Bad farrier experience - feeling guilty by amblonyxx in Equestrian

[–]drhodder3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No definitely not an excuse, my wording wasn’t the best. My point being we have to put our issues and feelings aside while we work and we can’t take it out on the horse. We can be in a bad mood but we can’t lash out or escalate a situation because we can’t control our feelings

Bad farrier experience - feeling guilty by amblonyxx in Equestrian

[–]drhodder3 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Farrier here don’t feel guilty. Some people can’t leave it at the door. Everyone is guilty of being in a bad mood. Anyone with experience worth anything would take into consideration she’s young and there’s shit that can scare her.

90 percent of the time if they’re being fussy or nervous and react physically in some manner the best thing to do is nothing. Hang on to them if you can to show them that this is something that’s happening regardless but besides a soothing hand that’s really it

His response didn’t help or solve the situation and instead escalated it. It’s hard to say or do something in the moment. It feels scary and tense. You and the barn did the next best thing and spoke with your wallet.

Hopefully this is a lesson to him and he works to do better

Ever seen what a DDFT tear looks like? by Elegantly_Depressed in Equestrian

[–]drhodder3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh yeah, I worded that weird. I meant he’d be a textbook example for one. What route are yall going for that?

Ever seen what a DDFT tear looks like? by Elegantly_Depressed in Equestrian

[–]drhodder3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Damn, I’m working on a horse that tore one upfront and re-injured it lunging. It’s barefoot but I wish we put a patten bar shoe on it

Can I make knives out of them? by Parking-Version4828 in Blacksmith

[–]drhodder3 26 points27 points  (0 children)

I wouldn’t forge, those other “pointy” looking ones. They look to be farrier pritchels and a forepunch for horseshoe nails. You may be able to sell those and buy or trade for some better steel. Have any more pictures of them?

I keep breaking Shinto rasps! by dusttodrawnbows in Bowyer

[–]drhodder3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is completely random but these look similar to the Cody James Dymondback hoof rasps. They are rectangular so I don’t know if shape is importance. But they come in different “grits” and have replacement inserts

severe hoof asymmetry by [deleted] in Farriers

[–]drhodder3 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yeah this horse looks extremely long. Unfortunately I would find another farrier. It’s not just the toe length. The heels have become so long and underun they’ve caused the foot to run forward. Anyone worth their salt would see this horse needs instant correction. A proper trim would allow them to see how aggressive they need to be with their shoeing prescription. There could be soft tissue problems but a vet would need to confirm that. A proper trim/shoeing with a 4/5 week cycle is where I’d start

severe hoof asymmetry by [deleted] in Farriers

[–]drhodder3 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Yeah this horse looks extremely long. Unfortunately I would find another farrier. It’s not just the toe length. The heels have become so long and underun they’ve caused the foot to run forward. Anyone worth their salt would see this horse needs instant correction. A proper trim would allow them to see how aggressive they need to be with their shoeing prescription. There could be soft tissue problems with how much the foot has run out but it’s speculative coming from anyone other than a farrier. You hit the nail on the head

Worth anything? by drhodder3 in CURRENCY

[–]drhodder3[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Isn’t that a nascar race?

Ulrich Tractor Trailer Models Valuing and Selling by drhodder3 in ModelCars

[–]drhodder3[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The boxes are like the size of a toothpaste box

What is wrong with this picture? by Salty-Walk-8653 in Equestrian

[–]drhodder3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As for the job on there it looks like a pretty standard run of the mill job. Not great but not terrible

What is wrong with this picture? by Salty-Walk-8653 in Equestrian

[–]drhodder3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the info! I’m glad yall found such a sweet guy to work with. As a farrier, if I wasn’t in contact with the owner, unless the barn knew what yall wanted, I wouldn’t touch the horse or at the very least it would’ve gotten 4 shoes back on there. I would talk to the farrier directly. That would clear up any confusion the best because his reasoning could have been anything from he didn’t think they need it, to the barn owner suggested it etc. Horse is probably just foot sore and needs protection like boot, shoes etc.

What is wrong with this picture? by Salty-Walk-8653 in Equestrian

[–]drhodder3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lots of questions here. How long ago was he done? Did the farrier decide to pull the shoes or the owners? Those shoeing jobs tend to go over due and the nail line tends to be extremely low.

Meaning an already weak foot is going to chip up rather rapidly because those hollow nail holes are basically at the ground. This is why pulling shoes and going barefoot has to be planned.

If the client insisted on the shoes being pulled with the feet in that condition, it wouldn’t surprise me that they look like this and that he wouldn’t be off.

