12/04/2026
Why the World Is So Difficult for Farriers
One of the most frustrating realities of being a farrier is that we are constantly judged for outcomes we do not fully control.
A perfect example happened to us recently. We were asked to shoe a team of horses coming in from winter turnout after six months without trimming. Unsurprisingly, they arrived with horrendous feet. The capsules were long, flat, broken back, collapsed, and structurally weak. Exactly what you would expect after prolonged neglect combined with months of standing in wet winter conditions.
People often fail to understand what prolonged hydration does to the hoof. Hoof horn is a biological composite material with viscoelastic properties, and as hydration increases, the material becomes softer, more deformable, and less mechanically resistant. The hoof literally loses stiffness as its material properties change.  When horses spend prolonged periods stood in wet fields and mud through winter, the horn becomes weaker, the capsule deforms more readily under load, and the structures begin to collapse under forces they would otherwise tolerate. Add six months of unchecked growth to that and you create the exact ski slope, flat-footed, broken-back feet we were presented with.
Now here is where the public misunderstanding begins.
Clients seem to think a farrier should be able to simply rasp all of that away in one visit and magically produce perfect feet. But biology and biomechanics do not work like that. If a hoof has migrated and distorted over six months, aggressively forcing it back into ideal proportions in one trim risks overloading live structures, removing too much support, breaching sole depth, destabilising the capsule, and ultimately making the horse lame.
So what does the good farrier do?
He does the difficult thing, not the dramatic thing.
He gradually resets the foot toward improvement whilst preserving soundness, maintaining capsule integrity, and respecting tissue tolerance. He accepts that proper correction often takes multiple cycles because hoof balance is not simply cosmetic. It is a matter of managing forces, moments, and tissue loading over time. The hoof is a mechanical structure governed by load history, not just by what was rasped that day. As discussed in my book, morphology reflects sustained loading and impulse over time, not merely immediate appearance. 
That is exactly what we did.
We set those feet up to improve over the following cycle. We did the hard work. We established the foundation for recovery while protecting the horses.
But because the feet did not instantly look cosmetically “perfect,” the players and management complained that they still looked long. We were removed from the team.
Another farrier came in the next cycle, inherited the feet after we had already done the difficult corrective groundwork, and naturally the feet looked significantly better after his round.
So now we look incompetent, and he looks like the hero.
That is the reality of farriery.
We are often judged not on the difficulty of the case presented to us, but purely on superficial appearance at that moment in time, with absolutely no appreciation for the biological and mechanical process behind what has been done.
And this problem extends far beyond simple neglect.
Farriers are blamed constantly for movement asymmetries and landing patterns that are not hoof-created in the first place. Modern science has shown repeatedly that landing is influenced heavily by swing phase mechanics, neuromuscular control, proprioception, and the overall physiological and postural state of the horse. Landing pattern alone does not predict loading pattern, nor does it automatically define hoof imbalance.  Yet many still watch a horse land slightly unevenly and immediately blame the farrier, despite the fact that the asymmetry may originate from higher limb pathology, compensatory posture, neurological patterning, or whole-body dysfunction.
Likewise, medio-lateral hoof distortion is not simply a matter of “the farrier trimmed it uneven.” Hoof morphology reflects cumulative impulse and loading history over time. If a horse carries itself asymmetrically, if it has chronic compensatory posture, if it moves with a higher limb restriction, if it is crooked through the thoracic sling, pelvis, or spine, then that altered loading will reshape the hoof regardless of trimming. The hoof is part of a bidirectional system in which posture affects hoof loading just as hoof mechanics affect posture. 
Even broader still, domestic management itself changes horses. Stabling, feeding positions, rider asymmetry, poor saddle fit, limited turnout, emotional stress, inappropriate workload, and artificial living conditions all alter posture and autonomic tone, which in turn alter movement, loading, and ultimately hoof morphology. Yet somehow the farrier remains the one blamed when the feet reflect those influences.
Then summer arrives, the ground dries, the feet harden naturally, hydration reduces, horn stiffness improves, and the capsules often tighten and become more upright almost by themselves. Suddenly the feet “look better.” And who gets credited? Usually whichever farrier happens to be standing underneath the horse at that moment, regardless of whether the improvement was driven by seasonal change and environmental conditions.
This profession desperately needs a more mature understanding of hoof science.
The farrier is not a magician. We are not working on isolated blocks of wood. We are working on living biological structures shaped by physics, physiology, posture, environment, and management over time. We operate within the constraints of the horse in front of us, and the horse in front of us is a product of far more than just trimming.
The industry must come to understand that the farrier is constrained by the horse’s world. We cannot out-trim neglect. We cannot shoe away poor management. We cannot rasp off higher limb pathology. We cannot override six months of damage in one visit without consequence.
So perhaps before blaming the farrier, people need to ask harder questions.
How has this horse been managed?
How long has it been left?
What environment has it lived in?
What postural or pathological issues are influencing loading?
What role is the rest of the horse playing in the foot we are seeing?
Until the industry starts asking those questions, farriers will continue to be used as scapegoats for problems they did not create.
And frankly, enough is enough.
To My Fellow Farriers
If you do your best at every visit, keep up with all the latest research and take pride in your work but…
If you have ever lost work because someone else got the easy follow-up cycle after your corrective set-up…
If you have ever been blamed for pathology you did not create…
If you have ever had owners ignore every management factor but refuse your recommendations while still blaming you for the outcome…
Know this
You are not alone.
This profession is difficult not just because the work is hard alone,
but because so much of what determines success lies outside our control.
The industry must mature to a point where it understands the farrier is only one variable within a much larger system.
Until then, farriers will continue being blamed for the consequences of everyone else’s ignorance.
We at TED will continue to try our best to educate the industry, both the farrier and the rest of the team.