Some have asked if this is an older upload because of the nice weather. This was filmed today. We are down in Mexico putting on some clinics. Sunny and 75 with some great farriers from Mexico! Thanks for watching!
@user-ho5yw1lu7hАй бұрын
Be safe! And safe trip home!
@stephanieparker1250Ай бұрын
I was literally about to say, what amazing weather!! ❤❤
@oldmennewgamesАй бұрын
Love it that you build the shoe from scratch, and teach the students all the elements of a farrier.
@idahohorseshoeingschoolАй бұрын
Thanks! It’s tough but really rewarding to build something useful and beautiful.
@lindahollister5530Ай бұрын
I will agree. Nice job. ❤❤
@348TobicoАй бұрын
Beautiful job from start to finish. It is pretty obvious from your channel name that you are a school---a teaching facility. You SHOULD be showing shoeing from scratch for goodness sake! I would love to see a follow up on this horse and the frog prolapse.
@idahohorseshoeingschoolАй бұрын
We are hopeful to see some good heel growth! Keep you guys in the loop!
@CindyHuotАй бұрын
Building your own shoe is an art that needs to come back!!
@KateandBreeАй бұрын
As an equestrian with a huge interest in all parts of caring for horses, I love seeing you build horseshoes from scratch. I feel like it's very much an art and a science. It's nice to see such great feet!
@GrainneDhub-ll6vwАй бұрын
If you don't make lots of shoes, you won't have the skills to make a shoe from scratch when you need to. And I've never known a farrier who could build a shoe from scratch that didn't make the occasional tool or objet d'art as needed or just for fun, either. My farrier made me a lovely standing lamp for my first marriage and I made sure to claim it when we divorced, 17 years later. Paul is gone now but I will have this wonderful memento of him and all the horses he shoed for me until I am gone myself.
@pamelaremel7477Ай бұрын
Wish farriers like you had been around when I was showing my "winging" mare! LOL I would rather pay for hand made over pre fab ones. Keep up the excellent work! Videos are getting more professional.
@huricane5184Ай бұрын
Building the custom shoe is a lost art that nobody wants to do or learn about. Keep up the original blacksmith ways thats been done for thousands of years before mass produced shoes. Never let that tradition die. Excellent work.
@zekec6088Ай бұрын
You're so awesome, what you do for horses. Coincidentally, I just mentioned your channel to an acquaintance of mine, yesterday at the food co-op, because they mentioned their friend who's new rescue horse was foundered. I always find your videos fascinating, and I hadn't seen you upload in a while. One of my dream professions but I don't think I'm physically strong enough at present.
@idahohorseshoeingschoolАй бұрын
Thank you! My wife and I are a 2 person team and it sometime takes a miracle for the schedules to line up with our kids to film and upload. Thanks so much for supporting us!
@khomo12Ай бұрын
It's always nice to see you posting! Great job!👍👍👍🐴🐴🐴
@traceyrossberg4640Ай бұрын
I enjoy your videos so much, love watching you make the horse shoe from scratch, just incredible, you really are a master of your craft, thank you for posting, and you lost your beard! Take care.👍💙🐎
@idahohorseshoeingschoolАй бұрын
The beard will be back! Thanks for watching and supporting our small channel!
@snailieАй бұрын
It might be the hard way, it might be the time consuming way, but it's the way of art and of a real craftsman. I absolutely love watching your videos and seeing you build all those horseshoes from scratch. I've had my own horse for over almost 15 years now and never once saw a farrier around here make a horseshoe from scratch...
@stephanieparker1250Ай бұрын
Wow that horse was so patient and trusting, he barely moved at all. Nearly forgot you were working on a living animal lol
@melissahyatt9626Ай бұрын
YAY! I love your videos the most and was just thinking today “hmm, I hope he puts another video out soon!”. Thanks!
@joykiser6673Ай бұрын
Loved this channel from the first time I found it. ❤
@zekec6088Ай бұрын
Indeed!
@idahohorseshoeingschoolАй бұрын
Thank you!
@nancybarnes9825Ай бұрын
I love how you work to these horses have a better life ❤😊
@sherinnovak729Ай бұрын
This horse certainly has a stretched out frog, but a prolapsed frog is a new one for me.
@user-je6ql5je3dАй бұрын
You are the best! You take your time. You think about what the horse needs! Thank you for all you do! I wish you lived in Georgia. "Be Safe"
@deborahgeorge3238Ай бұрын
I love the work you do. This was such a lovely result. I feel for you bending over all the time. Your poor back!
@TheSeptemberRoseАй бұрын
I LOVE watching all your videos! It's great to see old skills being used when so much of the world is under threat by A.I.
@nathanmoore1893Ай бұрын
These videos are very relaxing while being informative.
@art1muz13Ай бұрын
Thanks for the video, It's always nice to see you posting! Great job! Please, please, please do a follow-up video.
@sh8895Ай бұрын
You have my respect! Such a difficult physical job even if you aren't shoeing. Thankfully mine are all barefoot
@stevenbrooklyn4825Ай бұрын
Finally another video from you. Need more
@user-kr4hn5df4lАй бұрын
I love horses and I respect you from Japan!
