Tilley Co Farrier Service

Tilley Co Farrier Service Veteran owned and operated ⚓️ Professional Farrier | 25+ Years Experience Comments? Bring it on — I welcome it all!

If you wish to contact me, please call —
I’m much easier to reach by phone than by smoke signal or carrier pigeon. Please "Like" my page if:

You know me (or at least pretend convincingly)
We've done business before (and neither of us needed therapy afterward)
You're interested in doing business in the future (I’m flattered already)
You're curious about what this business is all about (spoiler: it

involves skill, sweat, and steel)
You like horses (who doesn't)
You appreciate blacksmith work (because turning fire and metal into function is just plain cool)

Questions? Thank you,
Chris Tilley
Owner of Tilley Co LLC

From our family to yours, we’re wishing all the amazing moms a truly fabulous day filled with love, laughter, and happin...
05/10/2026

From our family to yours, we’re wishing all the amazing moms a truly fabulous day filled with love, laughter, and happiness!!! 💖🌸

‘Tis the season! May your holidays sparkle with moments of love and laughter, and may the year ahead be joyful and prosp...
12/25/2025

‘Tis the season! May your holidays sparkle with moments of love and laughter, and may the year ahead be joyful and prosperous. Merry Christmas from Tilley Co Farrier Service Family! 🎄🎅🎁

🎅🐴 Ho-ho-hoof care around Montgomery, TX!Now accepting new clients!📞 651-492-4652 — Call or message to schedule!Sleigh b...
12/01/2025

🎅🐴 Ho-ho-hoof care around Montgomery, TX!
Now accepting new clients!
📞 651-492-4652 — Call or message to schedule!

Sleigh bells ringing… horses’ feet need trimming! 🎄 I provide professional trims, shoeing, and reliable hoof care — no cookies required. 🛠️🍪
Spots are limited (even Rudolph booked early!).

From my family to yours, wishing you a heartwarming and memorable Thanksgiving weekend.🦃🍂❤️ Chris Tilley
11/28/2025

From my family to yours, wishing you a heartwarming and memorable Thanksgiving weekend.🦃🍂❤️ Chris Tilley

From my family to yours — we’re dying to wish you a Happy Halloween!!! 🎃👻🦇
10/31/2025

From my family to yours — we’re dying to wish you a Happy Halloween!!! 🎃👻🦇

**Now accepting new clients around the Montgomery,TX area!**Offering professional, reliable farrier services — trims, sh...
10/22/2025

**Now accepting new clients around the Montgomery,TX area!**

Offering professional, reliable farrier services — trims, shoeing, and quality hoof care. 🐴🛠️

Limited spots available — call or message to book today. - 651-492-4652

🍂🐴 Fall into Fresh Hooves! 🍁🍁I’ve got a couple of spots open for select clients around the Montgomery, TX area!Cooler we...
10/17/2025

🍂🐴 Fall into Fresh Hooves! 🍁🍁
I’ve got a couple of spots open for select clients around the Montgomery, TX area!
Cooler weather is here — it’s the perfect time to get your horse’s hooves in tip-top shape before winter trots in. 🧡🐎

🍂 Professional trims
🍁 Quality shoeing
🌾 Reliable, seasonal hoof care

Message/Call me to grab a spot before they’re gone like autumn leaves in the wind! 🍃

10/06/2018

GOING IN CIRCLES

When horses roamed the plains, they did exactly that: they roamed. They drifted along, grazing and mostly walking in straight lines. When horses worked for a living, they continued to walk those straight lines, pulling a plow from one end of the field to the other, pulling a milk wagon from one end of town to the other, or pushing cattle from one end of Texas to the other. As they transitioned from work animals to recreation vehicles, they generally continued walking, jogging, or cantering in reasonably straight lines, going from one end of a trail to the other.

Of course, not all work or recreation involved strict, straight line movement. They were asked to cut cattle, which often required them to work laterally, with sudden starts and stops and jolts and jerks. They were asked to perform military/dressage maneuvers, with significant lateral movement and transitions. They were asked to foxhunt, which required them to work over fences and around obstacles. They were asked to participate in sport, such as polo, which again required stops, starts, bursts of speed and lateral work. And, of course, they were asked to race, which required speed, but generally on straight line tracks or long ovals.

As they transitioned into show and competition arenas, however, they shifted away from straight line activity. We changed the game and asked them to become focused athletes and runway models. In doing so, we put them into smaller and smaller spaces and asked them to perform more and more patterned behaviors. Basically, we put them into patterned, repetitive movements—mostly in circles... little, tight circles. And they started to fall apart, experiencing more and more issues with joint problems, soft tissue injuries, and general lameness concerns.

We blamed their failures and breakdowns on bad breeding practices and poor genetics; we blamed their failures on bad farriers and inadequate veterinarians; we blamed their breakdowns on poor training and conditioning, poor horse keeping practices, bad nutritional practices, and any number of other things. And, while none of these should be disallowed, the fact remains that we changed the game and put them into those little, tiny circles and repetitive activities. So, let’s look at equine anatomy, and specifically, let’s look at that in relation to athletic maneuvers and activities.

First and foremost, the horse is designed to be heavy on the forehand. We fight against that concept, asking them to engage their hindquarters, to “collect,” and to give us impulsion. And they’re capable of doing so… but they’re not designed or “programmed” to sustain such activity for any length of time. When they do this in “natural” settings and situations, they’re playing, they’re being startled or frightened, or they’re showing off. None of these are sustained activities.

Likewise, when they do engage, they’re generally bolting forward, jumping sideways, or leaping upwards. And they're typically doing that with a burst of speed and energy, not in slow motion. Ultimately, their design is simply not conducive to circular work. Each joint, from the shoulder to the ground is designed for flexion and extension—for forward motion, not lateral motion. In fact, these joints are designed to minimize and restrict lateral or side-to-side movement.

Got all my knives good and sharp for a heavy day tomorrow. Not much hair left on my right hand, but the knives are sharp...
03/01/2018

Got all my knives good and sharp for a heavy day tomorrow. Not much hair left on my right hand, but the knives are sharp.

Anybody have any opinions about these two trim styles.
02/10/2017

Anybody have any opinions about these two trim styles.

03/09/2016

Trimming a pony.

Address

Opdyke West, TX
77316

Telephone

651 - 492 - 4652

Website

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