Wow.... Pretty soon no one will share their ideas because no matter what, people who took a weekend course will attack you. I don't do everything like you do, but if I've got a horse that grew a whack of heel, damn right I'm taking that all off! If it's a large amount, I generally tell people not to ride for 2-3 days so the horse can adjust. Been a professional farrier for over 24 years. Never had one go lame because of that. 🙄
Daniel Anz a pleasure to look at your work, I would like to know what is the limit of lowering the hoof exactly. since I have made mistakes with my horses. Another thing that does not seem right to me is to bend and rivet the nail outlet, since it hurts the foot wall... Believe me, I work on my ranch with horses and I have run very hard. and my animals work hard and they never never thrown a horseshoe without riveting or bending the nail on the way out. In my opinion I do not take a good look at that and it is unsightly !!! greetings from Sonora Mex.
Job, muchas gracias. Para responder a tu pregunta te ofrezco el curso online sobre el concepto Balance F que se encuentra en esta plataforma: edu.balance-f.com. Encuentras ahí toda la información en profundidad + el libro Balance F en formato digital.
@@danielanz-balancef Gracias mi estimado Daniel por responderle a este fiel admirador de tu trabajo!!! Voy a hacer todo lo posible por informarme mas en su plataforma. y de echo ya estoy por encargar tu libro en MERCADO LIBRE que es donde tengo cuenta para hacer compras or en Ebay... Y de cualquier forma aqui en su canal lo seguire en cada video que suba!!! De nuevo muchas gracias por responder y por darnos un poco de su conocimiento en cada video que nos regala en este canal!!! saludos de nuevo y gracias!!!
@@jobquijada9496 Muy amable, Job. Recuerda que en el curso ONLINE en edu.balance-f.com incluye el libro en formato digital. Se acaban de sumar dos módulos más de herramientas, forja y herrado. Todo por el mismo precio (49 US$).
@@danielanz-balancef De echo hace 15 minutos me acabo de registrar Daniel en su pagina online y nada a seguir aprendiendo gracias por la informacion y estaremos en contacto en su sitio mi estimado!!! saludos de nuevo...
Correct me if I am wrong (and it is a little hard to tell by just watching the video): you took way more off the heels than off the toe. Isn't that putting an immense pressure on the tendons by changing the static dramatically in one trim? The way I understand it, is that you can only take away from the heels what you also take off the toe.
Hi Bassi, thank you for your inquiry. My concept is based on removing from the foot only what is excess, what causes pressure, what bothers the horse. Long heels are very uncomfortable for the horse, so removing excess material generates instant relief. You only generate stress on the tendons when you remove too much material, but not when you remove just enough. If you respect the information that the foot shows you, you always relieve the horse. If you remove too much or too little, you generate ligament tension and pressure on the hoof. Long heels generate a lot of pressure on the suspensory ligament branch.
@@danielanz-balancef and you ramped the heels down to the collateral grooves! That destroys the heel buttresses ..the entire foundation for the back of the hoof and thins out the sole in the back of the foot and forces the heels to become underrun! You also removed the horn tubules and destroyed the support the the entire dorsal wall...this hoof will collapse and this horse will loose it's life because of your ignorance! Learn the anatomy of the true foot of the horse...study the real foot..the internal foot so you know how the shoe /hoof should fit! PLEASE
@@danielanz-balancef Are they really? I find it hard to believe because when a draft horse or any horse wants his foot back and if you can't jump that's it ! No foot no farrier!
My arabian has a right vrint that AKWAYS grows long inbetween trimmings. Should i br concerned about this? Her high low isnt bad enough to be concerned but that hiif always grows out sooo fast!!!!
@@ruttingpeakadventures no, you should never address flares from the top...always the bottom...the bars are pushing out the hoof wall...by rasping the tubules off the dorsal wall you actually weaken the structure of the wall and cause more flaring.
Nicole A Daniel please study Linda Harris's work. You will go from a life of laming and mutilating to a life of restoring and soundness. I studied her work. FREE videos on youtube and much info on her FB page and she is available for consult. I took on my 3 horses who were all lame, trimmed them my self and restored them to soundness after many years of struggling with the "experts". Farriers need to learn the anatomy of the hoof to help them!
Horses will very likely become tendon problems if hooves are lowered by such a huge amout (compared to before) in only one day because the whole body was used to walking on "highheels". Changes should therefore be done slowly over time. Furthermore, I noticed that, after work is done here, there is a curved line concerning the edge of the hoof (visible in the Photo at 8:39) from toe to quarters but there should be a straight one.
