Care and Rehabilitation of the Equine Foot Book Reviews
This book is a complete and comprehensive description of methods and
husbandry that, when employed as a complete health care package,
allows horse after horse to simply forget its feet ever hurt.
I have been educated, humbled, enlightened and frequently
amazed while working with these authors.
Debra Taylor, DVM, MS, DACVIM
I have been "looking at" horse feet for years but until I read this
book I never really “saw” the foot. I
would be a much better diagnostician if I had read this book years
ago. John
Schumacher, DVM, MS, DACVIM, ABVP
Pete Ramey's Care and Rehabilitation of the Equine Foot book is probably the most comprehensive work ever written on the horse's hoof. With the help of major contributing authors and researchers, it takes a new look at growing or rehabilitating a horse's hoof from within, combining all the various aspects of hoof care, nutrition and lifestyle. With 440 pages and over 600 photographs and illustrations, Pete Ramey, surrounded by collaborative experts in their fields, has created the ultimate reference book on equine foot health. It is deep, detailed and scientific and might well become the new way to think about care for the foot, whether shod or barefoot. Kerry Ridgway, DVM - Institute for Equine Therapeutic Options
May/June,
2012 AMERICAN FARRIERS JOURNAL www.americanfarriers.com 67 Book Takes
A Wide-Ranging Look At Paths To A Healthier Equine Foot Care
And Rehabilitation of the Equine Foot By Pete
Ramey Review By
Randy Luikhart This was a very interesting read. I found Pete
Ramey’s open and honest assessment of how the hoof-care industry is
faring enlightening. Although he is the author of this book, the
list of co-authors is like a tour through the minds of some of the
most reputable researchers in the industry. This is not just a book
on rehabilitation of the foot, but also one containing information
that any hoof-care professional can use in his or her daily work. Robert
Bowker Input Dr. Robert Bowker’s papers provide the reader
with easily understood narrative both in lay and anatomical terms.
The Michigan State University researcher’s good-foot, bad-foot
discussion explains the differences and how they contribute to sound
and unsound horses. The role of circulatory and micro vessels aiding
in hydraulic dampening of destructive vibrational frequencies is
eloquently described. Macro- and micro-structural irregularities
between the good foot and bad foot are defined and explained in
terms everyone can understand. Bowker makes a convincing case (and
rightfully so) for hoof-care professionals to be more conservative
in excessive removal of weight-bearing structures of the hoof. In further chapters, Bowker explores the science
behind hoof growth. He believes the foot grows down and gets larger
in thickness and girth as it descends to the sole region. Some of
the slides showing the discrete cells he is describing in the text
could have been labeled better. This problem made reading and
comprehending the text more difficult. He does a great job of
describing the various innervations of the hoof and how each plays a
role in assessing the stimuli for the hoofs environment, whether
pain, temperature or locomotion. A very intense segment on the chemicals discrete
to these nerves and various mechano-receptors is all necessary
information for clearly comprehending the complexity of hoof
function. A description on assessing blood flow with Doppler
ultrasound and the mechanics of this process was extremely
interesting. EMS Review If you have any desire to learn about Equine
Metabolic Syndrome (EMS), Dr. Eleanor Kellon presents information
defining the differing pathways of possible EMS and their differing
treatment protocols. This is a must-read for any person dealing with
these horses in their practice. Her easily understood narrative
expands on to the hoof’s nutritional and normal mineral
requirements, as well as their individual roles in hoof structure.
She includes a guide to ensure the animal is receiving enough
minerals. Pasture
Facts Kathryn Watts presents a very convincing argument
on the new and improved pasture grasses now being planted and how
the non-structured carbohydrates (NSCs) vary among them. NSCs have
long been known to have a major role in laminitis and EMS, so
management of these simple sugars is crucial for healthy horses. Kellon then makes a strong case for better hay
analysis so that we actually know what is being fed to our horses,
following with a chapter on balancing the diet. There is no doubt
this information is often overlooked by the average horse owner. Its
importance is obvious, but not often easily understood. More Than
Just Feet One of the nice things about this book is that it
flows. Dr. Kerry Ridgeway follows the metabolic and nutritional
papers with a paper on the gastrointestinal tract, ulcers, colitis
and the treatment of these common GI problems. This is a very
informative and clearly presented section, describing in great
detail the disorders and the treatment. Treatment costs and
effectiveness are clear so readers get a selection of possibilities
for treatment at a cost they can deal with; a very practical
approach. Dr. Debra Taylor does a great job describing the
EMS patient and its problem feet. She spends time explaining the
differences in treatment protocol of the syndrome and the feet, as
well as the biochemical basis for some of these differences. Her
very clear and adamant stance for proper radiographic marking to
properly gather information on the current status, prognostication
and treatment is worth the read. Another excellent chapter is on the
use of venograms in information gathering and the importance this
information may give you in the clinical management of these
often-difficult cases. Taylor’s stance is the more information you
gather, the better. More data will help you in your evaluation if
you get a recurrence or setback of the patient’s recovery. I have long loved reading the writing of Dr.