@dawnmichelle4403Ай бұрын
I'd love to see a follow-up video of this horse. ❤
@jacky3580Ай бұрын
When I was a kid, I wasn’t convinced pulling shoes, trimming, nailing shoes didn’t hurt the horses and ponies.! I was probably 12 before I was totally convinced. Funny to remember this!
@user-ho5yw1lu7hАй бұрын
A: Love watching you guys' hammer skills! B: It takes skills to be a good farrier! If they don't know how to do without shortcuts and technology, I wouldn't have them do my critters! C: You guys are a school! Like any GOOD school your students should be getting the best education possible! I am pretty sure that culinary schools still start their students with one-handed egg opening and basic knofe skills! Don't worry about keyboard experts: They are not there! And if they are farriers, or call them self such, and don't know why you teach that way... Maybe they shouldn't be farriers and sure as hell not Instructors!
@harmonysprogressАй бұрын
So good to see a new video!!! Always a joy and learning experience!! Bridge
@MrDavePedАй бұрын
Wow. If I ever need my frog supported I know where to go. ..
@TheRinkbossАй бұрын
Beautiful work , always a pleasure to watch your videos.
@suellenspencer-eb2nvАй бұрын
Thank you for sharing your knowledge & teaching. ❤❤❤
@deziderhorvath9605Ай бұрын
Dobrá práce jseš jednicka některý koně jsou v strašným stavu koně i pláčou hrozný měj se krásně a hlavně zdraví Česko Michal 🇨🇿😎🤞🦊🐴🐴
@Silvio.S.Arruda0042Ай бұрын
Congratulations on your excellent work
@DoubleDogDare54Ай бұрын
Is this something you did just for one hoof, or was it on both fronts or all four?
@idahohorseshoeingschoolАй бұрын
Did it to both fronts! Thanks!
@DoubleDogDare54Ай бұрын
@@idahohorseshoeingschool Great job. I am always impressed by your skills!
@kingkong7617Ай бұрын
You did a great job on that horse shoe.
@Rural-ambala-HR04Ай бұрын
Love from HARYANA (India)
@CDBakerАй бұрын
Horses need arch support to I see.
@samgee7999Ай бұрын
I don’t think I’ve ever seen a horse shod with a saddle on. Does anyone know a reason besides, we got places to be right meow?
@idahohorseshoeingschoolАй бұрын
This was a students horse. Just needed To replace a lost shoe real quick before a rodeo.
@samgee7999Ай бұрын
@@idahohorseshoeingschool gotcha. thanks for the response. I'm not a farrier and don't intend on training to be one. But I love horses and your channel has taught me a lot about how to bettter care for my horses. thank you!
@julieoghesteneАй бұрын
X-ray it to see the grade of npa, correct that as much as possible by trimming, than use wedgepads to support the rest. Just by eye U can almost be sure that there is npa going on, and that is why the heels are bad
@rebeccab719Ай бұрын
Can someone explain what the purpose of the brush he hit against the finished shoe is? Just curious.
@Eroc224Ай бұрын
Is the charge more for a farrier making the shoe vs using cookie cutter shoes already made a lot use?
@idahohorseshoeingschoolАй бұрын
It usually comes down to time invested. This shoe can be built much faster with a factory shoe and a mig welder. It would probably be an extra $50-100 added to a regular shoe job for this modification! Thanks!
@Eroc224Ай бұрын
@@idahohorseshoeingschool great! Thank you for the answer!
@frednatural7310Ай бұрын
Is that approx. equal parts dental material?
@SasfootАй бұрын
Is this an older video and/or filmed offsite? It looks warm outside, Riley has no beard, and that's obviously a portable forge.
@idahohorseshoeingschoolАй бұрын
Nope! Just filmed it today. I am in Mexico shoeing horses and shaved my beard! Thanks for watching!
@SasfootАй бұрын
OK, cool. Also, I've seen you build heart bar shoes in other videos but never with frog support that long.
@supi-xd1lfАй бұрын
hello I am a video producer in Japan. Your videos are very fascinating and I really enjoy watching them. Now, getting to the main topic, I would like to introduce your video to everyone in Japan. If you'd like, please let me introduce your video to everyone in Japan. I am not yet able to post on this channel, but I plan to post more and more in the future. Thank you for your support 🙇
@pixie706Ай бұрын
If i have a sore foot then pressure from a shoe is painful .
@susanschmid2271Ай бұрын
@davidbowen60Ай бұрын
First I’m watching a ginger colour horse then at the end it’s a black horse? Then back to a ginger
@idahohorseshoeingschoolАй бұрын
Not sure what you are seeing but we moved my horse out while I was building the shoe and a student was shoeing a different one while I was forging.
@KateandBreeАй бұрын
This is a chestnut with bay (maybe black) socks. I'm going to go with bay socks. I've never seen a chestnut with black socks.
@l.c.9185Ай бұрын
Dont know why this career has to keep standing and bending all the time, so exhausted 😢