Showing posts with label Hoof Blog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hoof Blog. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 11, 2024
SURVEY: Professional Farriers' and Equine Veterinarians' Attitudes, Knowledge, and Opinions Sought by University of Edinburgh Researchers
Researchers from the University of Edinburgh’s Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies in Scotland are seeking online input from equine veterinarians and professional farriers from the United Kingdom, USA, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.
Tuesday, February 27, 2024
Rood & Riddle Equine Hospital opens doors for International Equine Podiatry Conference April 18-20, 2024
Rood & Riddle Equine Hospital in Lexington, Kentucky will host the third International Equine Podiatry Conference.
The doors to the forge are always open at the Rood & Riddle Equine Hospital in Lexington, Kentucky. Someone is always going in or out, and the equine podiatry clinic is a favorite stop on every hospital tour. But from April 18-20 this year, the doors will open even wider to welcome attendees to the hospital's third International Podiatry Conference.
Attendees should expect to roll up their sleeves, buckle their aprons, and spend two days in a stimulating state-of-the-art treatment and diagnosis center where the highly-trained staff looks expertly -- and exclusively -- at the equine hoof. A registration at this conference guarantees that the motivated participants can and will get their hands dirty and their questions answered.
Thursday, April 27, 2023
Meet University of California at Davis new veterinary hospital farrier Ian Davies
Ian Davies, DipWCF is hard at work in his new job.
The British-born and British-educated farrier has joined the University of California School of Veterinary Medicine Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital in Davis, California. The vet school welcomed Ian to his new position yesterday.
Wednesday, August 17, 2022
Prevent laminitis: Wellness Ready stallside insulin tests accelerate Equine Metabolic Syndrome diagnostics
A new stallside diagnostics tool called Wellness Ready provides real-time equine insulin levels from a simple blood test kit; it is now available to veterinarians around the world. With its growing use for horses of all breeds and ages, laminitis prevention is taking a big stride forward.
Farriers at the Herning 2022 FEI World Championships: Who was minding the forge?
Wednesday, March 30, 2022
New HISA racing rules for Thoroughbred horseshoe traction to begin July 1 in USA
New federally-mandated racing safety rules from the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority will be introduced "feet first" this summer. The first new rules are primed to take effect on July 1 at U.S. racetracks.
A change to how American Thoroughbreds may be shod, including what shoes they can wear, is key to the new rules, limiting the use of shoe traction devices with one national rule for the entire United States.
Thursday, July 29, 2021
The Olympic Hoof: Therapeutic plastic horseshoes helped two US dressage silver medal horses in Tokyo
Horseshoes, like Olympic medals, can be made from different metals. But this week in Tokyo, the world saw that they can also be made of plastic...and help bring home a medal. |
For Team USA in the Tokyo Olympics this year, dreams are made of gold, silver, and bronze. But for two horses, those dreams had a plastic lining, although you might not know it unless you happened to see the bottom of their hooves.
Thursday, July 22, 2021
The Olympic (Laminitic) Hoof: Dressage horse diagnosed with laminitis before competition begins
But for one rider, the challenges are just beginning: Her horse, expected to compete in dressage on Saturday for South Africa, has been diagnosed with laminitis at the equestrian center outside Tokyo.
Tuesday, May 04, 2021
Renate Weller appointed vet school dean at University of Calgary
Renate Weller, an educator and leader in the equine veterinary field in Europe, will become the new Dean of the University of Calgary Faculty of Veterinary Medicine in Canada this September. |
Monday, May 03, 2021
Message to Hoof Blog readers and email newsletter subscribers
Hoofcare Publishing will be back at work and publishing from the "real" office in town soon. In the meantime, some changes are coming to improve the delivery of your email newsletter and headline alerts.
Saturday, April 17, 2021
Remembering Britain's Prince Philip and the Quick-Thinking Farrier
Prince Philip's brush with danger at the 2013 Royal Windsor Horse Show has almost been forgotten but it could have ended quite differently. A quick-thinking farrier was the hero that day. |
Prince Philip was, of course, an avid and exuberant competitive carriage driver, as well as polo player and long-time president of Fédération Équestre Internationale (FEI), the global governing body of equestrian sport.
What I'll remember, however, is a horse show mishap that could have ended quite differently.
Thursday, February 04, 2021
Sunday, January 10, 2021
All Creatures Great and Small: James Herriot Begins Career with a Hoof to the Head
The return of James Herriot's heart-warming "All Creatures Great and Small" stories to American television for the next six Sundays might be just what we need to get through the winter.
Monday, January 04, 2021
For Auld Lang Syne: New York's forgotten landmarks of hoof history
I have always wanted to organize a tour of New York City for horse and hoof history, but this might be as close as I can come until life gets back to normal. Consider this a warmup, inspired by the New Year's Eve traditional celebration in Times Square.
This article will cover midtown landmarks -- or "hoofmarks", as I call them -- around Times Square and Central Park.
Tuesday, June 09, 2020
Barefoot by the Numbers: Swedish Standardbred trotters are faster without shoes, but risk breaking gait
Researchers at Sweden's University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU) at Uppsala have analyzed the performance records of trotting Standardbreds based on varied configurations of fully shod, front or hind shoes only, or without shoes entirely.
Tuesday, September 17, 2019
Video abstract on Equine Metabolic Syndrome in Welsh ponies and Morgan horses wins prize at BEVA Congress
Veterinarians have been upgrading their skills at both communicating information about their research and in making their research more accessible to the public. Laminitis prevention is an area that is in critical need of more outreach. Navigating the literature on laminitis research can be confusing and overwhelming.
At last week's British Equine Veterinary Association (BEVA) Congress in England, the Equine Veterinary Journal (EVJ) gave an award for video interpretation of equine research. The video abstract they presented is remarkable on two counts: The winning author is an American, and the subject is laminitis prevention and education of horse owners.
Sunday, September 15, 2019
Vet/author/editor/researcher Tim Mair brings a wide range of expertise to new post as BEVA President
The British Equine Veterinary Association welcomed a new president during the recent BEVA 2019 Congress in Birmingham, England.
Friday, September 13, 2019
Equine Research: BEVA Congress 2019 award goes to Irish paper analyzing progress in equine motion study, including hooves and shoes
News from the British Equine Veterinary Association (BEVA) Congress underway in England this week is that a paper in the field of equine motion analysis has received a prestigious award. The winning paper was the result of a "scoping" review of what equine motion research has been accomplishing for the past 40 years, and how productively the field is moving forward.
Among the results from the paper are analysis of the way that hoof movement and shoe effects research has been conducted in the past and suggestions for future modification. Some findings from the study are outlined for you here.
Tuesday, September 10, 2019
Burghley Horse Trials' Best Shod Horse for 2019: What was he wearing...and why?
Each year, England's five-star Burghley Horse Trials gives a prize to the best shod horse, and the selection of that horse is always a story in itself. On Wednesday last week, 67 horses stood patiently and had their feet picked up, shoes and hooves examined, and notes taken.
Monday, September 02, 2019
Labor Day parades: When American horseshoers marched down city streets
The first Labor Day parades in the United States featured marching horseshoers representing their local trade unions. It was a day of pride and fellowship on the city streets. But it was also a rare thing for a working horseshoer: a day off.
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