Hilary Clayton and her contribution to this book is no exception.
She takes the time to break down the weight-bearing phase, foot
function during locomotion, forces, range of motion of the distal
limb joints during load and propulsion and the resulting swing phase
from that weight bearing. Clayton’s papers are always informative
and written so that even I can understand it. Ramey’s Thoughts Pete Ramey has the task of tying all the
previously presented information together and supporting his
protocol for foot management. He does a stellar job in his
description of “what he is seeing” in a foot and walks you through
his visualization process so you may experience the same
visualization. He also breaks trimming procedures down into chapters
so that he may properly explain each and every component of
management of the foot from his perspective. Once you understand his principles of trimming
the sole, wall and frog, he ties variables into the process, so that
you can visualize and understand the goals he is expecting to reach
through using these procedures. This is a long read (446 pages) and often times a
tough one, but it is a read that everyone should finish. Ramey’s
wonderful, clear writing style is evident in a statement like “Most
domestic horses are living in the human equivalent of a pie
factory.” These whimsical passages were enough to keep me reading.
Among hoof professionals, no two people think alike and there are
areas that Ramey talks about that will raise discussion. That is not
bad. Disagreement is not bad. Drawing a line in the sand is. Ramey has taken a huge step forward in “throwing”
out lots of tidbits to discuss and backed some of his positions with
science. These technical and sensible discussions will hopefully
make us all think about our normal practices of hoof care. No doubt
if Mr. Ramey and I were sitting around a table discussing
methodologies of dealing with various hoof conformations we deal
with daily, each of us would have pictures of our successes and
failures. Our discussions would be lively and on many points we
would agree. One of the early themes that Ramey spoke of in the
introduction was the necessity for us all to think about what we are
doing to feet, before we do it. I would recommend adding this book
to your library and reference material. Not that this book has all
the answers, but it does make you think and that is its purpose. Finally, “The laminae were simply never intended
to suspend the horse’s weight without help from the sole, bars and
frog. Good horseshoeing and good trimming practices incorporate the
functional congruity of the hoof.” Mr. Ramey, I couldn’t agree more. Care And Rehabilitation of the Equine Foot is
available for $176 and can be ordered through the author’s website
at HoofRehab.com.
I received the book today, ripped open
the package in the post office parking lot, and sat there for about
20 minutes having a flip through it, with a dropped jaw. Please pass
along my sincere thanks to Pete and Ivy for putting together such a
fascinating, comprehensive resource of contributing authors
(including Pete of course!) and including so many detailed drawings
and pictures. I definitely will add it to my "suggested reading"
list for my students. I can't wait to sit down and take it all in.
Cheers, Lauren
I have just finished reading this book
from cover to cover and feel that I have greatly increased my
knowledge of the horses’ foot and how to manage it in both the
normal and pathological state. Pete Ramey has brought together a
broad range of authors who have all had a significant impact in
their respective fields of work. The result is a well balanced and
holistic view of the management of the horse which covers the foot
in more detail than I have found in other references. The bringing
together of various points of view of hoof care professionals with
scientists, veterinarians and nutritionists, all with the healthy
horse and healthy foot as the ultimate goal, has produced a resource
that will stand alone for some time to come. This is an important
reference for all those involved in the care of the horse and should
be compulsive reading for horse owners and managers. I highly
recommend the book. I have read all 464 pages but I will go back to
the text and great descriptive figures time and time again in the
future. Brian Hampson,
PhD
This is much more than a book about
barefoot vs. shod. In fact,
it’s not about that at all. This is the new way of thinking about
care for the foot—care takes on a double meaning. Instead of just
compensating for the horse’s problems, look at how to help the horse
grow a better foot. Think ‘rehabilitation’ instead of
‘compensation’, when you can. It
might make people turn their heads, especially
for work on young horses—the idea is to anticipate problems
and avoid them instead of fix them.
