The Accidental Smallholder Forum
Livestock => Sheep => Topic started by: JMB on October 13, 2013, 03:49:50 pm
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Hello .
This is probably going to be a daft question, but here goes anyway.
One of my sheep has what appears to be Shelly hoof. There is now a gap big enough for my finger between his toes and his hoof wall. I've dug out the muck and sprayed it, but I'm not sure if I should have cut the separated hoof bit off completely???
I assume if not it will keep filling with dirt? But if I pare it right back I'm worried it'll expose his foot more? That's the daft question, sorry.
And is there anything else I should be doing to help it heal and grow back?
And to prevent it happening again? ( we don't use a foot vaccination or a foot bath or anything)
Thanks
Joanne xxxx
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Youv'e answered your own question yes it will just fill up again , you will find that when you cut it back that areaof the toe exposed to dirt will already have hardened slightly so shouln't be raw . You can buy licks with zinc to harden the hoof but it may not help
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Thank you for your reply xxxx
I'll have a look at the mineral licks.
I wasn't sure if foot bathing had any effect on Shelly hoof, but I think not.
Thanks again
Joanne xxxx
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I recommend trimming back only if the hoof is actually curling around under the clee, making a sideways pocket as well as an upward one. I have heard that cleaning it out thoroughly and filling the pocket with hoof putty (cattle variety) can help. Our sheep have had it occasionally but if you can keep them off muddy ground it grows out in about three months. More likely to be a problem in summer, when can attract flies to lay.
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With a foot being constantly exposed to damp and muddy ground you'd be constantly unclogging the gap of dirt if you don't trim or exposing the softer sole to the sheep equivalent of athletes foot (scald)if you do. I'd trim back the hoof wall as if there was no gap firstly, then scrape out as much icky pooey muddy stuf as you can with the point of a foot trimming knife. Get a bucket of water inc antiseptic disinfectant and a kitchen washing up brush and clean out the gap thoroughly (think nail brushes and fingernails-get right in there) then stand your sheep on dry bedding to allow hoof to dry, then spray with terramycin/alamycin (antibiotic) spray which should treat any potential infection (it has a drying out effect too) and greatly protect against nasties getting in and doing their worst.
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I had this last year with one of my sheep limping on and off. Eventually I followed advice and trimmed the hoof wall right back so there was no cavity for dirt, rather than my usual, timid, just the easy-to-trim of bits, and she was right as rain the next day and had no further trouble.
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Took my goats for CAE testing last week (left a bit too late as usual) and while there I asked about this very thing. the goat was limping slightly and I'd started to trim wall right back but chickened out, worried I was overtrimming. Vet said the obvious, I had been doing right, if I didn't trim the wall right up, just more and more dirt would be forced up into the cavity, making it worse. I'd used a plastic scrubbing brush, but that didn't get far enough up the gap.
There is a thread somewhere which mentions copper, depending on whether you're on copper deficient land I believe even sheep need some? (hope sheep keepers will come back about this).
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Hmm I've been scared of the hard trim too. Good to hear a vet okaying it. Does the foot not suffer with boggy ground conditions though being exposed like that? Have to add, any flappy bits of hoof wall (sometimes it happens wih sheepy feet like it does with our fingernails) get readily removed and the foot doesn't appear to suffer. Think I've just answered my own question there..........
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If you keep the lower blade of the footshears flat against the sole the cut will always be proud of the sole and you won't go too deep.