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My Trip To
Cabo San Lucas.
I received an email about a
horse that was being diagnosed with laminitis and chronic Founder.
Bradley.......I'm writing from Cabo San Lucas Mexico..........
We have a fantastic horse , Santana"........he's in big trouble......we
think it's Laminitis........can I call you to talk about it.........or
can you recommend someone else to call.........we have no way to x
ray.....
So appreciate any of your thoughts..........with sincere thanks, Lori
I replied with:
Hose Santana with cold
cold water on the legs, all 4, up to the knees, 15-20 minutes
every couple of hours if
you can not do it 24/7
It would be better to
get Santana to stand in a very cold stream or river,
Just getting Santana to
stand in ice cold water is best, all four legs up to the knees.
Then source the problem
and get rid of it . . . let me know how it goes.
Nine days later I receive
another email:
Hi Bradley, I’m Jacque the horse owner in Mexico that my friend Lori
spoke to you about, the Laminitis was caused by years of bad shoeing,
not a grain founder. I'm not much for typing so l am going to try and
call you instead, what is the best time to call you ? l will send you
some pictures of his feet taken yesterday. Thanks for showing an
interest in trying to help there is not much of it here as you can
imagine. All the best Jacqueline
Below are two of the photos that
I received:

First thought is the Bars and Heels
are so over grown,
That this is were the pain is coming
from.

Well call me silly but as far as I
see there is no founder and who knows about laminitis, as it has been a
while since the first email contact and if there is no heat . . .
. . . After I received these photos
I received a phone call, and that is what I said. we talked extensively
about it, and all I could do is suggest that the horse just needed a
good trim and shoes, as the horse is normally ridden in and on sand
daily as well as gravel. The owner wanted me to describe to her what to
tell her horseshoer to do. After only discussing the true point of the
frog, and thinking that she doesn't really understand what I am saying,
I said "This is really tough, It is to bad I just can't be there to do
it, or explain to your horseshoer what I mean".
She replied with "Really, Could
you?". The next day the flight was booked and I was on my way.
Below is where the horse is
stalled




The horse was not really up to the
seven people around him, or the scary X-Ray machine. But we all got
through it, safely.

It is always best to take X-Rays of
the feet slightly elevated on a block of wood, both feet, fronts or
hinds equally loaded. But Santana was not calm or cooperative, and the
only way he would stand still was to have one foot on the hoof stand. So
we did the best we could with what we had to work with.




This is the front right foot and you can see that there is no rotation
at all




The local Farrier Yayo on the right.

When Yayo and I first met, I said
through an interpreter, "I don't know what you know, I just know what I
know, so in my explanations I realize you may already know what I am
talking about. So I am not in any way trying to insult you, I am just
going through the steps of trimming and shoeing".

The shots above and below, I
cleaned out the sole area and knifed a blueprint for the nippers to
follow, at which point Yayo said "I don't do that I just nipper through
the sole". Also there are not many photos to chose from, but I cleaned
out the bars and frog better than what is shown.



The owner had told me the night
before that the trainer thought that one of the problems with the horse
was that the feet were to small, and the removal of the shoes was to
enable the foot to broaden and become larger. And that was the
prescription given to Yayo. As we worked I was directing my conversation
to Yayo, but my intent was for the Trainer to hear that the coffin bones
shape and size is what dictates the shape and size of the hoof wall, and
to try to change that is inviting disaster to occur.

