Episodios

  • Episode 16 - Hoofcare for the Dressage Horse
    Mar 25 2026

    In this episode, we explore the precision of shoeing the dressage horse, from Intro level through to Grand Prix.

    Learn how different movements influence hoof loading, how to assess the horse both statically and dynamically, and how shoeing strategies adapt to surfaces, conformation, and performance demands.

    We cover trimming principles, shoe selection, barefoot management, and the importance of working alongside vets and physiotherapists to support long-term soundness.

    A practical, evidence-based guide for farriers working with the modern dressage athlete.

    Support the show

    To order your hardback copy of The Hoofcare Companion visit:

    Store | thefarrier

    For an eBook version visit here:

    The Hoofcare Companion (eBook Edition) eBook : Jerram, Marc: Amazon.co.uk: Books


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    19 m
  • Episode 15 - Cushings Disease - A Complete Overview
    Mar 11 2026

    Cushings disease, correctly termed pituitary pars intermedia dysfunction, is one of the most important endocrine disorders affecting the ageing horse and a leading underlying cause of laminitis and chronic hoof pathology.

    In this episode of The Hoofcare Companion, host Marc Jerram delivers a clear, farriery focused overview of Cushings disease, explaining how pituitary dysfunction leads to widespread metabolic, vascular, and immune changes that often manifest first within the hoof.

    The episode explores thorough assessment of the Cushings affected horse, common and subtle clinical signs, laminitis risk, and the farrier’s role in early recognition. Veterinary diagnostics, medical treatment, and the importance of collaboration between farrier and vet are discussed, alongside practical hoof management strategies aimed at reducing mechanical stress and supporting long term comfort.

    This episode is essential listening for farriers, veterinarians, and horse owners seeking a deeper understanding of Cushings disease and its impact on hoof health, laminitis, and lifelong management.

    Support the show

    To order your hardback copy of The Hoofcare Companion visit:

    Store | thefarrier

    For an eBook version visit here:

    The Hoofcare Companion (eBook Edition) eBook : Jerram, Marc: Amazon.co.uk: Books


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    24 m
  • Episode 14 - The Coronary band, Coronitis and Coronary Band Dystrophy
    Feb 25 2026

    In this episode, we take an in depth look at one of the most critical yet often underestimated structures of the equine hoof: the coronary band. This episode is essential listening for farriers, veterinarians, and serious hoof care professionals who want a deeper understanding of how coronary band health directly influences hoof wall quality, growth, and long term soundness.

    We begin by exploring the normal anatomy and function of the coronary band, explaining its role as the primary germinal tissue responsible for producing the hoof wall. You will learn how the epidermal and dermal components work together, how coronary papillae form horn tubules, and why the vascular and neurological supply of this region makes it both highly productive and highly vulnerable.

    The episode then examines the coronary corium in detail, discussing blood supply, lymphatic drainage, innervation, and how mechanical loading and movement influence horn production. We explain why disruptions at the coronary band are always expressed distally in the hoof wall and how farriers can interpret growth rings, horn defects, and changes in wall quality as a historical record of coronary band health.

    The second half of the episode focuses on coronitis and coronary band dystrophy, conditions that can have lifelong implications for hoof integrity. We discuss:

    • Common traumatic, infectious, environmental, and systemic causes
    • The difference between acute inflammation and chronic dystrophic change
    • How repeated low grade trauma and poor environmental conditions contribute to long term damage
    • The relationship between systemic disease, laminitis, vascular compromise, and coronary band pathology

    You will gain insight into the clinical signs seen in both acute and chronic cases, including swelling, pain, discharge, scarring, altered horn growth, cracks, and capsule distortion. We also explain how to distinguish coronary band abscessation from other hoof pathologies and why accurate assessment is critical.

    From a professional perspective, this episode outlines the diagnostic process, highlighting the role of the farrier in recognising abnormal growth patterns and working alongside the veterinary surgeon. We cover veterinary investigations including blood work, imaging, ultrasonography, and when biopsy may be indicated.

    Finally, we discuss medical and farriery management strategies, focusing on:

    • Controlling inflammation and infection
    • Environmental and hygiene management
    • Conservative trimming approaches during active disease
    • Shoeing strategies to reduce mechanical stress on compromised horn
    • Long term management, prognosis, and owner education

    This episode reinforces the importance of a collaborative, multidisciplinary approach and positions the farrier as a key professional in early detection, ongoing management, and long term hoof care planning.


