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Foal Foot Maintenance

 

The subject came up the other day about foal trim intervals and when the first trim should take place. The question was, "Do you think trimming foals early and regular would stop a lot of the problems that we see in the feet of horses today?"

After some thought I replied "Although there are some foals with feet or leg deformities, generally speaking, most every grown horse has some issue with their feet, and seldom have I ever seen a foal with a foot problem."

 

What I had said that prompted the question was, "If I had a foal on my property, I would trim by rasping the foals feet once a week for six months, starting in the first week. After that I would trim the foals feet once every two weeks till twelve months. And then trim every four weeks, through to eighteen/twenty-four months".

 

"That sounds like a ridicules trim schedule.  Why so often?"

 

Although the bones in a horse continue to grow for a few years till it is full grown, the epiphyseal growth plates in the distal end of each major bone in the limb of the horse, stop growth in very definite time intervals. These intervals are 3,6,9,etc. months. The first being the most distal and the smallest, the Second Phalange (or P2) stops growth at the epiphyseal growth plate at three months. The next is the P1 at six months and the Canon Bone at nine months.

 

Limb Bones  - Closure Times

 Short Pastern Bone (P2)

3 mo.

  Long Pastern Bone (P1)

6 mo.

  Cannon Bone (M3)

9 mo.

  Tibia

8 mo.

  Radius

24 mo.

 

The importance of the epiphyseal growth plate is that although the bone still grows to full size long after, the epiphyseal growth plate determines the angular placement of the joint. What this means is that if the foals foot has a medial/lateral (inside/outside) foot imbalance, the joints are not growing straight, and leg distortion will remain in place for the rest of the horses life, period. And forever after the Veterinarian, and the Farrier are left to deal with the deformity, whether or not it leads to chronic trim/shoeing compensation, or even ongoing lameness's.

 

We need to keep the foals feet level, and trimmed to length through the entire "Epiphyseal Growth Plate Growth Cycle", to ensure straight limbs. To just correct the balance every so often will not be sufficient, as the longer the joints are out of balance, the more out of balance growth takes place in the bone, and the short periods of balance are not enough to compensate.

 

So if a foals foot is kept in balance with a strict trim schedule, the result should be that the limbs of the horse should remain straight, and any other genetic foot problems will then become more manageable.

 

 

I would hazard a guess that a person raising a foal, and having a record of the trim schedule, would be able to demand a higher value at the sale of that horse, as the horse will have less issues with its feet as it ages.  

 

 

 

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