that goes untreated.

    • @candicemaldonado4507
      @candicemaldonado4507 10 месяцев назад +12

      Me too

    • @gabiferreira6864
      @gabiferreira6864 9 месяцев назад +63

      Their hoof is really like super thick nails

    • @LittleGreyWolfForge
      @LittleGreyWolfForge 9 месяцев назад +65

      It like fingernails, you will get them pulled of off once in a while from an accident or something, but they grow back.

    • @thisirishcobcan
      @thisirishcobcan 9 месяцев назад +9

      @@LittleGreyWolfForge just don’t agree with that.

  • @ChubbyUnicorn
    @ChubbyUnicorn Год назад +294

    I thought a hoof falling off was a death sentence. I'm so happy to see a horse can survive and thrive after such injury.

    • @davecooper3238
      @davecooper3238 7 месяцев назад +11

      It’s a bit like a human breaking a nail. I used to be a groom.

    • @jwhite-1471
      @jwhite-1471 3 месяца назад +34

      @@davecooper3238 Sure, if humans walked with all of their massive weight on one big toe on either foot, with their entire capacity to stay mobile being dependent on retaining most or all of the nail ... yeah, it'd be just like breaking a nail. 🙄

    • @juliusyankson5096
      @juliusyankson5096 3 месяца назад +2

      ​@@jwhite-1471yeah it would, what point are you getting at?

    • @calebmcallister4289
      @calebmcallister4289 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@jwhite-1471 as long as the whole things not gone its fine

    • @FOX007-um1wr
      @FOX007-um1wr Месяц назад +5

      So I can't imagine how incredibly painful this must have been for this horse.

  • @KateandBree
    @KateandBree Год назад +720

    I’ve never seen the wall just fall off! What a tough bird this horse is. I’m sure it was incredibly painful for her. She’s looking great.

    • @abbienormals1669
      @abbienormals1669 Год назад +46

      Right! I smashed my toe last year and ended up losing the whole nail. The day it happened it was so INCREDIBLY painful. I normally have a really good pain tolerance but it was SO bad.
      Yet... this was her WHOLE foot! I can't imagine how much that hurt!

    • @KateandBree
      @KateandBree Год назад +59

      @@abbienormals1669 Actually, her hoof wall IS NOT her whole toe. Let's work from the inside out: the coffin bone is analogous to our big toe bone. The frog and all the other stuff on the inside of the wall is like the padding and cushion. The hoof wall is the toenail. So, she lost her toenail. The difference is that toenail surrounds all of the padding and stuff, so unlike our toes, it can be a life or death situation depending on how much of the "stuff" came off with the wall.
      Horse stepped on my foot. Sliced the toenail off at the cuticle. Didn't feel it aside from the sliced cuticle which was more paper stabby. Breaking my toes from a horse stepping on my foot hurt more. My podiatrist gets a lot of work from me. Ha ha ha............

    • @PersoMena
      @PersoMena Год назад +25

      @@KateandBree So basically she got the same injury of sorts that Abbie described - they both lost a toenail - but with far different severity ratings.

    • @margodphd
      @margodphd 9 месяцев назад +10

      ​@@PersoMenaIt's as we lost a toenail BUT 1. Had only one toe 2. And had to keep en pointe all time 😂

    • @lazydave9761
      @lazydave9761 4 месяца назад +7

      Horses aren't birds, you goof!
      They're reptiles.

  • @vintagelady1
    @vintagelady1 Год назад +750

    What a horse, I swear she never moved a muscle while he was working on her--in fact, I kept looking to see if there was really a horse attached to that foot! Fabulous farrier, you saved that horse's life. And finally, respect to the owner for not just sending Florence off to the knacker.

    • @abbienormals1669
      @abbienormals1669 Год назад +45

      Yeah, and one shot, you can see her back feet. One is just casually resting like she's just as happy as can be, getting her pedicure, lol.

    • @AHart7853
      @AHart7853 Год назад +3

      What’s a knacker?

    • @banana9106
      @banana9106 Год назад +35

      @@AHart7853 He means knacker's yard. That is where horse's go either when they have been shot or to be shot. The horse's body is then disposed of most likely in 2 ways: 1] The meat is used for dog food 2] the bones are used to make glue. That is why when things or people are worn out, we say they are knackered.