@JH "Farrier school"... :D if I did, I would probably not know these things. Ever heard of Reetdach-Konstruktion ("thatched roof construction"), the importance of "planem Auffußen" (literally plane footing) and studied causes of tendon injuries and microtraumas in bodystructures ? If not, stop being rude. ^^
If you have a stone in your shoe, do you just make the stone smaller or do you remove the pressing stone completely? Here you will find the answer yourself. Sometimes you can dare to do something and make the horse's feet more comfortable with one stroke, instead of dragging everything out unnecessarily. Also you can see that the live sole was not touched, only dead pressing horn was removed I strongly suspect that this horse will walk much better after the treatment than before, and that is exactly the goal.
@@googlenutzer4853 actually this horse will have major problems, his heels were ramped causing all the pressure to push the entire foot under and up...the coffin bone will be forced to tip and this horse will eventually founder.
My opinion is too much height taken off in one trim will criple the horse and sanding the wall for looks is just destroying the protective barrier that controls the moisture
The foot was so long that the white line was open and affected by bacteria and fungi. On that horse I have trimmed only, because the conitions of the place were not good and it would still be affected by the dirty ground. But in other cases I clean it and use a product against bacteria and fungus. With time and periodically trimming the white line is closing.
If shoes were being applied, the amount of hoof removed,would put the new nails higher than the old holes on a well nailed shoe...I see many farriers that in my opinion,drive nails too high..I like the clinch no more than 3/4" above the shoe..
Ich habe zufällig ihr Video gefunden. Ich habe gleich mehrere Fragen. Warum werden die Eckstreben nicht bearbeitet? Hier sind sie zu lang und gehen bis zur Strahlspitze und liegen teils auf der Sohle, von der Ballenansicht machen sie gar einen Hubbel und die Trachten sind nach hinten schräg geraspelt. Warum wird die Sohle bei diesem Huf mit Senke geraspelt? Und warum wird außen am Huf die Glasurschicht entfernt, was ja erstens völlig unnötig ist und außerdem den Schutz gegen Umwelteinflüsse einschränkt.
Hallo Raven, vielen Dank für deine Nachfragen. Du kannst alle Antworten und noch mehr Informationen in meiner Online Schule (WEB: www.f-balance.com/de/). Herzliche Grüße. Daniel Anz.
Why are you sloping down the heels so much? And why are you filing down the hoof wall so much? Shouldn't you trim so that the frog makes contact with the ground? The frog will continue to deteriorate if it doesn't make contact.
that poor horse! You absolutely destroyed the entire foundation and support of that hoof..You obviously know absolutely nothing about the internal foot of a horse. PLEASE STOP butchering these defenseless animals feet. You are giving them a death sentence! Ramping heels, destroying horn tubules etc why?? Please educate yourself!!
Thank you 🥕🍎 I trim the hooves of our horses by myself and your video was very helpful. Your video teached me a lot.
Thank you to, I'm glad it is helpful for you 🙏
Wow those bars! I don't think I've ever seen such huge overgrown bars on a hoof before.
That is the first I have seen such overgrown bars.
Wow.... Pretty soon no one will share their ideas because no matter what, people who took a weekend course will attack you. I don't do everything like you do, but if I've got a horse that grew a whack of heel, damn right I'm taking that all off! If it's a large amount, I generally tell people not to ride for 2-3 days so the horse can adjust. Been a professional farrier for over 24 years. Never had one go lame because of that. 🙄
Daniel Anz a pleasure to look at your work, I would like to know what is the limit of lowering the hoof exactly. since I have made mistakes with my horses. Another thing that does not seem right to me is to bend and rivet the nail outlet, since it hurts the foot wall... Believe me, I work on my ranch with horses and I have run very hard. and my animals work hard and they never never thrown a horseshoe without riveting or bending the nail on the way out. In my opinion I do not take a good look at that and it is unsightly !!! greetings from Sonora Mex.
Job, muchas gracias. Para responder a tu pregunta te ofrezco el curso online sobre el concepto Balance F que se encuentra en esta plataforma: edu.balance-f.com. Encuentras ahí toda la información en profundidad + el libro Balance F en formato digital.
