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[RC] FW: Colorado State University Veterinary Students Attend Hoof Workshop with Dr. Tomas Teskey - StephTeeter


(forwarded on behalf of Tomas Teskey)


From: Tomas Teskey [mailto:tteskey@xxxxxxxx]
Sent: Friday, March 04, 2005 1:39 PM
Subject: hoof news

Colorado State University Veterinary Students
Attend Hoof Workshop with Dr. Tomas Teskey

I had the honor of speaking with 50 veterinary students at the teaching
hospital at Colorado State University this past weekend. My wife, Lora, and
Martha Olivo were also present at Saturday morning's lecture and slide-show
presentation, "The Unfettered Foot; A paradigm change for equine podiatry"
where the latest cutting edge information on horses and their hooves was
presented. The Equine Club provided a great lunch for all who attended, and
that afternoon, the students looked on as I demonstrated a trim and
dissection for them under a camera that projected all the images on to the
big screen at the front of the lecture hall. I was impressed with all the
students' interest in the information, and each busily took notes in the
folders I provided. I explored with them the differences between unhealthy,
shod hooves and healthy, unfettered hooves, going through my new outline
which presents the information in a very simple, easy to remember format.
Lora took pictures to document the occasion and Martha spoke about the
importance of providing proper environment for horses, describing her latest
"infinity environment" design and how it works with the nature of the horses
to keep them sound. All equine club students and clinicians were invited to
attend, and though no veterinarians attended the lecture, I was not in the
least discouraged with the experience. A couple of the professors I
corresponded with via email prior to this meeting were quite fearful of what
might be presented, but all of these students, many with a great deal of
equine experience, were riveted on the presentation. Many students came up
to me after Saturday's presentation and dissection and were just bubbling
with questions. Several indicated that they were convinced that what they
had seen was true and both their own horses and horses they would care for
in the future would be so much more healthy and sound because of what they
had just learned. This is what it was all about, and I felt very humbled
that these soon-to-be veterinarians were so honest and willing to admit that
conventional hoof care causes such great harm to the horses. They all
learned that a shod horse can not possibly be looked at as sound, given the
terrible changes in form and function that occur--rather a sound horse is
"one free from pain that can walk, trot and canter with animation and
impulsion on unfettered feet." It was also apparent the students' horror in
discovering that conventional hoof care elevates the heels in both heel-sore
and laminitic horses! This is why I know that this past weekend's experience
will send big, juicy ripples around the world, influencing countless people
and helping horses everywhere.
Sunday, thirty five of the 50 students came back to participate in a
"wet-lab", where we all took up tools and worked on trimming and dissecting
cadaver limbs that had been stockpiled prior to my arrival. Of course there
were many diseased hooves and legs, but each provided an opportunity to
demonstrate the power of natural trimming techniques and how the hooves
would have benefitted from correct hoof care. The enthusiasm was once again
bubbling throughout the lab as Martha and I went from team to team helping
the students find important landmarks and use good technique. Given that
many of these students had never taken up a rasp or hoof knife, they all
were able to trim their hoof and dissect it to appreciate how form and
function come together to keep the horse sound. The excited chatter and
looks of wonder are forever imprinted in my mind...what they learned those
two days was truly monumental.
Sunday afternoon, I ventured out with six students to consult on a young
horse, uncomfortable and having trouble since moving to the area this past
Fall. The horse belonged to one of the students that attended Saturday's
lecture, and she could now accurately describe for me what she was
previously unaware of with her horse's hooves: there was a two to three
degree change in the angle of growth a third of the way down the hooves and
the heels were too high, indicating the horse had suffered a mild founder.
We mapped out the hooves, reduced heel height by a quarter inch and removed
the flare towards the ground. "Roxanne", previously "mean" to anybody trying
to trim her, was a complete doll after tending to her left front foot, and I
finished up all four over about an hour's time (we had to do a lot of
talking while we worked). She walked off with a spring in her step that she
had earlier been denied given the poor form, and so yet another horse was
set on the path of honest soundness.
This past weekend will go down in history as the first purely veterinary
audience at a veterinary college to be exposed to the truth about hoof
health, and this Spring marks my tenth year since graduating from Colorado
State University. It was especially fitting being able to go back to my alma
mater to share some of what I've learned out "in the real world". This
completes a cycle of learning and experience in an important way, and I have
"handed off batons" to a bunch of new recruits that will branch out and
bring their own special healing touch to horses that so desperately want and
deserve to be sound.
I look forward to talking to more veterinary students at all the veterinary
schools around the world, as well as groups of veterinarians eager to learn
about the hoof. When they learn that I could shoe a horse at 14 years old
and ride in the roughest terrain with shod horses, but can now accomplish
the same work with greater efficiency while preserving the horses' health
and doing NO HARM, they, like these veterinary students, will become
advocates for appropriate hoof care.
"The deformed and shod hoof is a sad and sorry sight,
Harmful to the horse.
The Unfettered Foot is a joy to behold,
And does no harm, of course."
Dr. Tomas Teskey D.V.M
tteskey@xxxxxxxx


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