    • @vintagelady1
      @vintagelady1 Год назад +31

      @@AHart7853 That's the butcher or slaughterhouse. If you watch Horse Plus Humane Society or Fletcher Farms, you will see that many of these draft horses who have given their lives to work for farmers are sold to the slaughter pipeline when they are no longer useful. It is my understanding that it's primarily the Amish who do this, but I wouldn't want to say whether it's usual practice or not. It is in any case despicable.

    • @dangerousdays2052
      @dangerousdays2052 Год назад +4

      If I was that horse, I swear they would have turned me into a glue

  • @JosieB2017
    @JosieB2017 9 месяцев назад +104

    Back in the eighties I was working on a very large thoroughbred farm that had its own vet clinic with 2 resident vets. A mare came in that had vet wrap left on a Pastern for who knows how long. Within 24 hours her hoof fell off at the cornet band, all the bones were there and the mare wanted to live so she was put into my care for the next 10 months. The smell was like a nasty outhouse I had to endure every day while changing the bandage. Eventually a hoof wall started to form and when it was long enough she wore a hoof boot so the foot would shape like a hoof. And with weekly visits by the horseshoer, the hoof looked normal except that the nerves never grew back so she had a funny gait which we figured was due to her not feeling the foot. The interesting part was the bottom was solid, no frog grew. She was finally turned out for good into the broodmare band. The hoof always made a good conversation piece when people were told the mare lived and was out in the pasture having babies.

  • @angelamelville67
    @angelamelville67 Год назад +520

    I'd liked to have seen what the hoof looked like at the start when she lost the hoof wall. So glad she has recovered from it with your help 👏🏻

    • @Henning_S.
      @Henning_S. Год назад +19

      Yes, i also want to see that

    • @hospitalcakewalk
      @hospitalcakewalk Год назад +22

      It was probably like a human missing a toenail, a bloody mess

    • @captainsinclair7954
      @captainsinclair7954 Год назад +20

      I’d like to refer you to a video by a cow hoof-smith in Wisconsin or one of the fly-over states. He actually took care of a cow that also had a “hoof came off of this animal” problem, but it was a cow. It’s likely that something similar to that poor lass’ hoof happened here, albeit the circumstances were different. If Peter would like to jump in and confirm this, I believe the internals of the hoof actually got sheered out of the hoof capsule. By that I mean the entirety of the “nail bed” was exposed to the elements.
      No doubt in my mind the amount of pain this horse would’ve been in. For the short term, an Iodine and Salicylic Acid wrap would provide temporary relief as well as bacterial protection. Based on what Peter said, it sounds to me like the heels were taking much more weight than they were meant to when she started putting weight on that foot again.
      This is just one theory though. I’m 100% sure I’m wrong and the foot wasn’t as bad as I’m describing it. I’m just trying to explain how I think he went about treating her before this shoeing video.

    • @virtuedreamer6623
      @virtuedreamer6623 Год назад +8

      Oh, trust me, I've seen horse hooves without hooves, its sorta nasty and i love it! It looks like a big red mushroom

    • @captainsinclair7954
      @captainsinclair7954 Год назад +2

      @@virtuedreamer6623 that’s exactly how I imagined it in my head, and remember from that video I mentioned above

  • @createwithbarbbl4125
    @createwithbarbbl4125 Год назад +142

    I've never heard of a horse losing a hoof before. Well done for working with the owner to save her. She's lovely.

    • @ThomasDoubting5
      @ThomasDoubting5 Год назад +6

      Nor me , or least one that's still alive .

    • @purpleunicorn87
      @purpleunicorn87 7 месяцев назад +5

      It wasn't actually the hoof that fell off, just the hoof wall - which is equivalent to toenails on humans

    • @the_retag
      @the_retag 6 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@purpleunicorn87if had a toenail off after i dropped a heavy thing on it when i was in primary school and boy does it hurt

  • @jenniferbeyer6412
    @jenniferbeyer6412 Год назад +256

    That injury was horrific. It was great that she was saved. And given a chance. .
    Great work.

