It’s incumbent upon the veterinary and HCP communities who now KNOW the truth to educate their peers and demand change and standards. It’s your professional duty and any other course is simply unacceptable.
It’s like fighting Nabisco who is responsible for billions of diabetics and buying off the American Diabetes Association so they can sell billions of dollars in drugs, cereals, and hidden sugars!
No it wouldn't help the hoof recover or the horse because removing toe wall from the ground interrupts hoof growth rates - and that is huge in recovery.
@@Chartok you trim the toe if it is along the heel to toe plane, if it isn't then you cannot trim it because you want depth to increase and equalise hoof growth rates.
Excellent ❤
Thanks 😊
It’s incumbent upon the veterinary and HCP communities who now KNOW the truth to educate their peers and demand change and standards. It’s your professional duty and any other course is simply unacceptable.
It’s like fighting Nabisco who is responsible for billions of diabetics and buying off the American Diabetes Association so they can sell billions of dollars in drugs, cereals, and hidden sugars!
Totally agree - but so many of them still don't know... they are lost.
But, trimming the toe would help the roll-over for the horse. So it doesn't have to move around with "flippers" on?
No it wouldn't help the hoof recover or the horse because removing toe wall from the ground interrupts hoof growth rates - and that is huge in recovery.
@@lindsaysetchell Interesting, so not touching the toe at all or just like a normal trim?
@@Chartok you trim the toe if it is along the heel to toe plane, if it isn't then you cannot trim it because you want depth to increase and equalise hoof growth rates.