    Support the show

    To order your hardback copy of The Hoofcare Companion visit:

    Store | thefarrier

    For an eBook version visit here:

    The Hoofcare Companion (eBook Edition) eBook : Jerram, Marc: Amazon.co.uk: Books


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    25 m
  • Episode 13 - Sidebone
    Feb 11 2026

    Sidebone is one of the most commonly encountered structural changes within the equine foot, particularly in heavier horses and those exposed to repetitive concussive forces. In this episode of The Hoofcare Companion, we take an in depth look at sidebone from a farriery perspective, exploring not only what it is, but why it develops, how it alters hoof biomechanics and how informed trimming and shoeing decisions can significantly influence long term comfort and soundness.

    This episode moves beyond sidebone as a simple radiographic finding and places it firmly within the wider context of hoof balance, conformation, workload and management. Whether you encounter sidebone regularly in practice or want to deepen your understanding of its functional significance, this discussion provides practical insight grounded in anatomy and biomechanics.

    What We Cover in This Episode

    What Is Sidebone

    Anatomy and Function of the Lateral Cartilages

    Pathophysiology and Development

    Causes and Predisposing Factors

    Conformational Faults Associated with Sidebone

    Static Assessment of the Horse

    Dynamic Assessment and Gait Evaluation

    Clinical Signs and Differential Considerations

    Radiography and Its Role in Farriery Decision Making

    Trimming Principles for Managing Sidebone

    Shoeing Strategies and Traditional Sidebone Shoes

    Pads and Supportive Materials

    Long Term Prognosis and Case Management

    Who This Episode Is For

    Farriers and farriery apprentices
    Veterinary surgeons with an interest in hoof biomechanics
    Equine podiatrists and hoofcare professionals
    Advanced horse owners seeking a deeper understanding of foot pathology

    Support the show

    To order your hardback copy of The Hoofcare Companion visit:

    Store | thefarrier

    For an eBook version visit here:

    The Hoofcare Companion (eBook Edition) eBook : Jerram, Marc: Amazon.co.uk: Books


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    18 m
  • Episode 12 - Suspensory Ligaments
    Jan 28 2026

    In this episode of The Hoofcare Companion, Marc Jerram takes an in-depth look at the suspensory ligaments of the lower limb, exploring teir anatomy, function, common injury patterns, and most importantly the farriery principles that influence both injury risk and rehabilitation.

    Suspensory and navicular-related injuries remain one of the most common causes of chronic lameness and loss of performance across sport and leisure horses. This episode is designed to give farriers a clear working understanding of how hoof balance, trimming and shoeing decisions directly affect these structures, and how to work effectively alongside the veterinary surgeon during diagnosis and rehabilitation.

    🎧 What You’ll Learn in This Episode

    • Why the suspensory apparatus is a critical load-bearing and energy-storing system
    • The evolutionary anatomy of the suspensory ligament and its functional implications
    • Key anatomical differences between front and hind limb suspensory ligaments
    • How the muscular component of the hind limb suspensory influences performance and injury presentation
    • The role of the navicular suspensory structures, including the impar and collateral ligaments
    • How hoof conformation, toe length and heel height affect suspensory and navicular loading
    • Common suspensory injuries:
      • Proximal suspensory desmitis
      • Mid-body and branch lesions
      • Navicular suspensory injuries
    • Why front limb injuries often present as lameness, while hind limb injuries present as performance problems
    • Diagnostic tools explained:
      • Palpation and gait assessment
      • Ultrasonography
      • Radiography
      • MRI and its role in distal limb soft tissue diagnosis
    • Recognising altered gait patterns associated with suspensory pain
    • Evidence-based trimming principles for suspensory rehabilitation
    • Shoe selection strategies for:
      • Front limb suspensory injuries
      • Hind limb suspensory injuries
      • Navicular suspensory pathology
    • The importance of farrier–veterinary collaboration throughout rehabilitation

    🧠 Key Takeaways for Farriers

    • Small changes in hoof balance and breakover can significantly alter suspensory strain
    • Front and hind limbs must be approached very differently in both assessment and shoeing
    • Suspensory injuries are rarely just a “rest and hope” problem—mechanics matter
    • Correct trimming and shoeing can reduce reinjury risk and support long-term soundness
    • Ongoing reassessment is essential as the horse moves through rehabilitation phases

