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HomeTag "equine foot care"

Can it be Fixed? – Part 2

Dec 21, 2017 by Pete Butler Category: Conformation 0 comments Tags: basic farrier training, Butler horseshoeing schools, Butler Professional Farrier School, competency in equine foot care, DBE Continuing Farrier Education, equine foot care, horse foot care tips, individual horse care

Last week (Can it be Fixed?), we talked about crooked-legged horses that are not lame. Non-lame horses do not need to have their conformation cosmetically “fixed”, but rather should be balanced in the way that makes them the most comfortable. But what about crooked-legged horses that do become lame because of their conformation? What should […]

Special Holiday Offer!

Nov 30, 2017 by Pete Butler Category: Anatomy, Best Business Practices 0 comments Tags: Butler horseshoeing schools, Butler Professional Farrier School, competency in equine foot care, DBE Continuing Farrier Education, Doug Butler, equine foot care, farrier customer service, low ringbone, ringbone

With the holidays approaching, we are offering a discount on the Hands-On Teaching Models and Study Aids collection at Doug Butler Enterprises, Inc. The Ringbone model which typically retails for $120 is now available at the reduced price of $99. The Foundered Foot Model which retails at $79 is now available for $59. This promotional […]

Don’t Be An Ultracrepidarian

Nov 16, 2017 by Pete Butler Category: Best Business Practices, Horseshoeing, Veterinary Care 0 comments Tags: Butler farrier schools, Butler horseshoeing schools, Butler Professional Farrier School, competency in equine foot care, equine foot care, farrier careers, farrier customer service, Farrier School, horseshoeing business tips

Farriers can get annoyed with people that they feel are unjustly criticizing their work. A horse owner may “go on the internet” for a few hours and feel at liberty to offer advice with their newfound knowledge. When a (sometimes well-meaning) non-farrier does this, it makes him or her look ignorant. A customer once said, […]

Fitting Heart-bar Shoes

Oct 26, 2017 by Pete Butler Category: Horse Foot Care, Horseshoeing, Uncategorized 0 comments Tags: Butler farrier schools, Butler horseshoeing schools, Butler Professional Farrier School, competency in equine foot care, DBE Continuing Farrier Education, Doug Butler, equine foot care, farrier careers, farrier customer service, Farrier School, hoof care, Horse Foot Care

A serious affliction of horses today is laminitis and founder. When a horse has laminitis, the toe or front half of the foot is in pain because the laminae that adheres the hoof wall to the bone has become inflamed. This is a problem because the hoof wall supports the weight of the animal. The […]

Case Study – Horse with Low Ringbone

Oct 27, 2016 by Jake Butler Category: Anatomy, Conformation, Farrier training, Horse Care, Horse Foot Care, Veterinary Care 0 comments Tags: competency in equine foot care, DBE Continuing Farrier Education, equine foot care, exostosis, farrier customer service, Farrier School, fractured extensor process, fractured P3, hoof care, Horseshoeing School, how to shoe a horse, Jake Butler, low ringbone, radiograph, ringbone

  Farriers are presented with different horse feet scenarios.  Often these come as a last resort from horse owners.  This was a horse that was injured 4 months ago.  The owner was not sure how the horse injured himself.  There is a bulge at the coronary band and the right front foot is beginning to […]

6 Components of Cold Weather Horse Care

Dec 02, 2015 by Doug Butler Category: Horse Care, Horse Foot Care 0 comments Tags: Butler farrier schools, Butler horseshoeing schools, cold weather horse care, equine foot care, hoof care, horse care tips, Horse Foot Care, horse foot care tips, horse owner guide, individual horse care, winter equine foot care

Horses have a thick skin insulated by fat and thick winter hair. The horse’s integument (its hooves and skin) has an underlying dermis that contains AVAs (arterio-venous anastomoses). These vascular systems allow the body to shunt or divert blood away from its surface area periodically to keep the animal’s central core warm

The Future of the Hoof Care Industry – a Mixture of Good News and Bad News

Aug 23, 2010 by Butler2318 Category: Best Business Practices, Farrier training, Horse Care, Horse Foot Care, Horse Owner Tips, Horseshoeing, Veterinary Care 0 comments Tags: basic farrier training, Butler farrier schools, equine foot care, farrier customer service, small business marketing tips

The future will bring the foot care industry a combination of good news and bad news. The good news is that farrier communication will be better and easier. Publications, the internet, conventions, summits, sponsored clinics and general sharing of knowledge make learning faster and easier. The bad news is that unsound ideas will be spread […]

The “Shoeless Experiment” Cripples Horses by Doug Butler

Mar 26, 2010 by Butler2318 Category: Customer Service, Equine Soundness, Horse Foot Care, Horse Owner Tips, Horseshoeing 21 comments Tags: barefoot trimming, competency in equine foot care, equine foot care, farrier customer service, horse foot care tips

More than one hundred years ago farriers were confronted with the same problems as farriers are facing today. The “shoeless experiment” was then proposed as a one size fits all solution by “the barefoot people.” (See page 2 of William Hunting’s, The Art of Horseshoeing, published by W. R. Jenkins in New York, in 1898). […]

New Farrier and Horse Owner Resources

Mar 09, 2010 by Butler2318 Category: Equine Soundness, Farrier training, Horse Foot Care 0 comments Tags: "DBE March Gladness", equine foot care, horseshoeing business tips, individual horse care

“Share a little March Gladness…” We’d be “glad” if you would check out each of our newly designed websites … www.dougbutler.com – for horseshoeing books and training DVDs www.butlerprofessionalfarrierschool.com – learn about our facility, staff, curriculum, class schedules, admission requirements, tuition www.butlerhorseshoeingschools.com – sign up today to receive weekly blogs on humane horse foot care […]

7 Farrier Fundamentals

Jan 29, 2010 by Butler2318 Category: Best Business Practices, Equine Soundness, Farrier training, Horse Foot Care, Horseshoeing 0 comments Tags: basic farrier training, equine foot care, hoof care, horseshoeing business tips

It’s important to have a memorized sequence of performing farrier skills so  nothing is left out.  This is the sequence we teach at Butler Professional Farrier School.  The image in the mind guides the craftsman’s hands.  This sequence must be practiced until it becomes a habit. 1. ASSESSMENT Consider horse, shoe wear, and conditions 2. […]

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