    • @Peterthefarrier
      @Peterthefarrier  Год назад +35

      Thank you

    • @SalDry-pf5gf
      @SalDry-pf5gf Год назад +7

      I agree it was horrendous but thank the Lord that you are in earth 🌎🌍

    • @SalDry-pf5gf
      @SalDry-pf5gf Год назад +5

      ​@@Peterthefarrier thanks for doing this video

  • @jamesmchugo9422
    @jamesmchugo9422 Год назад +77

    I have an uncle that did this kind of work. It was amazing how he could could take a horse that was going lame because of hoof issues and return them to health. Good job, carry on.

  • @sergc7205
    @sergc7205 Год назад +74

    The dedication and skill of the farrier in this video is truly remarkable. It's amazing to see how Florence, the horse, has made progress in recovering her hoof after such a traumatic injury. The farrier's explanation about the circumstances surrounding the lack of initial footage demonstrates professionalism and understanding. Kudos to the owner for providing the necessary care and support for Florence throughout this challenging process. It's heartwarming to witness the positive outcome and the bond between the horse and the farrier.

  • @JDMSakura
    @JDMSakura Год назад +129

    I read horses that lose their hoof can end up needing euthanasia due to the excruciating pain they'd have to endure for about a year before it grows back, even then they don't always grow back normally and the horse can stay lame for life. But this horse clearly made a remarkable recovery, the hoof looks really good considering the trauma it went through...
    I'd love to know more about her recovery and what went into getting her through that and how did she cope on basically 3 legs? Is what I read true or is Florence just one of the lucky ones? Is it because she didn't lose the entire hoof, just most of it? Does she have any lameness now? How long did it take to grow back fully? Amazing work though, she's a beauty, crazy that things like that can happen, thanks for showing and telling us her story. Sorry for all the questions, I just find this fascinating.

    • @kristawilson718
      @kristawilson718 Год назад +8

      She's 75 years old in horse years! But that's why I started the question to the (owner) but everyone else replied. I would like to know myself! ❤️🐎❤️

    • @JDMSakura
      @JDMSakura Год назад +8

      ​@@kristawilson718 yeah thanks for asking about it too, nobody answered me but it's helpful reading the replies to your comment! I watch horse plus too 😁

    • @bartender4877
      @bartender4877 Год назад +10

      @@kristawilson718 my old horse ( Icelandic) got to be 34😅

    • @kristawilson718
      @kristawilson718 Год назад +3

      @@bartender4877 WOW! THAT'S INCREDIBLE!!!❤️🐎❤️

    • @bartender4877
      @bartender4877 Год назад +46

      @@kristawilson718 thank you ☺️ she also didn’t die from disease or anything badly. It didn’t take a vet to put her down because she was in pain. Where I’m from The Netherlands she was on a meadow with all older horses. The farm has a meadow for geldings and also separate for mares ( no stallions allowed). But in that way the younger horses don’t upset the real older ones. So she died just from old age on a meadow next to the barn in her own time amongst her old companions. The farmers saw her acting a bit different ( meaning she wondered off and did not stay close to the others, not far off but separated where she could see them)
      but didn’t call a vet because they didn’t want to make it a whole scene, where it could be stressful for her or us. She just layed down and went to sleep. Real peaceful and ontbinden pain at all. It was before winter so we were happy she got another good summer because winters can be hard on older horses. It was real hard to lose her but the way how was real rewarding because she was my first horse and gave me a stallion foal. She was my first love and at her old age we stopped riding only grooming and taking my now small kids to go walking in the riding area and outside. So she still feel important and hade something to do. But the breed is real strong and never sick at least she was never sick. I also hade a welsh cob section D mare that was such a beautiful horse also. But yeah horses can get real old I think it depends on breed and how you take care of them. We never sold a horse because they got old I believe if they gave you their best years you should give them all the love you can when they get older🥰❤️ I can’t imagine a horse losing its hoof at all, all our horses got everything taking care off in due time.

  • @JohnCarder
    @JohnCarder Год назад +101

    A pleasure to see your blacksmithing work around the heel of the shoe to adapt it to the situation. Nice job, glad to see you're making progress.

