Some info on the ABC science explaining how bar invades the sole - TopicsExpress



          

Some info on the ABC science explaining how bar invades the sole region: Cheryl Edwards-Henderson Look at the sole and find the rim edge of the bar that was smeared out there. What you are looking at was a more invasive trim that was taught from some of the Strasser students. I was collecting trimmed cadavers to have Allie dry them so we could have a representative of the tearchers methods. The bar was taken deeply down but did not quick the bar laminae. The sole was removed down low to where there was no dirtline. But, you can see that this hoof had bar still embedded in sole. Some hooves have for years been piling on the bar over the sole region and it has crushed any tubules that would ever have come to the surface. A hoof like this can take about 4 trims until you begin to see the sole tubules. There is a technique to achieve this I will try to get on here. February 23, 2013 at 12:21pm · Like · 9 Paige Preston Boyer So what causes the bar to smear over the sole? March 23, 2013 at 10:52pm · Like Cheryl Edwards-Henderson Think of a tooth brush analogous to the bars tubules. The knife cuts the outer wall tubules but missed rows of the inner bar wall which is also the softer area. The tubules are developed below and are pushing outward the tubules you see on the surface. So if the tubules are growing in length and they have not been trimmed they will grind into the sole and being unpigmented (white) the soft horn can stain and look like sole. This is a great example of that. The bar can be very deep in the sole tubules. Think of the sole tubules like blades of grass and the thin worm weaves through the grass hidden from view. The bar tubules can do the same. Look in the folder on disease that shows the soles tubules separating. They are all individuals not solidly joined. March 23, 2013 at 11:01pm · Like · 9 Debora Lay Also from this photo you can see the horn (bar and wall) are not near the bone. They surround the bone, but are not under it when in the correct position. If bar is out on the sole, then when the sole flexes and the bone drops as the sole engages the ground, it hits hard bar, not the flexible sole. March 23, 2013 at 11:22pm · Like · 13 Debora Lay I describe it similar. Wall and bar tubules are horn. The sole is not horn. When bar (horn) grows on top of sole, it damages it. The bugs eat the sole. They do not eat the bar or wall - aka horn. The sole is like hard leather, but it still flexes. When horn(bar) is on the sole, it cannot flex. (this got posted to the wrong photo....it belongs here. sorry) March 23, 2013 at 11:24pm · Like · 12 Karin Schouwenburg Cheryl Edwards-Henderson, you wrote this at the top: A hoof like this can take about 4 trims until you begin to see the sole tubules. There is a technique to achieve this I will try to get on here. If you have time, can you please write down about this technique you are talking about? November 16, 2013 at 4:24am · Like · 3 Cheryl Edwards-Henderson Karin when the bar has over grown and smeared or tamped down into the sole tubules it can takes months to reveal the bars invasive look. This would be a lip edge of a smooth area that dirt gets around to outline the rim edge. The shifting weight at t...See More November 16, 2013 at 12:21pm · Like · 6 Kathy Passmore- Gonzalez Great visual, thanks. November 16, 2013 at 4:39pm · Like
Posted on: Mon, 18 Aug 2014 20:47:16 +0000

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