Hoof Geeks Barefoot Hoofcare

Hoof Geeks Barefoot Hoofcare Discover the knowledge every horse owner needs to do right by their equine partner. When you know better, you do better! The equine foot is extremely adaptable.
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Learn how feet, teeth, diet, nutrition, and lifestyle all work together to impact your horse’s health, soundness, and well-being. It responds to internal and external forces. Understand how the whole body influences the hooves and how the hooves influence the body. See how diet and environment play a part in hoof health and soundness of the horse. Expand your hoof care knowledge and feel more comf

ortable making hoof care decisions. Understand injuries and lamenesses better. Learn how to read the hoof and to understand the information that hooves reveal. Natural hoof care is our passion and teaching is our joy! We find knowledge empowering and strive to share all we know so that you can feel confident too.

This company in Ontario makes "Ground Grazers" - the Canadian version of the Hay Pillows
06/18/2026

This company in Ontario makes "Ground Grazers" - the Canadian version of the Hay Pillows

06/18/2026

Wild horses were released into the Gobi — and what came next is one...

06/17/2026

Mr T’s cervical vertabrae, why was the severity of the injury missed?

It’s important to start with the fact that X-rays are not the gold standard of imaging any longer, MRI and CT would have visualised this injury and its severity.
X-rays require at least two views taken at roughly 90 degree angles to one another (orthogonal views) because a single image flattens 3 dimensional anatomy into 2 dimensions. This overlap can easily hide fractures, dislocations, or other injuries.
Why Two Views are Essential, Depth Perception: A single flat image cannot tell a radiologist if an injury is positioned in the front or back of a bone. Overlapping Structures, Other bones or dense tissues might obscure a fracture in one view, but the injury becomes obvious when rotated .Displacement and Alignment, Orthogonal views (typically an Anteroposterior or AP view, and a Lateral view) let veterinarians accurately measure whether bones are separated or properly aligned.

Why Angles Must Be Exact, Avoiding Distortion Because X-ray beams travel through a joint at an angle, any deviation from standard, established protocols, alters the perspective. This can cause bones to look artificially elongated, narrowed, or displaced.

Eliminating Superimposition, A joint contains multiple overlapping bones. If the angle is slightly off, a healthy bone can overlap a hairline fracture or cyst, hiding the injury. Exact, angled oblique views are used specifically to isolate and "pull" distinct parts of a joint out from behind other bones.

Evaluating Joint Space & Symmetry. The width of the joint space is a major indicator of arthritis or cartilage wear. If the beam is not perfectly perpendicular to the joint, it can artificially "narrow" the space on the radiograph, leading to a false diagnosis of disease.

For the full video explaining his injuries head to patreon to view his album.

https://www.patreon.com/Becks_nairn/posts/going-over-mr-ts-161229291/edit

The photo below shows a normal APJ(articulating process joint) on the left and mister Ts on the right side.

06/17/2026

Why can’t so many horses eat grass anymore?

This comes up a lot.

I had a great comment on my last post saying, “Thirty years ago, horses were out on grass all the time and they were fine.”

And I do think it’s a fair question. But I don’t think the answer is one simple thing. Part of it is that the grass has changed.

A lot of horse paddocks now are small, overgrazed, fertilised, sprayed, compacted, and resown or populated by survival of the fittest, with grasses that can survive heavy grazing. That does not mean they are ideal for horses.

Improved pasture, ryegrass, clover, fertilised paddocks and stressed grass can be very different to rougher, mixed, lower-input pasture.

A horse grazing a varied paddock with native grasses, herbs, weeds, shrubs, roughage and room to move is not living the same life as a horse standing in a small green square of high-production stressed grass.

We also have less biodiversity.

When paddocks become monocultures, we lose the variety that supports the whole system. The soil changes. The insects change. The gut input changes. The plants available to the horse become narrower and often richer.

Gut health, soil health and biodiversity are connected. If we simplify the environment too much, we should not be shocked when the animals living in that environment start showing health problems.

Then there is management.

Many horses now live on smaller properties with less movement, alone, more confinement, richer grass, more hard feed, more rugging, more stress, and more weight gain. A lot of equines who are easy keepers are being managed in environments that are simply too rich and “comfortable” for them.

And then there is the other part: we are also better at recognising the signs now.

Years ago, a lot of horses were probably called “a bit footy,” “arthritic,” “lazy,” “old,” “pottery,” “sore after a trim,” or “not great on hard ground.”

Now we are more likely to recognise those signs as possible low-grade or subclinical laminitis, insulin dysregulation, PPID, or metabolic stress.

So I think the answer is, the grass, the paddocks, and the way we keep horses changed. The amount of movement and the soil and plant diversity changed. And our understanding of early metabolic and laminitic signs improved.

Grass is not evil for every horse.

But for some horses, especially metabolic horses, grass can be the trigger that keeps the disease process going.

And if that horse is already showing signs of laminitis, stretched white line, footiness, thin soles, abnormal growth, strong pulses or chronic hoof capsule changes, then “just a little grass” is not a useful management plan.

We have to manage the horse in front of us, in the environment we have now.

06/12/2026

Grande Prairie clinic Day 2 - reviewing hoof pathologies, then more practice of course!!

06/12/2026

Grande Prairie clinic Day 1 - hoof grooming demo, then practice of course!!

06/11/2026
Again the Ladies in Grande Prairie AB are always the “Hostess with the Mostess”!!!!lol. I jokingly asked for fresh flowe...
06/11/2026

Again the Ladies in Grande Prairie AB are always the “Hostess with the Mostess”!!!!lol.
I jokingly asked for fresh flowers and they arrived ! Awe! Thanks Ladies !!! 🩷🩷🩷

06/08/2026

Incredible !
Looking forward to this clinic !!!!
Thank you for your exceptional passion and knowledge !!

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292 McPhillips Road
Lockport, MB
R1A3E4

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Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
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