Whole Horse Hoof Care - Equine Podiatrist

Whole Horse Hoof Care - Equine Podiatrist Welcome to my page, set up in 2019 at the beginning of my training to LEV5 DEP.

Qualified LEV5 DEP MEPA covering 20 miles from GU32 in the South of England free of additional charge and up to 30 miles for a small additional travel charge.

Finer Forage are one of my preferred ranges and now they have a product specifically to help CPL 👏
15/08/2025

Finer Forage are one of my preferred ranges and now they have a product specifically to help CPL 👏

Some of my eagle eyed and eared clients may have noticed that I differentiate when watching your horses walk up and on y...
12/08/2025

Some of my eagle eyed and eared clients may have noticed that I differentiate when watching your horses walk up and on your reports 👍

FEELY, FOOTY, SORE — OR LAME?
Why sensation in the hoof is not automatically pain

A horse’s hoof is not just horn wrapped around bone. It is a living, weight-bearing sensory organ, richly supplied with nerves, blood vessels, and specialised receptors. These include mechanoreceptors that detect vibration, proprioceptors that monitor limb position, and nociceptors that register potentially harmful pressure or temperature extremes. All of these are constantly feeding information to the central nervous system.

This feedback is essential. It allows a horse to adapt stride length, limb placement, and weight distribution in fractions of a second. Without it, the horse is less able to move safely over uneven ground, avoid overloading a limb, or respond to changes in surface.

Which means: sensation is not only normal — it is necessary.
The presence of sensation does not automatically mean there is pain, injury, or pathology.

Feely

A horse that is feely is responding to increased sensory input. This often happens on surfaces that are unfamiliar, abrasive, or more variable than the horse’s daily environment. They may step more cautiously, shorten stride slightly, or pick a particular line. The movement change is subtle, proportional to the stimulus, and often disappears once the horse adapts. It’s a sign the hoof is doing its job as a sensory interface.

Footy

Footiness usually describes more obvious caution — perhaps intermittent reluctance to load fully, especially on hard, stony, or irregular ground. It may reflect early-stage overload, sole pressure from retained exfoliating material, thin soles, or simply a lack of conditioning to that terrain. Footiness can be transitional and benign, but it can also precede soreness if the cause isn’t addressed. The key is whether the horse returns to baseline comfort with rest, protection, or surface change.

Sore

Soreness indicates a level of discomfort that changes movement on most surfaces and in most contexts. It can arise from over-trimming, bruising, inflammation of the laminae, or other tissue stress. However, mild and short-lived soreness can also occur when previously unloaded structures (e.g., frog, bars, caudal hoof) begin to take load again during rehabilitation — a form of adaptive stimulus. Distinguishing between adaptive soreness and damaging overload requires close observation, history, and context.

Lame

Lameness is a clinical term: a repeatable, measurable asymmetry caused by pain or mechanical restriction. It is more than a response to an uncomfortable surface — it’s a movement change that persists across contexts or gaits. True lameness should always prompt veterinary evaluation to identify and address the cause. However, mislabelling normal sensory caution as “lameness” can lead to unnecessary interventions and may undermine trust between owners and professionals.

Why the distinction matters

If every altered step is seen as pathology, we risk overprotecting the foot, depriving it of the very stimulus it needs to adapt and strengthen. If we ignore clear signs of discomfort, we risk allowing reversible issues to progress to real injury. The hoof’s role as a sensory organ means some change in movement is expected when surfaces, load, or environmental factors change — especially in horses that aren’t fully conditioned for that challenge.

The right question is not simply “Is the horse sound?” but:
– What is the hoof reporting to the brain?
– Is the movement change proportional to the stimulus?
– Does it resolve with rest, protection, or adaptation?
– Is it protective (self-preserving), adaptive (strength-building), or pathological (damage-related)?

When we understand the difference between feeling, protecting, adapting, and true pain, we make better decisions — and give the horse the best chance to keep both its function and its feedback intact.

10/08/2025

𝑻𝒉𝒂𝒏𝒌 𝒚𝒐𝒖 𝒇𝒐𝒓 𝒂 𝒇𝒂𝒏𝒕𝒂𝒔𝒕𝒊𝒄 𝒓𝒆𝒔𝒑𝒐𝒏𝒔𝒆 - 𝒎𝒂𝒓𝒆 𝒇𝒐𝒖𝒏𝒅!! ❤️

𝑼𝒓𝒈𝒆𝒏𝒕 𝑨𝒑𝒑𝒆𝒂𝒍, 𝑷𝒍𝒆𝒂𝒔𝒆 𝑺𝒉𝒂𝒓𝒆: 𝑭𝒐𝒔𝒕𝒆𝒓 𝑴𝒂𝒓𝒆 𝑵𝒆𝒆𝒅𝒆𝒅 𝒇𝒐𝒓 𝑶𝒓𝒑𝒉𝒂𝒏𝒆𝒅 𝑭𝒐𝒂𝒍
We are sadly looking for a foster mare for a 6-week-old warmblood foal currently at Liphook Equine Hospital.

If you or someone you know may have a suitable mare please contact us on 01428 727200

This post couldn't say it any better. For the horses sake the behaviour needs to stop! I've said since this first all st...
23/06/2025

This post couldn't say it any better. For the horses sake the behaviour needs to stop! I've said since this first all started that one of the biggest issue here is the lack of professional communication and the mentality that this one way is the only way and it's just getting worse.

