Cad'Ors • BareFoot Horse

Cad'Ors • BareFoot Horse I help Guardians be their Barefoot Horse's best Partner for life! Horse's well-being is so much more than just his food, pasture or trimming.

It's the combination of all this, & us, all together!

📣[ FINANCEMENTS POSSIBLES POUR LA FORMATION "Bien être équin - du soin holistique à l'équitation" avec le centre de form...
17/06/2022

📣[ FINANCEMENTS POSSIBLES POUR LA FORMATION "Bien être équin - du soin holistique à l'équitation" avec le centre de formation Shantyoga ] 💲

🦄 Nous avons obtenu la certification Qualiopi pour la formation Bien être équin que nous proposons, avec mes 7 autres collègues..
Cette certification permet aux stagiaires de déposer des demandes pour être financés par Pôle Emploi, l'AFDAS, le FIFPL, etc.
Donc n'hésitez plus et faites vos demandes de financements ! 😜

Concrètement, cette formation c'est :
👉9 modules aux thèmes larges et complémentaires
👉Une certification de formation
👉Un site magnifique : L'Oasis de l'Aube à Saint Mesmin en Dordogne
👉8 intervenantes spécialistes dans leur domaine :
- Emeline Díaz Roman thérapeute en Ayurveda, énergétique et lithothérapie, professeur de Yoga/Yogathérapie et praticienne de communication animale
- Angélique Descarpentry ingénieur agronome spécialisée en nutrition équine et gestion de prairies, ainsi que praticienne shiastu équin
- Marion Le Coguiec phytothérapeute, herboriste, aromathérapeute
- Adélaïde Potiron & Graham Sellier sellier et spécialiste en saddle fitting
- Léa Roussot spécialiste en bit fitting
- Roberta Battaglia vétérinaire équin
- Célia Caffarelli ostéopathe humain et équin, éleveuse, et cavalière spécialisée en équitation éthologique
- et moi-même, Jade Le Delaizir Cad'Ors • BareFoot Horse podologue équin

Le descriptif complet de la formation se trouve sur le site de Shantyoga :
https://www.shantyoga.org/formations-cheval-et-bien-etre-equin/?fbclid=IwAR3I-mDHniz-Y1zTYAmtOofnS5XCWBTcdiS4lBQxAcFXa62bSUudSzP9ALk

Voici la liste complète des 9 modules de cette formation :

• module 1 - LE COEUR, LE CORPS ET LES EMOTIONS, du 19 au 25 novembre 2022 ou du 1er au 7 juillet 2023 avec Célia Caffarelli et Emeline Roman Diaz

• module 2 - LE TOUCHER, du 1er au 7 octobre 2022 ou du 11 février au 17 février 2023 avec Célia Caffarelli, Angélique Descarpentry et Emeline Díaz Roman

• module 3 - GESTION DE PRAIRIE, PHYTOTHERAPIE ET AROMATHERAPIE pour les chevaux, du 25 novembre au 1er décembre 2023. avec Angélique Descarpentry et Marion Le Coguiec

• module 4 - NUTRITION ET AYURVEDA pour les chevaux, du 29 avril au 5 mai 2023 avec Angélique Descarpentry et Emeline Díaz Roman

• module 5 - LITHOTHERAPIE pour les chevaux du 1 au 7 avril 2023 avec Emeline Díaz Roman

• module 6 - PODOLOGIE EQUINE, du 9 au 15 décembre 2023 avec Jade Le Délaizir

• module 7 - SADDLE FITTING ET BIT FITTING, du 23 au 29 septembre 2023 avec Adelaïde Potiron et Léa Roussot

• module 8 - BIOMECANIQUE DE L'EQUITATION : un yoga du cheval et du cavalier, du 27 août au 2 septembre 2022 ou du 19 au 25 août 2023, avec Célia Caffarelli et Emeline Díaz Roman

• module 9 - APPROCHE VETERINAIRE : signes observables des maladies courantes et douleurs du cheval - gestes de premiers secours du 17 au 19 février 2023 avec Roberta Battaglia

Les inscriptions sont ouvertes pour l'ensemble de ces modules de la formation Bien Etre Equin - du Soin holistique à l'équitation, auxquels vous pouvez participer de manière indépendante si vous ne souhaitez pas tous les faire.
Pour des informations ou des inscriptions, contactez Cyrielle : [email protected]

Lindsey Field  was working on a very interesting topic recently. She was trying to determine if "overgrown bars" are in ...
23/04/2022

Lindsey Field was working on a very interesting topic recently.

