THE PREPARATION OF THE FOOT. 31 y 



While the horse is travelling, dirt and gravel are too apt to insinuate 

 themselves between the web of tlie shoe and the sole. If tiie shoe were 

 flat, they would be easily retained there, and would bruise the sole and be 

 productive of injury ; but when the shoe is thus bevelled off, it is scarcely 

 possible for them to remain. They must be shaken out every time the foot 

 comes in contact with the ground. 



The web of the shoe is likewise of that thickness, that when the foot is 

 properly pared, the prominent part of the frog shall lie just within and above 

 its ground surface, so that in the descent of the sole the frog shall come 

 sutliciently on the ground, to enable it to act as a wedge, and to expand the 

 quarters, while it is defended from the wear and injury it would receive if 

 it came on the ground with the first and full shock of the weight. 



The nail-holes are, on the ground side, placed as near the outer edge of 

 the shoe as they can safely be, and brought out near the inner edge* of the 

 seating. The nails thus take a direction inward, resembling the direction 

 of the crust itself, and take firmer hold ; while the strain upon them in the 

 common shoe is altogether prevented ; and the weight of the horse being 

 thrown on a flat surface, contraction is not so likely to be produced. 



The smith sometimes objects to the use of this shoe, on account of its 

 not being so easily formed as one composed of a bar of iron, either flat or 

 a little bevelled. It likewise occupies more time in the forming ; but these 

 objections would vanish, when the owner of the horse declared that he 

 would have him shod elsewhere ; or when he consented, as in justice he 

 should, to pay somewhat more for a shoe that required better workman 

 ship and longer time in the construction. 



THE PREPARATION OF THE FOOT. 



We will suppose that the horse is sent to the forge to be shod. If the 

 master would occasionally accompany him there, he would find it much to 

 his advantage. The old shoe must be first taken off. We have something 

 to observe even on this. It was retained on the foot by the ends of the 

 nails being twisted off, turned down, and clenched. These clenches 

 should be first raised, which the smith seldom takes the trouble thoroughly 

 to do ; but after going carelessly round the crust, and raising one or two 

 of the clenciies, he takes hold first of one heel of the shoe, and then of the 

 other, and by a violent wrench separates them from the foot, and by a 

 tiiird wrench, applied to the middle of the shoe, he tears it off. By this 

 means he must enlarge every nail-hole; and weaken the future hold, and' 

 sometimes tear off portions of the crust, and otherwise injure the foot. 

 The horse generally shows by his flinching tha!. he suffers by the violence 

 with wiiich this preliminary operation is performed. The clenches should 

 always be raised or filed off; and where the foot is tender, or the horse is 

 to be examined for lameness, each nail should be partly punched out. 

 Many a stub is left in the crust, the source of future annoyance, when this 

 unnecessary violence is used. 



The shoe having been removed, the smith proceeds to rasp the edges of 

 llie crust. Let not the stander-by object to the apparent violence which 

 he uses, or fear that the foot will suffer. It is the only means he has, with 

 safety to liis instruments, to detect whether any stubs remain in the nail- 

 lioles ; and it is tiie most convenient method of removing that portion of 

 the crust into wiiich dirt and gravel have insinuated themselves. 



Next comes the important process of paring out, with regard to which 

 it IS almost impossible to lay down any specific rules. This, however, 

 we can say with confidence, that more injury has been done by the neglect 

 X 