    🛠️ Who This Episode Is For

    • Registered and apprentice farriers
    • Equine podiatrists
    • Veterinary surgeons working with lameness cases
    • Therapists involved in rehabilitation
    • Horse owners wanting a deeper understanding of suspensory injuries

    Support the show

    To order your hardback copy of The Hoofcare Companion visit:

    Store | thefarrier

    For an eBook version visit here:

    The Hoofcare Companion (eBook Edition) eBook : Jerram, Marc: Amazon.co.uk: Books


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    17 m
  • Episode 11 - Medio-Lateral balance of the hoof
    Jan 14 2026

    Medio-lateral balance is one of the most influential and most misunderstood principles in farriery. In this episode of The Hoofcare Companion, we explore what medio-lateral balance really means, why visual symmetry can be misleading, and how poor balance contributes to long term lameness and pathology.

    Marc explores how farriers should assess medio-lateral balance both statically and dynamically, explains how conformation dictates loading patterns, and discusses why trimming and shoeing decisions must always respect the horse’s functional anatomy. From long-axis assessment of the forelimb and hindlimb to the role of radiography in modern farriery, this episode provides practical, evidence based insight for working farriers, students, and equine professionals alike.

    ⏱️ Episode Chapters / Key Topics

    • What medio-lateral balance really means in farriery
    • Common misconceptions around “level” feet
    • Why functional balance matters more than visual symmetry
    • Static assessment: what to observe before lifting the foot
    • Using the coronary band, hoof capsule, and growth patterns as indicators
    • Assessing medio-lateral balance through the long axis
    • Dynamic assessment at walk and trot
    • Understanding landing patterns, stance phase, and breakover
    • How discipline and surface influence medio-lateral forces
    • Conformational faults and their impact on hoof loading
    • Toe-in, toe-out, base narrow, and base wide horses explained
    • The role of radiography in accurate balance assessment
    • Forelimb assessment and weight-bearing considerations
    • Hindlimb assessment and propulsion-related imbalances
    • Pathologies linked to chronic medio-lateral imbalance
    • Trimming strategies: restraint, precision, and gradual correction
    • Shoeing options for managing imbalance
    • Bar shoes, spiral lifts, pads, and frog support explained
    • Long-term management versus short-term correction
    • Key take-home messages for farriers and hoofcare professionals

    🎯 Who This Episode Is For

    • Working farriers
    • Farriery apprentices and students
    • Equine vets and therapists
    • Educators and exam candidates
    • Horse owners interested in hoof biomechanics

    🧠 Key Takeaways

    • Medio-lateral balance is functional, not cosmetic
    • Visual symmetry does not always equal correct loading
    • Conformation dictates how forces travel through the limb
    • Long-axis assessment is critical for accurate evaluation
    • Radiography can reveal hidden imbalances within the foot
    • Over-correction can be as damaging as no correction
    • Small, incremental changes produce the best long-term outcomes

    🔧 Practical Skills Covered

    • Static and dynamic balance assessment
    • Long-axis limb evaluation
    • Identifying compensatory hoof distortions
    • Interpreting wear patterns and landing preferences
    • Selecting appropriate trimming and shoeing strategies

    Support the show

    To order your hardback copy of The Hoofcare Companion visit:

    Store | thefarrier

    For an eBook version visit here:

    The Hoofcare Companion (eBook Edition) eBook : Jerram, Marc: Amazon.co.uk: Books


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    24 m
  • Episode 10 - Hoof Wall Cracks
    Dec 31 2025

    Hoof wall cracks are one of the most commonly encountered yet frequently misunderstood conditions in equine hoof care. In this episode of The Hoofcare Companion, Marc Jerram takes an in-depth look at hoof wall cracks, breaking down the different types, why they occur, how they affect soundness, and how farriers and veterinarians can work together to manage them effectively.

    From superficial cosmetic defects to painful, performance-limiting cracks, this episode explains how hoof anatomy, biomechanics, trimming, shoeing, environment, and nutrition all play a role. Listeners will gain a clearer understanding of how to assess cracks both statically and dynamically, when veterinary diagnostics are required, and what realistic long-term outcomes look like.

    Whether you’re a farrier, veterinary professional, student, or an owner wanting a deeper understanding of hoof health, this episode provides practical, evidence-based insight grounded in real-world hoof care.

