Which stud for my horse?
Hello, this is the first time I've had a horse with shoes. Since I want to do some turf riding, my question is, what kind of studs do I need? There are so many suggestions online. Pictures would be great. Thanks for your help.
Stollen irons are iron into which the forging has made thread, so holes in which you can only spin cleats in at all.
stolleneisen make sense when it comes to jumping horse that has to complete a course on lawn. The corresponding cleats are then used, depending on the soil and requirements.
You don’t need a horse to ride on the meadow.
in improper use, you can also damage a horse. Things should only be used when there is an indication.
And in the end, no one can give you a proper answer, because it always comes down to the ground. If he’s smart hard, it’s gonna take someone else than if he’s muggy. Therefore, Springreiter also always have a quite large range of different spores that they use according to the requirements.
But there are definitely the jumpers who resort to cleats when riding on lawns, not riders who sometimes ride a little on meadow.
Then I assume the difficulty of what you want to do in the meadow does not go straight towards international diversity? Then, if you stay under such a level, everything speaks, but also really everything for good barework.
+ The hoof has more grip on all floors
+ The hoof does not have to regain the physiological disadvantages of the fitting in a subsequent beating-free period, but can remain good all year round
+ The whole system is, if well worked, completely pan-free
+ There are no extreme impacts on the joints that contribute significantly to their wear
+ The hoof can also swallow a one-sided appearance on a stone, so that not every one goes wrong on gravel road represents a border load.
I don’t know a reason not to go to the tool now and make the fitting down as I always do with horses coming into my care.
There are also horses that do not run without iron. Have an example in the stable.
The horse also has health reasons iron.
Suitable for the horse, for the fitting and intended performance requirements.
You should be advised on the horse. You wouldn’t be the first rider to ruin his horse.
provided that in the irons are even thread in.
A little on the lawn? You don’t need cleats. In addition, you need the corresponding fitting, you can’t turn into any iron studs.
I’ve had extra cleat holes. We have a pasture for dressage work when the place is too deep.
first you don’t need one and second:
I guess you’re gonna have summer iron on it.
if you don’t just deal with the blacksmith, jump on it, you can’t even use any studs.
is better.
He made me extra stud holes for the reason that we only have a rough ride. It has to wear the iron for health reasons
Ah.
no horse has to wear iron for health reasons, and if so, as long as it has to carry these irons, it is not rideable.
So there’s no need to stumble.
grüss the fairy taler of me, who calls himself with you. Horses that become healthy again with iron, it will not be because of the iron, but despite the iron.
You need a special fitting
Promise this with your blacksmith.
That’s what I was talking about with the blacksmith, and with the jump trainer.
I’d talk to my forge.
If you don’t jump M straight, you don’t need any.
But it runs with the iron very slippery and unsafe on the lawn.
Let her be converted to barhuf by a capable hoof worker. Then she’s got grip.