She was trying to determine if "overgrown bars" are in fact bar material or actually sole?

The second picture shows you a close up of a bar (check out the previous bar post if you're not sure what a bar is).
The blue dot highlights the external wall.
The yellow dot highlights the internal wall.
The red dot highlights the white line.

And the end of the bar is marked by the end of this organisation of material.

If you look at Lindsey's dissection on the 3rd picture, we were discussing anatomically what material blue dots are creating: bar or sole?

🥁

I'm sorry to announce that we don't know yet for sure.
Lindsey keeps looking into it. Her current theory would be that bar and sole don't generally abruptly change from one into another. So as not to create a weak point.

I quite agree with this.

So what is that huge chunk going round the frog in the 1st pic?
After trim, on the 4th picture, it would seem the bars did stop at the yellow line. The rest would then most likely be sole.



When facing this pathology, always work with your vet and hoof care provider. Here is a therapy we have found most effec...
12/04/2022

When facing this pathology, always work with your vet and hoof care provider.
Here is a therapy we have found most effective in treating canker:

1. Superficial debridement (cutting away abnormal tissue) over the entire affected area. This can be done using anesthesia or a nerve block. Only the superficial layer of infected tissue should be removed, as excising too deeply can re**rd healing and might also drive the infection into deeper tissues. Some veterinarians follow the debridement with two to three superficial freezes of the affected area to further kill off the diseased tissue. 

2. Canker prefers moist conditions, so keep the treated area very clean and dry. 

3. Non medicated topical effective treatments (see with your vet for medicated treatments) are:
- Thorough cleaning
- Epsom salt soaks
- Artimud packing
- Keep clean and protected with boots (Clouds) or apply a clean, dry, waterproof bandage.
- Repeat daily until fully healed

Horses have variable responses to treatment.



⚠️  Graphic images From AAEP:"Canker is an unusual condition of the horse’s foot that affects the frog, bars, and sole. ...
12/04/2022

⚠️ Graphic images

From AAEP:

"Canker is an unusual condition of the horse’s foot that affects the frog, bars, and sole. The name comes from the early belief that the condition was of a cancerous nature. However, to the best of our knowledge, canker is an anaerobic (grows in the absence of oxygen) infection in the superficial epithelium of the hoof (the outermost tissues, which produce the horn). [...]

The microorganism associated with canker causes abnormal keratin production, or overgrowth of the horn. This excessive proliferation occurs underneath the horn, as the infection spreads throughout the epithelial layer. Commonly, an affected horse will have white or gray matter that is moist and spongy appearing in the sulci region (grooves on either side and in the center of the frog) of the hoof. This characteristic growth’s appearance has been described as similar to wet cauliflower with cottage cheese like exudates. If there is extensive infection, heat might be felt in the hoof, but usually only in extreme situations. 

Canker is fairly rare and only briefly discussed in veterinary textbooks. Most texts suggest that housing a horse in unsanitary conditions causes the disease; however, farms with both the best of stable management and the worst can have horses with canker. [...] Stalled horses with little exercise seem more predisposed to the disease than horses that are active and kept outdoors.

In contrast to thrush, which is a necrotic or tissue-destroying process, canker creates abnormal tissue growth and is described as a hypertrophic pododermatitis. Both thrush and canker are found in the same region of the foot, but thrush resembles a tarlike substance. While thrush eats at tissue, the inner tissues of the digit are protected until bacteria get deep enough to deteriorate more sensitive structures. Canker, on the other hand, spreads in live tissue, without the help of oxygen. "



11/04/2022

Euthanised for behavioural problems 😢

So proud of my online trimmers!Here is Dalia's amazing job for her horse, Roy, in NZ, .yang.horsesShe contacted me for a...
10/04/2022

So proud of my online trimmers!
Here is Dalia's amazing job for her horse, Roy, in NZ, .yang.horses

She contacted me for advice. We devised a strategy and here is the evolution after a couple of months.

I'm very happy for her and Roy. Congrats on the trim well done!

I'm happy to help with any feet related questions you may have in French or English.
I first send a written report (like shown in the examples pictured), then we have a video call to make sure all is clear.
Finally, we do picture follow ups to assess and readjust strategy.

More information linked in bio.

Do you do the trimming yourself?



Many people send me pictures of their horse's feet, worried that they're getting too dry! Why is that??During seasonal t...
10/04/2022

Many people send me pictures of their horse's feet, worried that they're getting too dry! Why is that??

During seasonal transition periods (wet to dry / dry to wet), you often see your horse's feet changing.

Right now, on the northern hemisphere, we're transitioning from wet to dry.

