Showing posts with label steve taylor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label steve taylor. Show all posts

Sunday, 1 September 2013

..a pedi 'cure'...




...the farrier came...hoo-bloody-ray!
Don't let it be said that I'm stuck in my ways, or am unwilling to try new things.  But having spent eight weeks barefoot the boys are finally sound again with shoes back on.


Barefoot doesn't suit every horse or sensitive owner (mentioning no names), but they are happy clomping about the yard now, and so I'm happy too.

Yesterday afternoon Steve's van rattled down the driveway, the boys were right out in the fields grazing.  They waited until he'd parked and walked to the yard, and put themselves into their stables to wait for Steve to shoe them!  You couldn't make this stuff up.  Suffice it to say, Tom & Henry invited farriery yesterday, and got it.








See the pictures:

















Happy hooves, happy horses, happy butler.

Sunday, 16 December 2012

TCJpart101 Shoes













LOST SHOES:
Trakehners, I don't have to tell you, are amazing: agile, athletic, clever, beautiful, stunning, graceful, persuasive....all those things and more....


....but what they also do that no other breed seems to be able to match in sheer cunning, is get their shoes off.

Thank goodness there's something you can do with the recovered shoes, see previous December Yuletide blogs.

Here, once Steve has pulled up in his van, Tom positions himself in the yard, exactly where Steve shoes him, without any encouragement or persuasion  (I haven't put him here), and waits.  Tom knows exactly what to do, he is a clever boy.
 



 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Steve tells us that in all his many years as a farrier, shoeing everything from Shetlands to Shires, he has never known a pair who get their shoes off as Tom & Henry do!
 
 
Their white feet are the culprits every time.  This could of course be a coincidence but the evidence to the contrary here at WW is convincing otherwise.
 
The shoes, once Steve has them on his anvil, are always twisted, and it's this he can't fathom.  Tom and Henry are only shod on the front, so they can't be overreaching to get them off, so how do they do it?  answer: they're Trakehners and very, very clever.
 



This is Tom having his shoe put back on.

 
 




...all very neat, Tom is immediately happier.

 

Sunday, 11 December 2011

TCJpart22 Farriery






FARRIERY:
UPDATE:


February 2012  issue HORSE Magazine:

We need to have experts around us we can trust.  sometimes we need to ask those people to go above and beyond the call of duty, and a good relationship with your 'experts' is vital.

You may notice from this photo (my husband did), that the farrier is being offered a double-decker and a cuppa, this is a good start, but wait until he has finished doing a tricky job eh?







FARRIERY: My message, if your farrier falls short of the expertise you'd expect from him, change him.  An unhappy relationship with someone whose job it is to take care of your beloved horse is just not worth it.


Check out the Worshipfull Company of Farriers: website, there you can find farriers in your area and cross-check them with any reccomendations.


ORIGINAL MESSAGE: FARRIERY




January issue 2012



LETTER TO THE EDITOR:
Hi Jo,

I am writing in response to a letter in January issue ‘missing costs’ regarding farriers.
Fiona Morris obviously doesn’t think her farrier is worth the cost of a set of shoes, but she has forgotten the cost of shoeing isn’t about the raw materials, it’s about having someone very skilled and experienced, with years of apprenticeship and training, looking after your horses feet. 
What she may not realise, because the operation looks so smooth and practised, is that every visit her farrier is checking the balance of her horses feet, watching how he moves, trimming to straighten or correct, shaping the shoe, so he remains sound and rideable.  This is a very skilled job.
Farriery is the one cost I don’t moan about, because a good farrier, like mine, is worth his weight in gold.
Farriers get a lot of criticism from owners, about costs and unreliability, but I have the best farrier in the world and I am happy to pay him what he’s worth.  When he doesn’t turn up or is late, I try to think that that could be my horse he’s taking longer with: requiring speciality bespoke made corrective shoeing or emergency footwork, and my farrier takes the time it takes to do the job right, so he is quickly forgiven.

Steve Taylor, comes out at almost no notice to put shoes back on, he made a shoe specially to relieve a tendon injury my horse had (much to the surprise of my vet who thought he’d be lame for much longer, Steve’s forged on-the-spot, corrective shoe made him sound), and when I had the HORSE Magazine photographer come round, he got out of his sick bed to come out to me to check their shoes were OK for the shoot.

Treat your good farrier well, appreciate his expertise, you’d be lost without him.
 

Thank you

Shelley Rand, Tom & Henry.