We live in an age where collaboration is
not just an interesting undertaking—it's almost a requirement. Pete
Ramey has wrapped his reference book in a cloak of collaborative
experts to create a synergistic look at how hooves can be nurtured
back to health—or rehabilitated to a state of health that the horse
may never have known in its life.
Forget what you know about barefoot
trimming and be prepared for the launching pad to the next era of
collaborative hoofcare technology. Ramey
admits that he has softened his stance on shoeing, but believes we
can do better than continuous shoeing with steel or neglectful long
intervals between re-shoeings. This
book is a snapshot of where we are now—with bare hooves, booted
hooves and metal/aluminum/plastic shoes creating the spectrum of
choices. It may not be what we choose, he concludes, but how we use
the materials and methods.
I like the way that this book opens the
door to the future—and leaves it open.
Innovation is the path
through the door and this book should encourage everyone to decry
neglect, ignorance and lack of skill as hooves worst enemies.
Some horses may be well
through that door, thanks to having new materials and methods and
smart, skilled people on their side.
I hope in our quest for innovation we don't create a divided
society of "hooves" and "hooves not".
The best solutions will be the ones that are affordable and
usable in many hands.
Ramey also includes veterinary support,
imaging, nutrition, pasture management and locomotion in his
spectrum; without working them into the hoof equation,
the rehabilitation is not
going to be realized. Collaboration
is not an option, it's a requirement.
The hoof needs to feel the influence of much more than a
rasp and a knife to find its way along recovery road.
The road through this massive book passes
through the clinics, laboratories and research expeditions of
authors well-known to Hoofcare & Lameness readers.
I hope their names in the
table of contents will encourage some readers who might dismiss this
book as a "barefoot tome". You
can read it on many levels and believe me, you will.
Fran Jurga, Hoofcare Publishing
Pete
Ramey’s new Care and Rehabilitation of the Equine Foot is
singularly the most comprehensive and complete work ever written
about the horse’s hoof. Prepare yourself for deep, detailed and
scientific. It’s not a light read but rather a study manual that
will likely take years to absorb. At least it will for me. But the
630 color pictures and diagrams help even the lay person grasp the
principles and get a deeper understanding of the hoof and what makes
it tick.
You’ll learn everything about growing a healthy foot from within,
combining all of the various aspects of hoof care, nutrition, and
lifestyle into a system that yields the best end-result for the
horse, covering both the veterinary/internal and the
farrier/physical sides of rehab and prevention of hoof problems.
Most books only focus on one or the other.
Cover-to-cover this book never strays from the foot and conditions
that affect the foot. There is no 'fluff' or 'filler'. It’s a
must-have for anyone interested in knowing more about the health of
their horse’s hooves than anyone else on the planet.
Joe Camp - Author of the National Best Seller The Soul of a
Horse: Life Lessons from the Herd
To a horseman or
veterinarian, the title of this book may sound suspiciously broad.
Anyone familiar with horses and foot lameness knows the equine foot
is a multi-faceted topic. The subtitle helps by stating the book’s
purpose: “Practical Instruction for the Equine Veterinarian, Farrier
and Trimmer.” The statement
following the subtitle reiterates the comprehensive treatment of the
subject matter: “Details internal anatomy and development, caudal
foot pain and laminitis treatment, plus help for countless other
hoof problems.”
With 440 pages and
over 600 photographs and illustrations, this is a textbook for both
hoof-care professionals and for horse owners motivated to expand
their knowledge and understanding of hoof anatomy and hoof care.
The primary author,
Pete Ramey is one of the foremost hoof specialists and
hoof-rehabilitation practitioners in the United States.
Initially he earned his
reputation on the ground and under the horse through his hoof
trimming practice and work with problem feet.
Later in clinics, workshops,
publications, and videos, he’s presented methods and practices using
barefoot trimming techniques to restore lame horses to soundness.
Ramey’s practical experience is undisputed. His ten-disc
instructional video series, “Under the Horse” is accredited for 20
hours of continuing education credits for veterinarians and
veterinary technicians.
In the introduction, a
note from the editor explains the chapter arrangement: “This book
was organized to favor the target audience—equine veterinarians and
professional hoof-care providers. The more technical and veterinary
chapters by the contributing authors are placed in the front half of
the book. Pete Ramey’s chapters—written in simpler language and
tending to cover the more hands-on subjects—are placed in the back
half of the book. These chapters also introduce and discuss most of
the concepts covered in greater detail by the contributing authors.”
