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www.americanfarriers.com/articles/13338-new-york-farrier-gets-a-better-bar-show-when-modifying-keg-shoes
Open-toe horseshoe
Horses that have white line stretching or laminitis seem to prefer the open-toe shoe because it relieves stress on the dorsal hoof wall. Image: Doug Corey

New York Farrier Gets a Better Bar Shoe When Modifying Keg Shoes

April 15, 2022

Morrisville, N.Y., farrier Doug Corey uses an assortment of bar shoes, but none of them is store-bought. He welds them all in his trailer.

“It’s easier to shape an open-heeled shoe to a foot,” he told attendees during a How-To Hoof-Care Product Knowledge Clinic, sponsored by Mustad Hoofcare, at the 2022 International Hoof-Care Summit in Cincinnati, Ohio. “I can do what I need to get a superior fit. Then I can decide what kind of bar I want, whether it’s a big wide bar or one that is narrower.”

Corey prefers a wide bar to one that is narrow to help the horse in the arena.

“I don’t like a bar that is the same size as the branches,” he says. “The goal is flotation. When the horse goes into a sand arena, I want heel flotation. A wider bar helps keep the heels elevated in the sand.”

While a straight bar is the most common that he applies when one is necessary, he rarely uses an egg bar. Yet, he’s grown accustomed to using an open-toe or reverse shoe.

“Some horses don’t like to have stress on their dorsal hoof wall,” Corey says. “This was an old rope horse with a long history of laminitis (top photo). The only way I could keep it sound well into its teenage years was to put a reverse shoe on.”

Although the open-toe shoe is often called a reverse shoe, turning around a typical keg shoe is not his first option.

“I try to turn my open-toed shoes and plain stamp them,” Corey says. “I try to keep the bar wide. This lets me build a wedge into my reverse shoes. This one has a rim pad. I used a grinder on the heels and if you narrow the branches, it helps get a little more penetration at the toe.”


Learn More

  • Therapeutic Horseshoeing Modifications that Work: Many farriers diversify their hoof-care practices across multiple disciplines. The disparity often leads to a variety of shoeing modifications that are incorporated into one’s everyday work, and Doug Corey is no exception.
Jeff cota 2023

Jeff Cota

Maine native Jeff Cota joined Lessiter Media in January of 2014 and serves as the current editor of American Farriers Journal. Jeff enjoys photography, baseball, and the “opportunity to meet and learn from some great people in a fascinating trade.”

Contact: jcota@lessitermedia.com