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.
Sunday, January 10, 2021
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.
First US farriers graduate from Royal Veterinary College's Graduate Diploma in Equine Locomotor Research
The Royal Veterinary College has announced the graduation of the first group of American farrier students to compete the Graduate Diploma in Equine Locomotor Research (Grad Dip ELR). Launched in 2017, it is the first course of its kind, and offers professional farriers in both the US and the UK the chance to gain the necessary skill-set to produce original research and increase the evidence base behind farriery.
Tuesday, May 19, 2020
HoofSearch Publishes Online Donkey Hoof Research Guides Published with Free Access for All
HoofSearch, the index of equine foot research, has released an updated resource guide to peer-reviewed articles and theses on donkey hoof science and lameness studies. The index is free and accessible online to anyone interested in monitoring advances in donkey hoof health or improving the soundness-related welfare of working donkeys.
Sunday, April 26, 2020
First peer-reviewed journal article from the Royal Veterinary College's Graduate Diploma in Equine Locomotor Research explores impact of farriery on horse symmetry
A peer-reviewed study conducted at Great Britain's Royal Veterinary College (RVC) examines the effect of farriery interventions--in this case, studded tungsten-tipped "road" nails--and demonstrates their impact on horses’ movement symmetry, including weightbearing and propulsion.
The article, which will be published in the July 2020 edition of the Journal of Equine Veterinary Science and has been posted online, is the first farrier-authored peer-reviewed article based on a study conducted during the RVC's Graduate Diploma in Equine Locomotor Research (Grad Dip ELR) program. All students in the first UK cohort of the RVC program were professional farriers.
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