Tips For Top-Notch Hoof Care

Certified Journeyman Farrier Sean Elliott shoes horses that compete in a myriad of disciplines. He offers tips to promote hoof health and notes some things to avoid. Sean says the top three things healthy hooves need are good nutrition, a dry environment and balance.

Proper nutrition will give a horse the building blocks he needs to have quality feet. Sean recommends good hay, clean water and a ration balancer, and he discourages owners and caretakers from adding supplements just to use them if they claim they can make a difference in hoof quality. He reminds horse owners and caretakers to treat each horse like an individual and that feeding programs aren't one size fits all.

First and foremost, horses shouldn't stand for extended periods of time in mud or wet conditions, Sean says. He also recommends that horses not be bathed daily, which can strip hooves of oil essential to keeping them healthy. Sean also isn't a fan of topical hoof treatments, noting that a dry environment is more essential than anything that could be applied to the hooves.

Hooves should be seen by a qualified farrier every four to six weeks to ensure that the hoof capsule is placed correctly underneath the horse's leg. Routine trims will also deal with issues like long toes and flares in the hoof wall. Sean notes that a good farrier must have a grasp of equine anatomy and conformation, as well as understand the biomechanics of how hooves handle concussion.

Each hoof should be trimmed to be in balance and not to create hooves that look like they match one another. Shoes should be shaped to the foot and not the foot shaped to the shoe, Sean says.

Hooves can crack because the toe is too long, the heel is underrun or because the horse has been standing in a too-wet environment. Though most cracks aren't a big deal, ones that go all the way through the hoof capsule or all the way up to the hairline require an intervention by a farrier.

Contracted heels are also a common issue and are most often caused by improper hoof balance, which can affect blood flow and hoof expansion. Abscess can be startling to see as the horse tends to become suddenly, severely lame. Sean suggests that genetics may predispose a horse to abscesses and thin soles can exacerbate the problem. Abscesses are most common during spring and wet winter months, when moisture softens the hoof and the foot becomes bruised, which can lead to an abscess.

Read more at Equine Guelph.

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Imperial Hint To Stand At Clear Creek Stud In Louisiana For 2021

Clear Creek Stud is proud to announce their new stallion for 2021 in Imperial Hint (Imperialism-Royal Hint)

The son of Grade 2 winner Imperialism, Imperial Hint earned in excess of $2.2 million while winning 11 graded stakes including four Grade 1 stakes.

He twice won both the Grade 1 Alfred G. Vanderbilt at Saratoga Race Course and the G1 Vosburgh at Belmont Park. In the 2019 edition of the Alfred G. Vanderbilt he set a new track record running six furlongs in 1:07.92, getting the half mile in 44.21, while beating Eclipse Award-winning male sprinter, Mitole.

Also on his list of accomplishments is the G2 True North Stakes and the G3 Smile Sprint Stakes. In the Donald LeVine Memorial Stakes at Parx Racing he ran six furlongs in 1:07.55 with the half mile clocked in 43.81.

Imperial Hint recorded triple-digit Beyer Speed Figures eleven times in his career with a high of 114.

Imperial Hint will be syndicated with shares available that will grant shareholders seven breedings in his first four years at stud plus bonus seasons after that. Shareholders participate in both stallion awards and stud fees from excess seasons sold.

Imperial Hint will stand the 2021 breeding season at Clear Creek Stud for a fee of $2,500 payable Sept. 1.

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Steady Trade as Book 4 Opens at Keeneland September

The Keeneland September Yearling Sale opened its first of two Book 4 sessions with a workmanlike day of trade in Lexington Sunday. C.J. Johnsen made the day’s highest bid, going to $210,000 to acquire a filly by Ghostzapper (hip 2342) for his CJ Thoroughbreds. Three yearlings tied for the day’s second highest price of $190,000: a colt by Maclean’s Music and a pair of colts by first-crop sire Unified. A total of 31 yearlings brought six figures on the day.

In all, 237 yearlings sold Sunday for $11,516,500. The session average was $48,593 and the median was $40,000. The auction’s buy-back rate continued to fall, with 85 horses reported not sold Sunday for a buy-back rate of 26.4%.

During last year’s first Book 4 session, which was held on the eighth day of sale, 272 head grossed $15,448,700 for an average of $56,797 and a median of $41,000. The buy-back rate for the session was 27.85%.

The Keeneland September sale continues through Friday with sessions beginning daily at 10 a.m.

Ghostzapper Filly to CJ Thoroughbreds

Corey and C. J. Johnsen’s CJ Thoroughbreds struck late to secure a filly by Ghostzapper (hip 2342) for a session-topping $210,000 Sunday at Keeneland. Consigned by Peter O’Callaghan’s Woods Edge Farm, the yearling is out of multiple stakes winner Saxet Heights (Outflanker). Bred by SF Bloodstock, she was purchased by O’Callaghan for $130,000 at the 2019 Keeneland November sale.

