American Farriers Journal
American Farriers Journal is the “hands-on” magazine for professional farriers, equine veterinarians and horse care product and service buyers.
The Przewalski horse, the only wild horse living today, enjoys what could be considered the “ideal” life. In Mongolia and Hungary, where Brian Hampson has observed them, the nomadic grazers roam the fence-free countryside. Traditional herdsmen are responsible for regularly monitoring the herds, but the caretakers don’t interact with or attempt to domesticate the horses.
Without the human influence of selective breeding, processed feeds or training, one might assume that these horses are free from ailments such as laminitis.
“We thought that most likely, we’ve changed the foot of the domestic horse over the last couple hundred years and that has made it susceptible to laminitis,” says Hampson, who is the co-founder of the Australian Brumby Research Unit and holds a PhD in feral hoof studies.
“We thought there might have been something that was different about the wild horse’s foot that protected it from laminitis,” he says.
But that doesn’t seem to be the case. Feral and wild horses aren’t exempt from these pathologies that can challenge farriers working on domesticated horses. While diet…