  • @miss-asketches5284
    @miss-asketches5284 Год назад +65

    I've never seen this happen. So glad you were there to help and bless that owner for not giving up the horse. 👏❤️

    • @dissodatore
      @dissodatore Год назад +3

      Florence is lucky, we had to put down a mare who completely lost the whole hoof. She was bleeding and the whole thing was at the hay box.

  • @miask
    @miask Год назад +50

    I’ve never heard of s hoof falling off! It’s funny though, just as I was thinking how hard her hoof was, you said it was like concrete. LOL She’s such a good girl. It’s obvious she’s loved and well cared for.

    • @mylifewithmarmalade4624
      @mylifewithmarmalade4624 Год назад +2

      Same. I was like either that guy has the dullest hoof knife known to mankind or those are some super tough feet. We had a Morgan that had super hard feet. We’d soak her for 10 minutes before the farrier came to try to soften things up a smidge. Made trimming a bunch easier for her and the farrier.

  • @fandoria09
    @fandoria09 Год назад +21

    It was so nice to see a horse of her age recover from hoof trauma such as she had. The full working farm I grew up on our landlord had a retired work draft that was about 20+ years old when we moved onto the farm in 1977. A couple years or so after her hooves got to the point that they were growing really crooked and harder to cut down which was also an indication that her health was starting to decline from her loosing her teeth from tooth decay. She was being treated by a vet who was also a ferrier. She got too weak to do much anything, so she had to be put down.

  • @donchonealyotheoneal5456
    @donchonealyotheoneal5456 Месяц назад +3

    That was like magic. You're amazing at how you can judge the angle.
    When you're forging the shoe. Horses are my favorite people

  • @trixiepickle8779
    @trixiepickle8779 2 месяца назад +2

    Poor Florence, and her poor owner. Thank you Peter for sharing this and seeing this sweet horse still here. I've never seen an injury like this before I'm happy to say. But so pleased Florence is still here.

  • @jeanneparisot237
    @jeanneparisot237 Год назад +28

    I really love the fact that you work with the hoof in the most natural way they are. I always see blacksmith who cut so deeply in the sole and fork, when wild horse have the fork and the sole at the same level (natural way a horse's foot must look)
    You are quite rare, buddy. Good job. I wish there will be more blacksmith like you around the world.

    • @thisirishcobcan
      @thisirishcobcan 9 месяцев назад +2

      He rasps the absolute living daylights out of the outer hoof wall. He does also cut way too much in to the sole. This isn’t a natural trim by any stretch. The amount of rasping he did to the outer hoof wall was eye watering.

    • @sagalindhe
      @sagalindhe 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@thisirishcobcanHe did it do make it go along with the new shoe, no? To not make it stick out to get caught

    • @thisirishcobcan
      @thisirishcobcan 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@sagalindhe no he didn’t - you should fit the shoe to the hoof. You should NEVER fit the hoof to a shoe.
      He did the first set of over rasping to remove all the laminitic/inflammatory rings on the hoof wall to make it look pretty. It was un necessary and reduces the strength. You can only grow a strong hoof. You can’t rasp a strong one.
      When he applied the shoe, he set the shoe back to aid breakover (even though it’s been proven to make minimal difference) and then rasps again to make it ‘look pretty’. To me it’s a car crash of a job and I would have been surprised if this horse walked sound after that.

    • @SewingBoxDesigns
      @SewingBoxDesigns 3 месяца назад +1

      Late to the party but it's been decades since I was around horses and I was wincing when he went at that hoof. You can see he's caught his own hand a few times.

  • @maureenbowerman5300
    @maureenbowerman5300 Год назад +30

    Such a kind, patient and progressively thinking farrier! I have never seen this type of situation before. Quite shocking! And nearly miraculous to come back from losing an entire hoof. Incredible.

  • @maryfernando7545
    @maryfernando7545 Год назад +12

    I find it incredible that the horse does not struggle whille the shoe is being installed. One could not get a child to stay this still even when trying to put the nappy on. Animals are so understanding when we are trying to help them. Good job.