And because most of our horses live on grass pastures in France, the frog and sole materials are not naturally exfoliated. Add to it a longer trim cycle and VOILA! You end up with funky looking feet.

They're not dry, so to speak. They're in fact exfoliating, which is normal.

Many feel that oiling the feet will salvage the damage. But not at all. That's all dead material, it won't smoothen or repair itself with oil.

It needs a trim, stimulation and thrush treatment. Indeed, it can often harbor infection.

So if you're to take this material away, you better make sure it is infection free before you do it, so that your horse has all the chances to remain comfortable.

It can be partly avoided by keeping short trimming cycles in winter, providing your horse with enough movement and stimulation on various terrains and be very diligent with thrush treatment during the wet periods.

Have you already witnessed this on your horse?



🌟[ DU SOIN HOLISTIQUE A L'EQUITATION : pour une relation juste et équilibrée ]🌟Le descriptif des 9 modules de la Formati...
08/04/2022

🌟[ DU SOIN HOLISTIQUE A L'EQUITATION : pour une relation juste et équilibrée ]🌟

Le descriptif des 9 modules de la Formation Bien-être équin à laquelle je participe avec CAD'ORS et Shantyoga est entièrement en ligne :
🔸️ www.shantyoga.org
=> Formations cheval et bien-etre equin

Lecture émotionnelle, shiatsu, ostéopathie, lithothérapie, podologie, agronomie et phytothérapie, nutrition, ayurveda, saddle et bit fitting, biomécanique... Un programme très varié pour améliorer vos compétences.
Au sein de l'éco lieu L'Oasis de l'Aube à Saint Mesmin en Dordogne.

Pour toute demande d'information, contactez Cyrielle : [email protected]

🔸️Caval'éthique & Célia Caffarelli
🔸️Equi-transm'être - Angélique Descarpentry
🔸️L'Oasis de l'Aube & Shantyoga & Emeline Díaz Roman
🔸️Rose & Graham Sellier
🔸️Marion Le Coguiec
🔸www.equid-et-fitt.com & Léa Roussot
🔸️ Roberta Battaglia


Your reactions to the stories were very split. So I thought it deserved a little warning post on the importance of consi...
08/04/2022

Your reactions to the stories were very split. So I thought it deserved a little warning post on the importance of considering the picture angles to assess the foot.

If you look at the 2nd pic, many of you thought it was a rather nice looking little foot.

When I added more pictures, many realised how fooled they had been by the angle of the picture.

Those are pics of a chronically laminatic pony. We have some nice concavity and decent sole depth now.

But when you look at the lateral picture as well at the close up of the toe, you appreciate how big the lamellar wedge still is.

The picture of the trimmed bits are of the extra I had to take off to make him more comfortable.

So I guess, that, my take home message is :
Always be mindful when judging a foot based on just 1 picture. And pay attention to the angle the pictures are taken from. Converting 3D in 2D correctly is never an easy feat!

Do you struggle taking clean pictures of your horse's feet?

Chestnuts and ergots are remnants from former additional fingers equus used to have.Most horses have both on each leg an...
06/04/2022

Chestnuts and ergots are remnants from former additional fingers equus used to have.

Most horses have both on each leg and they come in as many sizes and shapes as there are horses.

They are horn like growths, growing throughout the horse's life. Some horses need help shedding them, others don't.

When left long, some horses can tear them. Which, in itself, isn't problematic as there are absolutely no nerves in them.

However sometimes they can be torn away, taking skin with it, which can hurt the horse and get infected.

I never have to cut my horse's. But I do have some work with Irish Cobs, Shires and other drafty types. With those clients, we refer to it as "dragon's talons" manicure 💅 🤣

What's it like for your equine, 🐲 or 🐴 ?

At this period, on the northern hemisphere, feet can undergo changes.The wall can start to flare (showing early signs of...
03/04/2022

At this period, on the northern hemisphere, feet can undergo changes.

The wall can start to flare (showing early signs of laminitis) and feet change shape.

Suddenly, the boots don't fit any longer 😱

But your horse is sensitive and needs boots to move comfortably.

It is possible to have 2 pairs of boots, one that fits the "healthy foot" and another that fits the "flared foot". It might be of the same brand, but not necessarily.

Of course, the best is always to avoid flaring by taking preventive measures. Unfortunately that's not always a 100% success.

This horse is fitted with Scoot Boots from in both instances, as they fit.
He's a size 5 regular when the feet are not too bad and a size 6 regular when flared.

This way, he can remain comfortable in all circumstances!

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Saint-Mesmin
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