Forum Coordinators: RedPhantom
Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Dec 03 5:49 pm)
Have you tried looking up the websites for Farriers Schools? There's one outside Tulsa, Oklahoma that had a rather extensive website a year or so ago...they teach how to make shoes from scratch and scrap, the old fashioned way, so there may be info there you could use. And Mr. B...I don't think that a hors will work on six inch spikes...better make them pumps. ; ]
Typically- here in the UK, anyway- the front shoes have toe clips (a single 'lip' overlapping the front of the hoof, as in compiler's photo) and the rear shoes have quarter clips (two little lips that each sit about 1/8 of the way around from the center line). Check the number of nails as well- there's often a different number for the inside and outside edges, but can I remember what those numbers are at the moment? Nope. Brain's gone blank. Blame monday morning. :p
The farrier/horseshoer usually bends a bit of the metal at the toe or along the sides of the shoe to create the clips. The clips, as far as my experience has been usually help take the pressure off the nails and keep the shoe secure; also a toe clip might be used in conjunction with "rolling the toes" to cause the horse to pick up the foot a little earlier than they might otherwise be inclinde to do; horses that clip (catch the back of the front foot with the rear toe) often have clips and rolled toes and squared toes...corrective work to try to keep them from pulling off those front shoes....
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