The Hoof Fairy, UK

The Hoof Fairy, UK Recently returned to Kent. Many years of experience. Gentle female approach, I have time and patience People always ask me Why? Why did you want to be a farrier?
(15)

It started with my early love of horses, in fact some of my very first words were reportedly "Clip-Clop"! Having ridden a variety of stuffed, wheeled and static equine before I could walk my first competition steeds were loan beasts of a gentle plodding persuasion at local fete's and fair's. At the age of 7 a kindly neighbour with her magnificent "Anglo-Arab X Thoroughbred" Major, gave me my first

taste of riding..falling..doing superman impressions out of the front, side and back door!! From those wobbly first trots I was hooked. Then came the first real love of my life. As a reward for a morning mucking out "Diddy Town" I was aloud to adopt the most wonderful elderly gent.....Arrow.... a 14.2hh Dartmoor Pony who spent his life stabled due to chronic laminitis. But as far as I was concerned he was "The Best". Arrow and I were best mates for a short 2 years before he sadly lost his fight against laminitis but not before he introduced me to farriery. I was 10, now at nearly 30 I still think of him nearly every day and how he led me to want to learn all I could about how to give horses like him the longest, least painful life possible. For the next 6 years i hung about with farriers on yards listening, learning and waiting! I worked as a groom for wedding horses, helped at a show-jumping yard where I got training on how to stay on!, worked as a Scurry Groom(ballast!!!) all over the country even got to do H.O.Y.S and the Royal Show it was amazing. Finally at 16 I managed to convince Warwick College that I could and would be a farrier. At that time I was one of the very few girls country wide training to be a farrier. Thankfully over the last few years that has changed and many more female farriers are qualfing. After something of a nomadic life in training from Kent to Surrey to Yorkshire(god its cold up there) to Devon and now back home to Kent I have worked on miniature Falabella through assorted riding, driving, jumping, racing-oooohhh yes I have shod a few winners in my time and no I never bet on them but enjoyed their win's all the same. So that's pretty much me really I've ridden for nearly 20 years on a motley variety of lovable beasts. I've tried most styles, even did a bit of side saddle!! some western and driven everything from Shetlands to a team of 6 Percheron. I have blobbed along on lazy hacks, ploughed fields behind magnificent beasts. Basically brushed and fed my own stobborn, old war horse, nutcase rescue cob-gorgeous,unrideable, expensive, field ornament that she is. You got to be slightly mad to love these big beasties but then you know that or you wouldn't be reading this. Thanks for taking the time to read my story, maybe we will meet one of these days.

08/03/2023

Late night horse humour

06/03/2023

“How much weight can a horse carry?

In my experience, a horse can carry an infinite amount.

They can carry the weight of broken hearts, broken homes, and broken bodies. Countless tears sometimes comb their tangled manes. Moments when parents and friends cannot be there to help and hold a person, horses embrace and empower. They carry physical, mental, and emotional handicaps. They carry hopes and dreams; and they will carry the stress from your day when you can't carry it anymore.

They carry graduations, they carry new careers, they carry moves away from everything familiar, they carry marriages, they carry divorces, they carry funerals, they carry babys before they are born, and sometimes they carry the mothers who cannot carry their own baby. They carry mistakes, they carry joy, they carry the good and they carry the bad. They carry drugs and addictions, but they also carry the celebrations.

They will carry you to success when all you have felt is failure. They will carry you, never knowing the weight of your burdens and triumphs.

If you let them, they will carry you through life, and life is hard, life is heavy. But a horse will make you feel weightless under it all.”

-Written by Sara Huffman

Photo credit: https://www.facebook.com/DorotaKudybaArt/photos

Good night, God Bless. 🙏🏻💖

31/12/2022

So near, AND YET SO FU***NG FAR…..

20/10/2022

Post for all customers

So as you all know by now I am pregnant and unfortunately I have had to make the decision at nearly 7 months pregnant to hang up my chaps for a few months.

I plan to come back gently to farriery in March if I can but will keep in touch with all of you.

I would like to say a huge thank you to all of my customers for being so supportive, kind and understanding over the past few months and look forward to introducing you to my little girl when I come back.

Best wishes to you all

The hoof fairy
Samantha

Number 4 made me laugh
16/10/2022

Number 4 made me laugh

This is really interesting article
26/06/2022

This is really interesting article

Why do ‘cresty’ necks suddenly go rock hard?

This information is relevant and useful to people who own horses with Equine Metabolic Syndrome and are in danger of laminitis or whose horses are intermittently ‘footy’. Understanding this has helped with rehabilitating, not only all the ponies at Jen Heperi’s Mini-HaHa Rescue Haven but many more horses and ponies all around the world.

We learned from Dr Deb Bennett PhD (who has conducted many dissections), that “the horse's "crest" is made of fibro-fatty sub-cutaneous (adipose) tissue similar in texture to high-density foam”.

Have you ever wondered how it is that the ‘crest’ of the neck can harden so rapidly? Sometimes overnight?

The actual reason is because it goes ‘turgid’ (it fills with fluid). Like foam, the crest tissue can take up water like a sponge; so it swells and hardens because fluid ‘leaks’ into it, filling the interstitial spaces until it is hard as a rock, and ‘softens’ when electrolyte balances are corrected thereby allowing fluid to be resorbed.

When the crest swells with edema, other parts of the horse's body like the abdomen and the hooves (significantly the digital cushion is made of similar material, it is a thick wedge of fibro-fatty subcutaneous tissue) -- are liable to be in trouble, too.

Hardening of the ‘crest’ coincides with not only spring and autumn growth spurts but also potassium and nitrogen spikes in autumn and winter grasses. It coincides with early signs of laminitis which are ‘stiffening’ of gait and being ‘footy’.

It is a sure indication that one cause of ‘pasture related laminitis’ is as much to do with mineral imbalances, (particularly potassium and nitrogen excesses concurrent with salt deficit) as sugars and starches. It explains why short Autumn grass can cause laminitis when analysis shows soluble sugars + starch content is only 7.5% while potassium is 3.4%, sodium only 0.154%, nitrogen 5.8%, nitrates 2290mgs/kg (far too high, in mature grass/hay they are undetectable).
It is one of the many reasons clover is such a ‘no-no’ for EMS/laminitis equines and a likely explanation why there are some insulin resistant/elevated insulin horses that can't tolerate Lucerne (alfalfa) and is why Lucerne can perpetuate laminitis when everything else is being done ‘right’.

People who own horses with EMS are aware they need to pay attention to this vital sign: that just before a horse has a bout of laminitis, the normally soft and spongy crest stands up firm and hard. Then they can immediately reduce potassium/nitrogen intake by eliminating short, green grass replacing it with soaked hay and make sure they add salt to feeds and not rely on a salt lick. If action is taken quickly enough in these early stages, laminitis can be averted, you can ‘dodge a bullet’.

Soaking hay for about an hour not only reduces sugars but also reduces potassium levels by 50%.

Therefore a very important aspect of EMS and laminitis is that identifying and addressing mineral imbalances (particularly high potassium/nitrogen & low salt) are equally as important as sugar and starch content when rehabilitating individuals and assessing suitability of forage for these compromised equines.

Not many horse I have the pleasure of doing that will stand in a open field with nobody holding them and let me trim the...
28/04/2021

Not many horse I have the pleasure of doing that will stand in a open field with nobody holding them and let me trim them all round. Such a sweet girl

12/03/2021

There are in fact more than four seasons ❄️🌸☀️🍂 and we are currently in the 'second winter' 😭

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Whitstable
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