I basically did what I was asked
and showed Yayo what I do and then suggested he continue and finish the
job, as it was his horse. He thought that I should finish the fronts and
he would do the hinds.
The heat of the day was so intense,
and the day dragged on, so near the end the last shoe was about to be
put on the left hind, and Yayo stopped and said to the interpreter that
there was not as much expansion on this shoe as the other hind. I said
"You saw it, and called it, so I will change it". He suggested maybe it
wasn't necessary. So I just repeated what I had said and opened it up.
At the end of it all I said "Yayo,
you are every bit as good a Farrier as I am, and the only difference is,
that I use heat to shape a shoe and you do not". To which he said
"Thank-you".
I also added "You know what you are
doing, and are the professional, do not let them tell how to do your
job. You know how to keep this animal sound."
During my time there I learned much
about the situation, and had I known it all before I left, could have
saved the owner a great deal of money.
Jacqueline, had owned this horse, Santana, for six years, and pretty much rode him
daily on the beaches, from her previous stable. And for six years this horse remained Sound. Santana had developed
a small lump on his neck, and after the Trainer/Holistic Person,
at a different stable, had convinced Jacqueline that the way
to remove the small dime sized lump was with "Sub Sonic Sound Waves",
and the benefit to this treatment was that it would also turn the horses
neck right side up, and build much needed muscle mass in his chest.
(Really???) At this point Santana was moved to this new location, which
I might add is absolutely wonderful, and a reflection of the stable
owners commitment to happy horses. Now that Santana was at his new home, treatment had commenced and
training had be stepped up to develop Dressage Discipline Muscle Mass.
At this point the trainer/holistic person felt that Santana's Chest was to narrow, and the
legs were crooked, the feet were to small and needed to be broadened,
and the sum total of these problems could be solved by removing the
shoes, while "Sub Sonic Sound Waves" were being used to assist in
rebuilding this horse. Somewhere in all of this the horse became lame
and was confined to stall rest and not allowed out of the stall, on
orders of the new trainer/holistic person, as there was large rock gravel in the isle
ways, "...and the horse would be sore". The Trainer/holistic
person also was saying that
"The
horse was laminitic and was chronically foundered because of years of
bad shoeing".
When I arrived I insisted we bring the horse out of the stall and down
to the cement pad so I could have a decent look at the animal. I also
insisted on Rads of the feet and we called the only X-Ray Technician for
several hundred miles or more.
|
Cabo San Lucas
RAYOS-X
Servicio a domicillo
Sergio A. Gonzalez
Ruiz
Tecnico Radiologo
cel. 624 100 55 35 |
Yo
Recomendar Muy
Bien puesto que caballo
By the x-rays I could see what I was sure of, and that was there was no
rotation of the coffin bone. And there was no indication of Laminitis.
After a good trim the slight swelling that was in his hind pasterns was
all but gone, and by the next morning his legs were right.
After working on this horse, I suggested we turn him loose in the riding
arena, watch him, and let him tell us how sound he is now. He ran
around, bucked and kicked, as though he had been stalled for two months,
and was happy and sound.
Next, while alone with Jacqueline, the owner of Santana, I said "You
have gone to great expense to get me here and make your horse sound, and
after that task has been completed, I would think that what I have to
say now should be implemented immediately. You need to command that
trainer/holistic person,
that lamed your horse, to never touch him ever again. She needs to, not
feed him, not train him, not to even think of him, or, talk to you about
your horse ever again. If you can not do that then you need to remove
Santana, and stall him at the old location. YOU WERE SOLD SNAKE
OIL, and that SNAKE OIL lamed your horse. If that person ever has
anything to do with your horse, you just wasted your money on me."
I next moved into questioning her about training for Dressage, and the
need for it, "Do you plan on riding Santana on the beach, or move to the
Dressage arena. In other words do you plan on ever riding in the
dressage discipline?"
To which she said "No".
"Then," I asked "Why would you need to develop those muscle groups?"
"Santana has been fit to ride the beaches of Cabo for six years. Why
change that?"
At the end of it all she hugged me crying, and thanked me profusely.
Click Here for
Me Sailing off Lands End Cabo San Lucas
Click
Here for General Photos of Cabo San Lucas
As Seen In The
Castlegar Newspaper Thursday September 25, 2008
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Farrier
Travels World
By Francisco Canjura -
Castlegar News
Published: September 23, 2008
Local
Farrier, Bradley SaintJohn
has
gone International.
SaintJohn who currently resides in Robson received his
certificate in advanced Farrier training from Kwantlen
University College and apprenticed on the coast for a couple
of years under some ‘top notch guys.’
“I’m not afraid to try things that I haven’t done yet,
things that are tried and proven methods. If you just follow
the guidelines you pretty much can’t go wrong, it’s going to
help the horse and through all that I gain experience,” he
said.
Four weeks ago, SaintJohn received the phone call that
turned his business international.
Photo Caption: NICE SHOES
Bradley SaintJohn, Farrier
makes a beautiful horse shoe.
He received a phone call from a horse owner in Mexico asking for help.
“(They) had a horse that was in trouble and, according to
the letter they sent me, he had to be fixed or put down
within a week,” he said.
They e-mailed SaintJohn a bunch of questions and photos so
he could help them fix the horse.
“I started telling her what to do, and I said 'This is really tough. It’s
really too bad I couldn’t be there to do it' and she said,
‘Well we were actually hoping you’d say that. Would you
consider coming down?’
“I told her I didn’t really like to fly so we talked about
driving, but then I told her I could probably fly and she
went ahead and booked the flight a couple of days later,”
SaintJohn said.
When he arrived and saw the horse he said it needed an X-Ray
to see what was wrong with the horse’s foot.
Bradley said the horse’s owner believed the horse had
chronic Founder, meaning his bones were coming through the
bottom of his feet. The X-Ray proved that diagnosis wrong
and the horse’s foot bones were in good shape.
Bradley said the horse’s trainer thought the horse’s feet
were too short and wanted to grow them larger. The hoof wall
of the foot had grown like a nail and it needed to be
trimmed or else the horse couldn’t walk properly, explained
Bradley. He said a horse’s foot size can’t be changed. The
family Farrier trimmed the hoof, outfitted it with proper
shoes and he was good as new.
“They were so amazed that a ‘gringo’ had fixed the horse,”
Bradley said. “If one person called me, I’m bound to get
called again from somewhere.”
At the time he received the phone call from Mexico, Bradley
said it didn’t seem real.
“It’s a funny thing, they’re talking to you in your ear and
you’re hearing them and you’re discussing it and you’re
making plans, but somehow there is that element that just
doesn’t seem real. I’ve heard people say that before and I
thought it is real so how can it not seem real? But somehow
it doesn’t feel real,” he said.
Reality set in for Saint John when he boarded the plane at
the Vancouver airport.
If you need horse shoes feel free to contact Bradley SaintJohn at
250-304-8400.
www.1stChoiceHorseShoeing.com. |
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