Wild Hearts Hoof Care

  • Home
  • Wild Hearts Hoof Care

Wild Hearts Hoof Care Equine Hoof Care by Sossity Skye - rehab, performance & maintenance. Barefoot, booted, glue on shoes

Holistic Based Equine Hoof Care by Sossity Skye - rehab, performance & maintenance

Welcome to the team!  💜  3D HoofCare
25/08/2025

Welcome to the team! 💜

3D HoofCare

🫩🥵
22/08/2025

🫩🥵

She’s exhausted from assisting  🥵😴.. but this modification really takes about 60 seconds a pair. Dremeling in a horizont...
11/08/2025

She’s exhausted from assisting 🥵😴..

but this modification really takes about 60 seconds a pair. Dremeling in a horizontal squiggle scuff can help with shoe retention on some horses. What got me thinking this way was seeing the resets stuck on like stink when they got a similar clean up. EasyCare Inc. Protective Hoofwear

Tis the season… my clients hear me talk about this, “the seasonal rise”.  Here’s a quick read from Dr Kellon - worth a p...
04/08/2025

Tis the season… my clients hear me talk about this, “the seasonal rise”. Here’s a quick read from Dr Kellon - worth a peak if you have a suspected (or known) Cushings horse.

https://drkhorsesense.wordpress.com/2019/08/04/the-seasonal-acth-rise/?fbclid=IwQ0xDSwL91vhleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHlJRQThYP2t4auTbqLKFFD7J2WsQsyoxGE_otyi1PFm-AGgea29vh1zteqlh_aem_FQA-20WWG_2_DnG-jkLb9A

ACTH, adrenocorticotropic hormone, is produced by the pituitary gland. It’s function is to trigger cortisol release from the adrenal gland. Every year in the fall there is a temporary increa…

Really interesting about stride length loss… could mean not tracking up, not using the back correctly, detrimental toe f...
01/08/2025

Really interesting about stride length loss… could mean not tracking up, not using the back correctly, detrimental toe first landings etc. It impacts more than you might think.

New research shows cranking the noseband hurts your horse's gait.

There are always many opinions about nosebands. Too loose, and a trainer might call it sloppy. Too tight, and it becomes a welfare concern. There are studded and crank and chain and traditional, and all kinds of gadgets and gizmos designed to keep our horse’s mouth shut, but what is best for the horse? Is cranking that extra hole doing more harm than good?

A 2025 study published in the Journal of Equine Veterinary Science examined the impact of noseband tightness on pressure and performance. The results are eye-opening if you believe that a tighter noseband means better performance in the ring.

Most riders are familiar with the standard: leave two fingers’ space beneath the noseband. It’s even outlined in guidelines from the FEI. And according to the study, 85% of riders say they know this recommendation. But when researchers actually measured the fit using a standardized taper gauge, only 15% had their nosebands adjusted to the proper tension.

The vast majority were too tight. Sometimes dramatically too tight.

The Hidden Pressure on a Horse’s Face
In the study, eight horses were fitted with a simple cavesson noseband and tested at three settings: a standard two-finger fit, a snug one-finger fit, and a cranked-tight zero-finger fit. Under each setting, researchers measured facial pressure and evaluated gait.

- The one-finger setting increased pressure on the nasal bone by 54% over the two-finger baseline.
- The zero-finger setting? A staggering 338% increase in pressure.

Imagine trying to do your day job with a belt cinched tight around your nose and jaw. Now add that your success relies on body movement, and you have no way to say, “This hurts.” That’s similar to what the horse might feel like being asked to perform in a fully tightened noseband that more than triples the force exerted on its face.

Unfortunately, changes to tack and equipment don’t typically come solely from the perspective of the horse’s comfort. So let’s look at performance as well.

In addition to pressure data, the researchers measured each horse’s trot stride. As the noseband got tighter, the stride got shorter—by a lot. On average:

- Horses at the one-finger tightness lost 6.2% of their stride length.
- With a fully tightened noseband, stride loss jumped to 11.1%.

In real-world terms, that’s about 24 centimeters, roughly the length of a hoof, disappearing from every stride. While that may not sound dramatic at first, consider how it compounds across a full course. Shorter strides can mean rushed distances, flat movement, and a horse that never quite gets to “flow.” In the hunter ring, 24 centimeters could be the difference between pinning in a highly competitive under saddle class.

