Rosie B wrote:
Kande - how bad of a club foot does Sting have? Bliss also has a club foot, but it's minor and doesn't impact him in any way.
Bliss's club may be a one up one down then, because when Sting's club was diagnosed he already had a ski tip on his coffin bone (and the bulge in the middle) so even though I have no way of knowing whether or not it would have gotten worse, I decided to have the check ligament surgery just in case the club was on it's way to an even steeper angle.
I also trim Sting myself, but I always take off as much heel as I can and usually trim some wall at the quarters and pillars, but seldom take much of anything off the toe where he breaks over. I can never get his heels down to the widest part of his (deep, narrow) frog on the club though, because I don't trim the heels lower than the sole, and the sole at the heels is higher than the widest part of his frog.
So because Sting had the check ligament surgery and has always been trimmed on a short schedule, his fronts are not noticeably different when they're on the ground. The wall tubules are straight and there's no curve in the wall at the toe, but as soon as you look at the bottom of his club you can clearly see that it's not a normal hoof. And when you look at the bottom of the other front it then becomes even more obvious that his fronts are very mismatched.
There's way more, though. I had a trainer ride him last week because we'd been talking about his sidedness issues, and as soon as she got on him a rode around a couple of times she flashed back to another WB she'd ridden who also had a right front club. She said that even though the other WB was much greener when she was riding him, the feel was the same. She also noted that while she could get Sting somewhat straighter in the body, as soon as she did his neck got crooked.
I work him way more to the left than to the right, simply because he feels so much more balanced to the right.
Interestingly, Sting has fully developed top and bottom canine teeth on the right side of his mouth, and none on the left side.
I trim his feet myself and I always make sure to leave the heel that he's comfortable with on that side and keep both feet comfortable for a heel first landing. The hoof angles are perfect on each side, but they don't match each other - nor should they. My vet is 100% on the same page with me and he's totally sound and comfortable, so I will keep on doing what I'm doing.
I'm more careful about how hard I work Sting because I'd like to still be riding him 20 years from now, and I doubt very much that he'll hold up to hard work given his sidedness issues. I may be wrong, but if I am it doesn't matter because I'm still upping my chances of keeping him sound by limiting the amount of work, so I don't think there's any downside to it.