@@danielanz-balancef Gracias mi estimado Daniel por responderle a este fiel admirador de tu trabajo!!! Voy a hacer todo lo posible por informarme mas en su plataforma. y de echo ya estoy por encargar tu libro en MERCADO LIBRE que es donde tengo cuenta para hacer compras or en Ebay... Y de cualquier forma aqui en su canal lo seguire en cada video que suba!!! De nuevo muchas gracias por responder y por darnos un poco de su conocimiento en cada video que nos regala en este canal!!! saludos de nuevo y gracias!!!
@@jobquijada9496 Muy amable, Job. Recuerda que en el curso ONLINE en edu.balance-f.com incluye el libro en formato digital. Se acaban de sumar dos módulos más de herramientas, forja y herrado. Todo por el mismo precio (49 US$).
@@danielanz-balancef De echo hace 15 minutos me acabo de registrar Daniel en su pagina online y nada a seguir aprendiendo gracias por la informacion y estaremos en contacto en su sitio mi estimado!!! saludos de nuevo...
looks good, thank you for sharing.
Correct me if I am wrong (and it is a little hard to tell by just watching the video): you took way more off the heels than off the toe. Isn't that putting an immense pressure on the tendons by changing the static dramatically in one trim? The way I understand it, is that you can only take away from the heels what you also take off the toe.
Hi Bassi, thank you for your inquiry.
My concept is based on removing from the foot only what is excess, what causes pressure, what bothers the horse. Long heels are very uncomfortable for the horse, so removing excess material generates instant relief.
You only generate stress on the tendons when you remove too much material, but not when you remove just enough.
If you respect the information that the foot shows you, you always relieve the horse. If you remove too much or too little, you generate ligament tension and pressure on the hoof.
Long heels generate a lot of pressure on the suspensory ligament branch.
@@danielanz-balancef and you ramped the heels down to the collateral grooves! That destroys the heel buttresses ..the entire foundation for the back of the hoof and thins out the sole in the back of the foot and forces the heels to become underrun! You also removed the horn tubules and destroyed the support the the entire dorsal wall...this hoof will collapse and this horse will loose it's life because of your ignorance! Learn the anatomy of the true foot of the horse...study the real foot..the internal foot so you know how the shoe /hoof should fit! PLEASE
@@marshapicken8229 Thank you for your suggestion.
@@marshapicken8229we’d like to see you do better
Omg! You are crazy working in sneakers!
They are safety shoes, very comfortable.
@@danielanz-balancef Are they really? I find it hard to believe because when a draft horse or any horse wants his foot back and if you can't jump that's it ! No foot no farrier!
My arabian has a right vrint that AKWAYS grows long inbetween trimmings. Should i br concerned about this? Her high low isnt bad enough to be concerned but that hiif always grows out sooo fast!!!!
What are these yellow things you use? I need them!😅
www.stanleyworks.de/products/detail/Produkte/HANDWERKZEUGE/Beitel%2C+Hobel+_+Surform/Surform/Surform+Kunststoff/Surform+Hobbyschaber
Omg why are we sanding off all the hoof wall???!!!!???!!!
On a barefooted horse rasp the hoof wall at a 45° angle and it will help from breaking and chipping.. from the top end you address flares.
@@ruttingpeakadventures no, you should never address flares from the top...always the bottom...the bars are pushing out the hoof wall...by rasping the tubules off the dorsal wall you actually weaken the structure of the wall and cause more flaring.
I would not file the face of the wall. That protective coating should remain.
Seems like a long toe ? And why the banana shape sole...I’ve seen it with shoes for horses with sore heels but this seems a lot... ?
That’s a pretty foot now.
Nicole A
Daniel please study Linda Harris's work. You will go from a life of laming and mutilating to a life of restoring and soundness. I studied her work. FREE videos on youtube and much info on her FB page and she is available for consult. I took on my 3 horses who were all lame, trimmed them my self and restored them to soundness after many years of struggling with the "experts". Farriers need to learn the anatomy of the hoof to help them!
Es arte esto!! Gracias Daniel! Mis caballos te agradecen! (Rescatados de trabajo de tiro de carro en condiciones muy malas)
Me alegra que sea de utilidad 🙏
What about the black gunk between the wall and the sole?
Hi Gerry, the white line is deteriorated due to the condition of the hoof and horse. The health of his hooves was not optimal, they were too long.
Horses will very likely become tendon problems if hooves are lowered by such a huge amout (compared to before) in only one day because the whole body was used to walking on "highheels". Changes should therefore be done slowly over time.