The editor goes on to
explain that those relatively new to internal hoof anatomy will be
best served by reading the photo captions and selected chapters by
the contributing authors first, then reading Ramey’s chapters on
trimming before tackling the more technical chapters by the
contributing authors. The 15 trimming chapters by Ramey are meant to
be accessible to layman hoof-care practitioners.
The list of
contributors to this volume is impressive and diverse. The
contributing authors include five equine veterinarians, all
prominent in their respective fields; a renowned specialist in
pasture and forage management and analysis; and an Australian
research scientist who specializes in hoof development and pathology
of the Australian feral horses.
Of the contributing
authors, Eleanor Kellon, VMD; Kerry Ridgway, DVM; and Kathryn Watts
present abundant information that should be of particular interest
to horse owners with horses diagnosed with insulin resistance,
Cushing’s disease, or chronic bouts of laminitis.
Dr. Kellon is one of
the leading researchers in equine nutrition and metabolic laminitis.
She explains her research into metabolic-triggered lameness and
presents the causes, symptoms, protocols, and management practices
for prevention and treatment. In
another chapter, she details the importance of balancing mineral
ratios in the equine diet for hoof health and provides specific
instructions on how to do it.
Kathryn Watts, equine
forage specialist, clarifies historically misunderstood concepts
about the fluctuating carbohydrate content in pasture grass and hay.
She explains the importance and “how-to” of testing and providing
low-sugar hay for laminitic and tender-footed horses.
Dr. Kerry Ridgway
discusses the prevalence and significance of gastro-intestinal
ulcers in horses and the relationship between ulcers and musculo-skeletal
pain and laminitis. With extensive experience in ulcer diagnosis, he
offers horse owners and veterinarians descriptions of little-known
signs and symptoms that typically can be indicators of
gastro-intestinal ulcers.
In 31 chapters, the
authors cover the subject matter and accomplish the comprehensive
mission implied in the title and subtitle. The technical and
professional dissertations are based on well documented,
state-of-the-art research and clinical trials.
The illustrations are excellent. Pete Ramey’s chapters of
explanations and trimming instructions are thorough and clear enough
to get a hoof practitioner started on the path of barefoot hoof
rehab. With the inclusion of chapters on nutrition and management
practices, it’s evident that hoof care and rehab is a “whole-horse”
undertaking. The overall
quantity and professional quality of information presented in this
book is exceptional.
The price is a
daunting $176. But that’s
probably comparable to the price of medical and veterinary
textbooks, to which it could be compared if equal importance had
been given to quality editing and production. Mistakes abound that
would have been eliminated with professional editing.
From typos and errors in
punctuation and mechanics to awkward, hard-to-read page layout and
formatting, the book suffers from the lack of professional
proofreading, editing, and design.
In spite of those
flaws, it is a pertinent resource for equine veterinarians,
farriers, trimmers, and horse owners who want to educate themselves
on barefoot rehabilitation practices. Others seeking more of an
introduction to barefoot trimming techniques and rehab practices may
want to access Pete Ramey’s website, hoofrehab.com or his videos,
which are available to rent at giddyupflix.com.
Staff review,
Modoc Independent News
I believe every vet,
farrier/ trimmer, trainer, horse rescue owner, barn manager,
breeder—every equine professional would do well by the horses in
their care to understand everything presented in this book, because
of its whole-horse approach in giving the horse it's best potential
for rehabilitation. It also gives the best advice on horse-keeping
from foal to adult to avoid the pitfalls that bring a horse to the
place of needing rehabilitation.
Geri White, ESA EqSC
If you only buy one book about laminitis,
make it Pete Ramey's
Care and Rehabilitation of the Equine Foot. Expensive, yes, owing to the hundreds
of colour photos and illustrations, but oh so worth it - and in fact
probably no more expensive than one set of remedial shoes or one set
of x-rays. Although Chapter 28 is entitled "Laminitis", the whole book
is directly or indirectly related to laminitis - understanding the
equine foot, the role of diet and the environment, how to trim the
foot for optimum balance and health, and how to reverse P3 rotation
and distal descent - all the information necessary to rehabilitate
the equine foot following laminitis and other common foot
pathologies, plus how to keep the foot and horse healthy after
rehabilitation, and how to prevent these problems in the first
place. There are no gimmicks, no fancy shoes or treatments - just
information based on recent research, many years of experience and a
good helping of common sense. In our opinion, essential reading for
any vet, foot care professional or owner dealing with a laminitic
horse - or any horse, for that matter. The Laminitis Site |