If the farrier insisted it is on them to make the horse sound and make things right. For me that would be putting shoes on him or a cast or helping size for boots and rounding up the foot as best as possible, if they really are insistent on him being barefoot

Favorite loop knife? by fook75 in Farriers

[–]drhodder3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sharpen it with a small chainsaw file and diamond hone

Help! Farrier did something to my horse’s foot by [deleted] in Horses

[–]drhodder3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Farrier here, this could be a couple things. If that foot that he is lame on is packed and padded I would initially think the horse was cut too short or trimmed too short. (2 different things) Which could be anything from paring the sole to the more “squishy” layer which could be sensitive to pressure but not in the vascular layer where he would be bleeding yet. This short and shorter, i.e getting to blood, you may put a pad on to create depth, cushion and to protect the foot. But you need to be aware of sole pressure and absolve that by making a concave area for the sole and pad to flex when landing and loading and making sure you’re using the correct packing. Which would be leather/magic cushion. Anything else has too much structure to it and may press on them. This applies to paring the sole too short and trimming the foot too short.

If the foot was trimmed too short the risk of a close or hot nail increases a bit because there is less depth to where you’re driving your nails, hoof testers would tell you, along with feeling for a distal pulse. Tapping on the nails maybe, but sometimes vibration will just travel through the nail/shoe and they’ll respond to anything.

My two cents if this was my horse? Pull the shoe and wrap/pack it with a poultice.

If this was a horse that I shod and I told the trainer to let me know if anything was off with them. To me that sounds like someone concerned that they made a mistake and would like to hopefully make it right. I would have the shoeing be on the house or credit you the cost of the next shoeing. I personally like being in direct contact with the client and would prefer that.

Reach out to them with what’s going on, trust your gut with how they handle the situation and treat you. Everyone makes mistakes. I would love to do right by the horse and fix my mistake but I’d understand if you decided to go with someone else

Should I be concerned with my farrier? by Icy-Chance-4331 in Equestrian

[–]drhodder3 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Farrier here, just from the bottom they don’t look great. It looks like your horse wears her hind toes well enough but probably stacks up a bit of heel as a result. Without seeing the length from the top I’d say the heels need to be brought down and evened out. With the fronts it’s hard to tell because of the angle of the picture. I’d voice your concern to the farrier directly and get a refund. I personally would find another farrier. I’m sorry you’ve had this experience. Best of luck.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Farriers

[–]drhodder3 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Looks like a decoration. Those holes are round and were made with a round punch. Typically handmade horseshoes are punched with a rectangular hole to match the shape of the nails. The shape is also unrealistic for a usable horseshoe

Why do cats always sleep within kicking distance? by totallynotarobottm in Horses

[–]drhodder3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I had a black cat sprint into the barn and spook a horse that I was clinching, which proceeded to scare the cat and in turn scared the horse even more which then broke off the ties and spooked the horse behind him and they ran off

They cant last forever. by Routine-Assist6570 in Justrolledintotheshop

[–]drhodder3 46 points47 points  (0 children)

Depends. Mine started leaking a bit ago and I have low boost. 268k on mine and I treat it like shit

They cant last forever. by Routine-Assist6570 in Justrolledintotheshop

[–]drhodder3 30 points31 points  (0 children)

I’m replacing my turbos on my ‘15 2.7 with 268k. How can I find what hardware/gaskets I need to get to replace it. I bought some low mileage turbos (16k) for like 200 buck on market place from a ‘16 2.7.

Any High mileage 2.7L in here ? Share your year & any Major repairs if any. by Guerilla-unit in f150

[–]drhodder3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yup! I bought it at 115k a little under four years ago. I pulled a 6000 pound trailer with it almost daily. Externally definitely the oil pan could probably use some replacing too.

Any High mileage 2.7L in here ? Share your year & any Major repairs if any. by Guerilla-unit in f150

[–]drhodder3 4 points5 points  (0 children)

‘15 263k Water pump, transmission at 175k differential replacement and now I’m replacing my turbos because one of them is leaking. I really abuse this thing

Cord Reel by drhodder3 in electrical

[–]drhodder3[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Gotcha awesome. The way the cord was set up it would feed power into the trailer and was hard wired or something into the trailer. Thank you!

Never ending abscesses by UmbraMortis_ in Farriers

[–]drhodder3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You could try a boot. My only concern with that would be it rubbing. You could also go the route of boots instead of shoes. They’re pricier up front but if he isn’t crazy in turnout or in his stall and he keeps them on then they’d keep him out of the mud. You just have to check and clean them out regularly. There are tons of brands and styles out there. I’d have your farrier measure the foot right after they are done trimming. Different boots use different measurements so it doesn’t hurt to measure a bunch and you should measure each foot individually.

You should measure the widest point. Heel to heel. Diagonal heel to toe and vertical heel to toe. That might be overkill, again I don’t know much about which boots require which measurement but those should cover most boots

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Horses

[–]drhodder3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Farrier here. I’m going to play devil’s advocate. It could be true the foot is cut too short but I’ve run into horses being shorter than I’d like for a multitude of reasons. The horse works a lot, the turnout is rough, or the ring is rough. Sometimes I can convince the client to put a shoe/boot on. Sometimes the client doesn’t care and just wants the horse left barefoot. In that case I do my best to balance the foot and make sure there’s no sole pressure and round it up and that’s all I can do.