The Hoof Care Wars: When Helping Horses Became a Battlefield

There was a time when the hoof care world was split simply: shoes or no shoes.
But times have changed.

Today’s conflicts are far more… evolved.

Now we have schools vs schools.
Or more accurately — one or two very specific schools versus…
well, everyone else.

Veterinary surgeons?
“Brainwashed by outdated models.”

Farriers?
“Still stuck in the dark ages.”

Independent trimmers?
“Unqualified. Dangerous. Actively harming horses.”

Yes — welcome to the world where if you’re not trained by their method, using their terminology, applying their trim, and chanting their jargon — you’re a threat to equine welfare.
An obstacle. A danger.
A hoof butcher.

And it’s getting poisonous.

What do these wars actually look like?

Online groups policed like secret societies, where dissent is flagged faster than a loose shoe.

Case studies weaponised to prove “everyone else is incompetent.”

Vets, farriers, physios and other professionals shut down or publicly shamed for not subscribing to “The Method.”

Emotionally charged accusations:
“That trim is abuse.”
“You’re setting that horse up to fail.”
“You’re killing horses.”

Not... “I disagree,”
but:
“You’re endangering lives.”

Meanwhile, in the real world...

Owners are caught in the middle, more confused than ever.

Horses are left without consistent, collaborative care.

Practitioners feel under siege, walking on eggshells rather than sharing knowledge.

Thoughtful discussion dies a slow death, buried under dogma.

And those who try to build bridges?
Mocked, blocked, or labelled "fence-sitters."

The horse does not care which school you trained with.

He cares whether he can land heel-first.
Whether he can move freely.
Whether his posture is improving.
Whether his pain is being addressed.

Horses don’t need ideology.
They need clarity.
Competence.
Care.

So let’s drop the slogans and the sanctimony.
Let’s stop declaring war on anyone who doesn’t echo our training manual.

No single school owns hoof care.
No method is universally right for every horse, in every context.
And if your training can’t stand up to scrutiny, open discussion, or collaboration with other professionals —
then it’s not a method.
It’s a religion.

And horses deserve better than that.

04/06/2025

Yay, holidays here we come 🥰

I'll be back on Monday 16th June and will respond to all enquiries then 😊
👏👋

Due to the closure of a lovely yard I've had the pleasure of going to for the past few years I have limited availability...
30/05/2025

Due to the closure of a lovely yard I've had the pleasure of going to for the past few years I have limited availability for taking on new clients for regular (5/6wkly) equine podiatry visits within a 30mile radius of PO8 😊

For more information - https://www.wholehorsehoofcare.co.uk/consultations

Today has been a good day with improvements and happier horses all round.These two boys were a pleasure today - they may...
29/05/2025

Today has been a good day with improvements and happier horses all round.

These two boys were a pleasure today - they may not have stood like statues but you know what - that's ok, because movement is conversation and with building trust you develop a two way understanding whereby they can ask and I will listen. The key point here is that they were polite about it (of course there are times when horses may have to (or choose to) "shout" to be heard and its just as important to recognise why that may be. Mcguire was "shouting" when he was in discomfort with laminitis- we listened to him and now he is recognising that we are listening and will help him feel better if he let's us 🥰

Bowie is a baby and so he's learning the ropes from scratch and with an owner as committed as Leia is to putting in the time and effort in between visits, he is already 100% happier with what's going on than he was only a couple of months and three visits ago.

There's a lot of misinformation out there but this post covers a lot of the issues faced with the sudden flush of spring...
18/04/2025

There's a lot of misinformation out there but this post covers a lot of the issues faced with the sudden flush of spring grass and well worth a read.

Module 2 assessment of the Equine Psychology Diploma finally submitted (not having a deadline is great in one way but no...
16/04/2025

Module 2 assessment of the Equine Psychology Diploma finally submitted (not having a deadline is great in one way but not so great in others 🤣)
Fingers crossed for another good result then on to Module 3 🥰

Hey it's me 🥰
15/04/2025

Hey it's me 🥰

“Meet the Equine Podiatrist”

The Equine Podiatry Association UK is proud of its members, all of whom are equine podiatrists (barefoot trimmers). We have a range of diversity within our membership, with each individual having their unique area of expertise which enriches our community, strengthening our collective mission to advance equine welfare and to promote responsible hoof care within the UK.

Today we would like to introduce you to one of our full members: Linda Wilmer

For more information about Linda please click the link below. 👇

https://www.epauk.org/membership/our-members/linda-wilmer/?doing_wp_cron=1743195916.3280909061431884765625

Hoof Boot Fitting availability coming up April/MayBased in Clanfield (Hants) and covering most of the South (subject to ...
07/04/2025

Hoof Boot Fitting availability coming up April/May

Based in Clanfield (Hants) and covering most of the South (subject to travel costs - no extra charge within 40miles of PO8)

29th April
2nd May
7th May
8th May
16th May

28/03/2025

And that's me done until the 7th April 👏
Now to get ready for my holiday 🥰

Address

Bampton
GU323PS

Opening Hours

Monday 9:30am - 5pm
Tuesday 9:30am - 5pm
Thursday 9:30am - 5pm
Friday 9:30am - 5pm

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Whole Horse Hoof Care - Equine Podiatrist posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share