    • @averycheesypotato
      @averycheesypotato Год назад +9

      It takes training. A young horse must be coaxed into standing still. A grown horse who has never been seen by a farrier before will take time to work with, or become dangerous if rushed

  • @nicem8746
    @nicem8746 Месяц назад +2

    Quite impressive. Thanks for your obvious skill and care, wow! Thankfully the team up with the owner made the difference for this horse. Kudos!

  • @casy5914
    @casy5914 Год назад +12

    The definition of "what doesn't kill me makes me stronger".

  • @nycgatita
    @nycgatita Год назад +29

    I don’t know anything about horses or their hooves, but I can tell you the job you did looked amazing! Florence must have known she was in good hands because she stayed quite calm. Thank you for being an savior to this poor creature! It’s lovely to see she’s doing so much better!

  • @andriamsimpsonrussell
    @andriamsimpsonrussell Год назад +14

    I've seen a horse that had foundered and lost both of it's front feet and had been like that for months. The horse had been abandoned in a field of lush green grass and no one noticed it. Poor horse was walking on bones, it was ultimately put down. It was the most infuriating and heartbreaking thing I have ever seen.

  • @Joey-JoJo-Jr.64
    @Joey-JoJo-Jr.64 Год назад +21

    Such incredible skill and talent not to mention back breaking labor.

  • @bobbibuttons8730
    @bobbibuttons8730 Год назад +16

    Oh my goodness, I’m so glad I found your channel. The care that this lovely old lady has had is incredible. Long may she continue to be able to play in the fields.

  • @susanmartin3762
    @susanmartin3762 4 месяца назад +2

    Gosh I forgot how much I used to love watching our horses getting new shoes made and put on. I was fascinated!..I guess I still am! Thanks for your videos. Her new hoof looks wonderful! Good job👍

  • @TheBlibo
    @TheBlibo Год назад +12

    Love seeing your work.
    I used to be a commercial vehicle fitter and when I finished my apprenticeship my bosses daughter's boyfriend who was a farrier asked me to come and work for him to do an apprenticeship with him, I declined because of my fear of horses. In later years I learnt to ride and lost my fear now turning him down is probably my biggest regret.
    Do you want a 63 year-old apprentice 😂

  • @hadassah2998
    @hadassah2998 Год назад +5

    Nice pedicure by a professional blacksmith! The shoe hoof looked like brand new. Amazing work.🐎👏

  • @PartanBree
    @PartanBree Год назад +15

    I'd love to know more about how on earth she survived this and how on earth you managed to treat it. Did she lose the whole hoof, sole and all? Or just the wall?
    I had been under the impression that if a hoof was this badly damaged that there was no coming back from it. Amazing what you've achieved!

  • @amilynnstapay796
    @amilynnstapay796 Год назад +8

    Owner and farrier have done an amazing job!
    Most excellent!

  • @Muffintop868
    @Muffintop868 7 месяцев назад +3

    What a caring farrier. Well done you. Give Florance an ear scratch from me she's a very strong lady.

  • @traceyrossberg4640
    @traceyrossberg4640 Год назад +7

    Truly amazing, the transformation is incredible, it’s always a great day when you post, I love your videos, they’re so interesting and informative, you’re just exceptional at your craft, and we get to see beautiful horses as well, thank you for posting, and take care.👍💙🐴

  • @nadissaryuu
    @nadissaryuu Год назад +1

    Absolutely wonderful work. So glad she and her human have you around to help her heal up and get back to a healthy hoof

  • @toxicbangbang
    @toxicbangbang Год назад +15

    I'm listening to this on headphones at 2:30am. When Florence snorted, i thought it was my fiance snoring 😂
    Well done. I've never seen this happen before.

  • @adriancross8105
    @adriancross8105 7 месяцев назад +1

    I know nothing about keeping horses but this to me is so interesting watching a skilled man at work, the hoof looks so good after your care of this beauty.

  • @davidjohns4218
    @davidjohns4218 Год назад +3

    I like watching people who know how to work their craft no hesitation , thumbs 👍

  • @randybutler4772
    @randybutler4772 Год назад +3

    What a beautiful save! Time and effort really pays off. Thank you for sharing.🐴

  • @ZebraKitten
    @ZebraKitten Год назад +21

    You said the ground was hard but surely there was more to it than that. Id definitely like to hear more about how and why that could happen and also how you went about treatment and what was involved. Interesting to hear she lost a hoof and great to see her come on but id like more of in the middle!