Furthermore, I noticed that, after work is done here, there is a curved line concerning the edge of the hoof (visible in the Photo at 8:39) from toe to quarters but there should be a straight one.
@JH "Farrier school"... :D if I did, I would probably not know these things.
Ever heard of Reetdach-Konstruktion ("thatched roof construction"), the importance of "planem Auffußen" (literally plane footing) and studied causes of tendon injuries and microtraumas in bodystructures ? If not, stop being rude. ^^
If you have a stone in your shoe, do you just make the stone smaller or do you remove the pressing stone completely?
Here you will find the answer yourself.
Sometimes you can dare to do something and make the horse's feet more comfortable with one stroke, instead of dragging everything out unnecessarily.
Also you can see that the live sole was not touched, only dead pressing horn was removed
I strongly suspect that this horse will walk much better after the treatment than before, and that is exactly the goal.
you can take it down to correct because the angle is correct, too little is a way to criple a horse
@@googlenutzer4853 actually this horse will have major problems, his heels were ramped causing all the pressure to push the entire foot under and up...the coffin bone will be forced to tip and this horse will eventually founder.
The angles didn't change that much here, though. The whole foot was too long. This wasn't a drastic enough change to cause problems.
Pracuje spokojnie super
Hey von welcher Marke sind deine Werkzeuge? Vor allem Messer und Raspel.
Lg Marika
Muy bello ese trabajo...que relajación muestra el caballo después de ese recorte!!!
My opinion is too much height taken off in one trim will criple the horse and sanding the wall for looks is just destroying the protective barrier that controls the moisture
Thanks for your negative comments on someone nice video
Many commenters have noticed that. Good point.
@@riverbendfarrier4490 Grow up snowflake.
what are you doing with the dark white line?
The foot was so long that the white line was open and affected by bacteria and fungi. On that horse I have trimmed only, because the conitions of the place were not good and it would still be affected by the dirty ground. But in other cases I clean it and use a product against bacteria and fungus. With time and periodically trimming the white line is closing.
I have a question after you clean everything up and put the new shoes on do the nails go through the old hole
This is a barefoot trim.
If shoes were being applied, the amount of hoof removed,would put the new nails higher than the old holes on a well nailed shoe...I see many farriers that in my opinion,drive nails too high..I like the clinch no more than 3/4" above the shoe..
Красота!)
Buen video creo que faltó algo de explicar...
Gracias, Miguel, el vídeo explicado se encuentra en el curso completo de 11 módulos que ofrezco en la plataforma de cursos online en edu.balance-f.com
Ich habe zufällig ihr Video gefunden. Ich habe gleich mehrere Fragen. Warum werden die Eckstreben nicht bearbeitet? Hier sind sie zu lang und gehen bis zur Strahlspitze und liegen teils auf der Sohle, von der Ballenansicht machen sie gar einen Hubbel und die Trachten sind nach hinten schräg geraspelt. Warum wird die Sohle bei diesem Huf mit Senke geraspelt? Und warum wird außen am Huf die Glasurschicht entfernt, was ja erstens völlig unnötig ist und außerdem den Schutz gegen Umwelteinflüsse einschränkt.
Hallo Raven, vielen Dank für deine Nachfragen. Du kannst alle Antworten und noch mehr Informationen in meiner Online Schule (WEB: www.f-balance.com/de/). Herzliche Grüße. Daniel Anz.
Why are you sloping down the heels so much? And why are you filing down the hoof wall so much? Shouldn't you trim so that the frog makes contact with the ground? The frog will continue to deteriorate if it doesn't make contact.
he has no idea how to trim a horse for soundness and health of the horse and hoof. I sure hope people don't hire him or follow his direction.
dude that hoof looks like a roller coaster. flatten that out, poor horse. do you own horses, do you ride?
Hi Julie, thank you for your comment, why do you think a horse's foot is flat?
watched this in an upside down.
camera in a tripod without music would much more satisfying..
good job though
Why does that horse have such shriveled up thin frogs? Something not right there.
If the frog never makes contact with the ground, it will not grow or be stimulated to grow...
No
Way too much time
It was no my horse. You find many horses with too long feet.
that poor horse! You absolutely destroyed the entire foundation and support of that hoof..You obviously know absolutely nothing about the internal foot of a horse. PLEASE STOP butchering these defenseless animals feet. You are giving them a death sentence! Ramping heels, destroying horn tubules etc why?? Please educate yourself!!