And this wasn’t just about stiffness or resistance. The study found a statistically significant negative correlation between noseband pressure and stride length. In short, the tighter the fit, the shorter the step.

Sure, a longer stride is helpful in the show ring. But this research highlights deeper concerns about what that level of pressure does to the horse’s face and nerves. The noseband sits directly over sensitive structures, including branches of the trigeminal nerve, which help regulate posture and proprioception. Excessive pressure here doesn’t just hurt. It may also interfere with the horse’s balance and coordination.

Previous studies have shown that pressures as low as 32 kPa can damage tissue. In this study, the tightest noseband setting reached an average of 115.8 kPa. That’s far above what’s been associated with pain or injury in other species. That number isn’t just theoretical. It’s happening under tack, often unnoticed, every day. And unlike overt lameness, this kind of pressure flies under the radar, making it easy to miss, but just as impactful.

🔗 Read the full article at https://www.theplaidhorse.com/2025/07/30/new-research-shows-cranking-your-noseband-hurts-your-horses-gait/

🔗 Read the full study here: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0737080625003120?via%3Dihub

😉
31/07/2025

😉

THE DANGERS OF MIDDLE-AGED WOMEN WITH RASPS

Apparently, barefoot trimmers are “mostly middle-aged menopausal housewives.”
That’s the latest pearl of insight doing the rounds online.
And you know what?
It’s not entirely wrong.

I am middle-aged.
I am menopausal.
And I absolutely will talk about digital cushions, mechanical load, and mineral ratios while sweating through a fleece in February.

Let’s unpack it, shall we?

“Housewife.”
Interesting choice. We run businesses, keep yards going, manage clients, plan rehabs, and hold the line between panic and progress. If that counts as housewifery, we’d like a raise. And a stronger wheelbarrow.

“Menopausal.”
Correct. Which means the nonsense-filter is gone. Evaporated. We now say what we think. Kindly, mostly. Firmly, always. Our tempers are short but our memory is long, and we've lived long enough to know the difference between a setback and a story someone tells themselves to avoid change.

“Middle-aged.”
Yes again. We’ve done the years in the field. The hours in the books. The heartbreak of rehabs that didn’t go to plan. We’ve made mistakes. Owned them. Learned. Tried again. And now we turn up to each appointment not to prove anything, but to help the horse — even if that means saying something uncomfortable, or stepping back.

And while we’re at it — let’s talk physicality.
This work is hard. It takes strength, stamina, and steel-core endurance. We haul hoof jacks, wrangle draft crosses, trim in sideways rain and searing heat. We lift, carry, squat, and stabilise half a tonne of shifting anatomy — often for hours at a time, on less sleep than ideal and joints that don’t always cooperate. We don’t just know hoof mechanics. We embody them.

We’re not here to be trendy. We’re not here for applause. And we’re certainly not here to start industry wars.
We collaborate with professionals we trust. We ask questions. We listen. We refer when needed. And we’ve got the radiographs, case notes, and clinical outcomes to back it.

So yes: some of us are barefoot trimmers.
Some of us are menopausal.
And all of us are still standing.

What’s more dangerous than a woman with a rasp?
A woman with context.
And quad strength.

⚠️ SATIRE WARNING: This post contains irony, exaggeration, and the occasional hormone-fuelled truth bomb. If you're tempted to take it literally, step away from the keyboard and drink some magnesium. Not everything is a personal attack — but some things are cultural mirrors. Handle with self-awareness.

Thank you so much Garrett Ford  EasyCare Inc. Protective Hoofwear for letting us try these super glue “hug” tabs on the ...
21/07/2025

Thank you so much Garrett Ford EasyCare Inc. Protective Hoofwear for letting us try these super glue “hug” tabs on the EasyShoe One shoes!
Shannon Peters Dressage and I think they look like they’re giving the hoof a hug 🤗

The fit was great even with some hoof challenges, we’re optimistic these are really going to help this horse ❤️

Princess dancing shoes 👑💗💎EasyCare Inc. Protective Hoofwear
19/07/2025

Princess dancing shoes 👑💗💎

EasyCare Inc. Protective Hoofwear

Before her 12 week trim 😁
13/05/2025

Before her 12 week trim 😁

27/04/2025

Address


Telephone

+18054329891

Website

Alerts

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

Contact The Business

Send a message to Wild Hearts Hoof Care:

  • Want your business to be the top-listed Pet Store/pet Service?

Share