    • @thisirishcobcan
      @thisirishcobcan 9 месяцев назад +3

      Laminitis. 1 million %. The chronic inflammatory rings that he rasped out were a MASSIVE give away. He says that the bruising in the sole was from the previous trauma but the sole can show laminitis in as little as a week so in my opinion (from experience) - the laminitis was still active.

    • @ZebraKitten
      @ZebraKitten 9 месяцев назад +2

      @thisirishcobcan wow, thanks for that. I knew laminitis was a horrible thing for them to have but didn't realise it could get as serious as them loosing part of their hoof. Thanks for educating me.

    • @thisirishcobcan
      @thisirishcobcan 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@ZebraKitten yes - laminitis is such a serious condition if left un treated. The laminae becomes inflamed and fails, which then leads to weakness. In severe/chronic cases a hoof capsule can slip off. Horrible disease.

    • @ZebraKitten
      @ZebraKitten 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@thisirishcobcan thank you so much for taking the time to reply and explaining it to me.

    • @thisirishcobcan
      @thisirishcobcan 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@ZebraKitten you’re welcome. I just hate seeing videos like this.

  • @lynjago6022
    @lynjago6022 Год назад +2

    It's always good to see a great farrier 'do their thing'! If you have a horse, a good farrier is a must!

  • @jemimalamb78
    @jemimalamb78 Год назад +1

    Absolutely true craftsmanship. Your dedication and care is commendable. ❤

  • @nicoleflierl637
    @nicoleflierl637 11 месяцев назад +4

    I watch a lit of hooving videos lately, from Scotland, to Brazil & Asia. This is my first time watching a shoe being put on!! Pretty amazing technique!!! Being a Glass fuser/Blower, I understand how quick u have to work in the heat loss, u did an amazing job!! Plus the fact, it's a whole new foot!! Kudos from NY!!

  • @JenniferThacker1969
    @JenniferThacker1969 Год назад +2

    Never ever have a I ever seen a horse lose a hoof like that! Im just shocked she was able to be saved! I can't imagine the condition that hoof was in when you started working on her!!! Great job!!!

  • @alexanderrosario8569
    @alexanderrosario8569 3 месяца назад +2

    People tend to forget that a horses hoof is just a big toe and even then they are standing on a big toenail, if the outter keratin sheath falls off the toe can still grow a new covering back as long as it is kept clean and not damaged with embedded debris.

  • @lynniewood
    @lynniewood Год назад +8

    Man these hoof videos look like they should be so painful, i keep having to remind myself its like getting your nails trimmed. Plus i don't think the horsey would be that still and calm if it was hurting, and she's clearly in very good hands. Its hard not to wince though haha

  • @elainesheldon5823
    @elainesheldon5823 Год назад +1

    Beautiful. Sweet horse.Hello Florence!

  • @stellmitchell2593
    @stellmitchell2593 6 месяцев назад

    That horse is beautiful and the patients and trust it has in you shows what a skilled and wonderful person you are🕊

  • @anothergirlgamer8872
    @anothergirlgamer8872 Год назад +20

    That is amazing. The difference in such a short time is just something else. 😮thank you for the update look forward to the next one x

    • @Peterthefarrier
      @Peterthefarrier  Год назад +9

      Thank you. It has been a long 6 months to get to where we are today.

    • @1234j
      @1234j Год назад +3

      ​@@Peterthefarrier bluddy brilliant. Great job.

  • @tictactoe325
    @tictactoe325 Год назад +13

    Crikey 😮. That’s an incredible recovery, especially for her age.

  • @h.w.a.batterink1027
    @h.w.a.batterink1027 Год назад

    thank you for loving horses so much. You are doing a great job. Enjoy.

  • @congt9288
    @congt9288 Год назад

    Marvellous to watch a skilled man at work. Lovely work.

  • @danielibnz
    @danielibnz 7 месяцев назад

    Great work... My grandfather was a farrier and blacksmith...
    Thanks for sharing all this.