    What You’ll Learn in This Episode

    In this episode, we discuss:

    • What hoof wall cracks are and why they develop
    • The anatomy and biomechanics of the hoof wall
    • Vertical versus horizontal hoof wall cracks
    • Complete and incomplete cracks explained
    • Sensitive and non-sensitive cracks and their clinical relevance
    • Toe cracks and quarter cracks: why location matters
    • Common mechanical, environmental, nutritional, and pathological causes
    • Recognising clinical signs and indicators of pain
    • Static visual assessment of hoof wall cracks
    • Dynamic assessment and how movement influences crack progression
    • When and why veterinary diagnostics are required
    • Trimming principles for managing cracked hooves
    • Shoeing strategies to stabilise and unload the hoof capsule
    • Long-term management strategies and realistic prognosis

    Who This Episode Is For

    This episode is particularly relevant for:

    • Registered and apprentice farriers
    • Equine veterinarians and vet nurses
    • Farriery and equine science students
    • Hoof care professionals
    • Owners managing horses with recurring hoof wall issues

    Key Takeaway

    Hoof wall cracks are rarely a simple surface problem. Effective management depends on understanding hoof biomechanics, identifying the underlying causes, and applying consistent, long-term farriery and management strategies rather than short-term cosmetic fixes.

    Support the show

    To order your hardback copy of The Hoofcare Companion visit:

    Store | thefarrier

    For an eBook version visit here:

    The Hoofcare Companion (eBook Edition) eBook : Jerram, Marc: Amazon.co.uk: Books


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    16 m
  • Christmas Special - How to shoe a racehorse
    Dec 25 2025

    In this Christmas Special of The Hoofcare Companion, host Marc Jerram reflects on the demands of elite racehorse farriery while thanking listeners for their incredible support throughout 2025. This episode takes a deep dive into the specialised art and science of shoeing the Thoroughbred racehorse — an athlete operating at the absolute limits of biomechanical performance.

    From breed-specific hoof challenges to trimming protocols, shoe selection, and the key differences between flat and National Hunt racing, this episode brings together practical farriery insight with evidence-based understanding. Whether you’re working on the track, in training yards, or managing performance horses in other disciplines, this episode highlights how precision hoofcare underpins soundness, performance, and career longevity.

    🎙️ What You’ll Hear in This Episode

    • Why racehorse farriery is different
      Understanding the extreme forces placed on the hoof at racing speeds and why small errors can have major consequences.
    • Thoroughbred hoof characteristics
      Thin walls, shallow soles, long pasterns, and how selective breeding for speed influences hoof integrity and injury risk.
    • Static & dynamic hoof assessment
      The importance of evaluating balance, hoof–pastern axis, landing patterns, breakover, and how movement reveals issues unseen at rest.
    • Conservative trimming protocols
      Why horn preservation is critical in racehorses and how functional balance matters more than cosmetic symmetry.
    • Shoes & shoeing strategies
      Aluminium vs steel shoes, toe clips, breakover modifications, heel support, and surface-specific considerations.
    • Flat racing vs National Hunt shoeing
      Key differences in speed, endurance, traction, durability, and how shoeing strategies adapt between disciplines.
    • Common Thoroughbred foot problems
      Thin soles, underrun heels, white line disease, poor horn quality, and how farriery plays a preventative role.
    • Collaboration in elite hoofcare
      The importance of teamwork between farrier, veterinarian, and trainer in managing soundness and performance.

    🎄 Christmas Message

    Marc also takes a moment to thank listeners, guests, and supporters for being part of The Hoofcare Companion throughout 2025, wishing everyone a Merry Christmas and all the best for a sound, successful, and progressive 2026.

    🎧 Who This Episode Is For

    • Farriers working with racehorses or performance horses
    • Equine veterinarians and students
    • Trainers and industry professionals
    • Anyone interested in elite hoof biomechanics and applied farriery

    📌 Subscribe & Support

    If you’ve enjoyed The Hoofcare Companion this year, please subscribe, share the podcast with colleagues, and leave a review — your support helps keep evidence-based hoofcare conversations moving forward.

    Support the show

    To order your hardback copy of The Hoofcare Companion visit:

    Store | thefarrier

    For an eBook version visit here:

    The Hoofcare Companion (eBook Edition) eBook : Jerram, Marc: Amazon.co.uk: Books


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    15 m