  • @robertshrewsbury5067
    @robertshrewsbury5067 Год назад +2

    Glad you were able to do this. In a foreign country, I saw them wrap a horses foot, which was my first clue that a hoof could be regrown.

  • @kristinakilby6798
    @kristinakilby6798 Год назад

    I was very impressed you have such a skill. My uncle does the same. But I was even more impressed when you starting shaping the horse shoe!

  • @1234j
    @1234j Год назад +2

    Amazing what you can do to help. Brilliant! Thank you from Herefordshire.

  • @drcloudy
    @drcloudy Год назад +11

    Yo some of these comments. How the hell are you supposed to have a whole camera crew and shit like other youtubers do with this particular job? Damn, people expect a lot out of FREE CONTENT these days.
    This was super educational to watch. Subscribed!

  • @kirstenocallaghan6974
    @kirstenocallaghan6974 Год назад +1

    Fantastic job you just performed for that very sweet horse. Thank you for excellent video with very nice explanations.
    🍀🐴🐎🍀♥️

  • @nondanelson9553
    @nondanelson9553 Год назад

    I had no idea the multiplicity of skills needed to do your job. Well done!

  • @shuffleaccount1985
    @shuffleaccount1985 8 месяцев назад

    AWWWW you gave her beautiful shoes , well done !

  • @robwembley
    @robwembley Год назад +1

    Amazing to see how the horseshoe is made and fitted !

  • @wandapulley1588
    @wandapulley1588 9 месяцев назад

    First time I have seen your channel . Like the way you explain why and i like no music . You look like you were very good to the horse . Thank you😊

  • @teleman5678
    @teleman5678 Год назад

    Great job!! Beautiful horse.

  • @angeladonovan1369
    @angeladonovan1369 6 месяцев назад

    Such a skill! A true craftsman. Bravo!

  • @19sman74
    @19sman74 Год назад

    This was really cool. Nice work, and what a sweet horse❤

  • @HuxtableTV
    @HuxtableTV Месяц назад

    It is a very nice video and Florence got a beautiful new shoe. 🐎🐎🐎

  • @patmayer7222
    @patmayer7222 Год назад

    ,,,,,,.......watching from land o' lakes,wi..usa,,,,,,,thank you for showing me how you took care of her injury,,,and how a show is formed,,,attached,,,...filed,,nailed.......I never saw the process this way before,,...great work...very skilled professional you are...........horse care is an art to be proud of.......tnx,,,,,,pat & family.

  • @hadorstapa
    @hadorstapa Год назад +9

    Thanks for this. Really encouraging to know that such a traumatic event can have a positive outcome with proper care.
    Could you maybe say a bit more about the healing process to get here and what kind of intervention was needed to promote that healing? Did you have to make a lot of visits? Was a vet involved? What kind of dressings or care did the horse need? Was she able to stay on her feet throughout? Thanks for your channel and everything you do to care for these four-legged beauties.

    • @Peterthefarrier
      @Peterthefarrier  Год назад +7

      It was a case of just letting the hoof grow down naturally. The main goal was keeping bacteria and infection out. This was done with gentle cleaning. The vet had been involved with this mare. I have seen her every six weeks over the last six months. She was on her feet the entire time but she did have a deep shavings bed to keep her comfortable.

    • @athenawilson4019
      @athenawilson4019 Год назад +1

      @@Peterthefarrier I'm trying to imagine how the horse could have stood on what was left of that foot at all. Did she just stand on 3 feet for all that time? Did she have any additional support for her weight?

    • @Bedwyr7
      @Bedwyr7 Год назад +2

      Yes I’m curious about this as well. I assumed that having balanced pressure on all four legs was really important and there might have to be like some plastic block glued on like healing cows sometimes wear. Regardless, great care for the poor thing.

  • @mariamachek607
    @mariamachek607 Год назад +4

    I don't know much about horses, but I never knew they could lose their hooves. But you sure did a beautiful job.

  • @impunitythebagpuss
    @impunitythebagpuss Год назад +1

    Liked and subbed...good luck with poor Florence and with your channel as well!

  • @user-wj2ly9ep4g
    @user-wj2ly9ep4g 2 месяца назад +1

    I find this so therapeutic to watch !

  • @Tenajeh
    @Tenajeh 3 месяца назад +1

    I have nothing to do with horses aside from going on a ride three times or so as a child. But this was incredibly fascinating to watch!

  • @smallantilope
    @smallantilope Год назад

    What a great master you are ... hats off ... thank you and all the best ...

  • @chantalsscaleisafibber
    @chantalsscaleisafibber 18 дней назад

    What a beautiful🐎.As someone who has chronic back and knee pain all I can think of is how painful his back, knees and ankles must have been when he started to learn his craft as you are not only bent over but holding a heavy🐎leg.

  • @billyccall5774
    @billyccall5774 Год назад +3

    Didn't even know they could lose a whole hoof. Great work mate.

  • @jeannierickard8504
    @jeannierickard8504 Год назад

    That is just amazing!!! You would never know she lost a hoof.

  • @itsnicole11
    @itsnicole11 Год назад +1

    What a beautiful horse 😍

  • @user-ou6rx9ew9m
    @user-ou6rx9ew9m Год назад

    i think you did a good job, the hoof was shining and healthy so thumbs up

  • @twiningsirishbreakfasttea3826
    @twiningsirishbreakfasttea3826 6 месяцев назад

    florence is a lovely old lady, nice to see that she’s doing well

  • @lisasmith742
    @lisasmith742 8 месяцев назад

    Very interesting!! I am definitely hooked.

  • @deannayoung5311
    @deannayoung5311 Год назад +2

    Brilliant 👍👍👍🌟
    Great job

  • @cocobean7519
    @cocobean7519 Год назад +3

    Wow Peter, great job on the hoof! I’m fascinated watching this video & watching a real craftsman/tradesman at work! It’s great to see real manly men doing real manly work! Good on you & pleasure to watch a farrier doing his stuff!👍👏🙏🏻

  • @redpillgirl1843
    @redpillgirl1843 Год назад

    You are very talented. Great job.

  • @user-dp1wc4oh4r
    @user-dp1wc4oh4r Месяц назад

    Beautiful Work 😊😊

  • @lornacy
    @lornacy 8 месяцев назад

    It was very kind of you to respect yhe owner's distress on the first visit. 😊

  • @davidplatt4148
    @davidplatt4148 Год назад +1

    proper job you did on that Hoof Buddy, it looks loads better, First time of watching but ill be staying. My dad was a carter, used shires, love horses

  • @evabetlyon2693
    @evabetlyon2693 Год назад +1

    Fabulous job ..she was lucky to be taken care of PROMPTLY

  • @HybridofDoom
    @HybridofDoom 8 месяцев назад +2

    I always find it amazing that humans saw a horses hooves and thought, "I can make it better." and then they did.

  • @kimmathis694
    @kimmathis694 Год назад

    Her hoof looks so nice all done

  • @user-co9em8mp7k
    @user-co9em8mp7k 4 месяца назад

    Florence looks so cute 😍

  • @ChaiLatte13
    @ChaiLatte13 Год назад +1

    wow nice to see she is doing so well now. I had no idea a horse could lose a hoof like that.

  • @miketroutman7365
    @miketroutman7365 Год назад

    Interesting video. Thanks for showing how this can be fixed.

  • @lindawallace6750
    @lindawallace6750 8 месяцев назад

    Beautiful Job!!!

  • @izza7533
    @izza7533 7 дней назад

    Great 👍 work!!

  • @donutferret7358
    @donutferret7358 4 месяца назад

    I have never been reccomended a video on horses before but this is rather interesting!

  • @cherricorcoran9523
    @cherricorcoran9523 Год назад

    Amazing work!

  • @kayceegreer4418
    @kayceegreer4418 Месяц назад

    Aahhh, this is relaxing..... I am done working with my hands and being on my feet and bending my back... Now, I watch you do you.

  • @RosieGaelic
    @RosieGaelic Год назад

    What an art this is!

  • @lindahood523
    @lindahood523 7 месяцев назад

    Can the horse feel that your doing that from Linda from Saint Louis Missouri have a great weekend❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @scottcarl3086
    @scottcarl3086 Месяц назад

    You did a great job!