“We’ve been on her since yesterday and she’s kind of one of those I kept falling in love more and more with her. So I’m glad it worked out,” said C. J. Johnsen.

Of the filly’s appeal, Johnsen said, “You can’t go wrong with Ghostzapper. And then the pedigree, the first three dams are very strong. When I first saw it, I thought, ‘An Outflanker mare?’ And I thought I had to do some research on Outflanker, but it turns out that, even though the sample size for the cross is small, it has produced two 2-year-old winners out of the three that have been on that cross. So the pedigree was just enough for us to go for it because physically, she is absolutely gorgeous.”

The filly will be trained by Wesley Ward.

CJ Thoroughbreds has purchased six yearlings-all fillies–at the September sale, led by a $335,000 daughter of War Front (hip 5) during the auction’s first session.

“We race them and then we sell them as broodmares when we retire them,” Johnsen said of the operation. “That’s our business plan. We buy only fillies with strong pedigrees by proven sires and then we sell them as broodmares. I think she is the 11th filly we’ve bought this year and we have one more to go.”

Johnsen said he has found the Keeneland marketplace this week to be unpredictable.

“It’s been strange. When we’ve thought we wouldn’t be able to afford a horse, we have been able to and then when we thought we could afford a horse, we were blown out of the water,” he said. “Day one, we bought three horses and didn’t think we’d be able to afford any of them. And we came away with all of them for much less than we thought. And then on day two, I don’t think we bought anything because we’d think, ‘Oh, this one is going to go for $250,000,’ and it goes for $450,000. So it’s been really unpredictable.”

More Music for Robison

When Jackie’s Warrior (Maclean’s Music) romped home in the Sept. 7 GI Runhappy Hopeful S. at Saratoga, he gave owners Kirk and Judy Robison their first Grade I winner in over two decades in the sport. The Robisons, who purchased the colt for $95,000 at last year’s Keeneland September sale, added another colt by Maclean’s Music to their roster when trainer Steve Asmussen signed the ticket on their behalf at $190,000 to acquire hip 2038 Sunday at Keeneland.

“Steve Asmussen is at the sale buying for me and he trains for me in the East,” Kirk Robison said from his home in El Paso Sunday afternoon. “He loves Maclean’s Music and we have the really good 2-year-old colt. Sometimes buyers go back to what horses worked for them before; the same stud, the same family and they have confidence. I think they also know what a certain stud should look like. And if they look like that horse, I think they like them even more.”

Hip 2038 is out of stakes-placed Yes Liz (Yes It’s True) and was consigned by the Vanlangendonck’s Summerfield on behalf of Barbara Banke’s Stonestreet Thoroughbred Holdings.

“Stonestreet is going to stay in for half the colt,” Robison said. “Steve called me about an hour ago and said they’d like to stay in for half. I said go ahead and we got him. We’ve never had a partner, but who is better to partner with than Stonestreet?”

Robison purchased four yearlings during Sunday’s session of the September sale. In addition to hip 2038, he purchased a filly by More Than Ready (hip 2078) for $75,000, a filly by Kantharos (hip 2249) for $75,000, and a colt by Street Boss (hip 2043) for $37,000.

“We are pretty picky on the vetting. We don’t have to have a perfect vet, but we’ve got to have something that works,” Robison said of his buying goals. “The ones that have to have a chip removed right off the bat are not the kind I want. I want a horse that can get to the races early and show us what they can do.”

Robison, who owns a string of pizza restaurants in Texas, continued, “We are still shopping. We want horses who are going to be early and who are sound. Steve is a pretty good judge of that and he doesn’t get too carried away because he knows what price point I’m comfortable with. If he has to stretch a little bit, I let him do that. I don’t try to micromanage him because he has such a good track record.”

Asmussen is signing tickets for Robison in the name of Downstream Racing, a tribute to the next generation of racing fans in the family.

“Those are my grandchildren-they are getting old enough now I got a license for all of them in California this summer to go to the races at Del Mar, and then of course COVID hit and it’s limited,” Robison explained. “So Downstream Racing is our grandchildren and their ownership in horses now.”

Jackie’s Warrior, pointing for the Oct. 10 GI Champagne S. at Belmont Park, worked five furlongs at Saratoga Sunday in 1:02.91 (10/19).

“He looks fantastic, he’s happy and I trust [assistant trainer] Scott [Blasi] and Steve get him to race on time and I think he’ll run well,” Robison said

Of his colt’s impressive Hopeful victory, Robison said, “I had never had a Grade I winner until him. I’ve only been in a handful of Grade I races and never been lucky enough to win one, so I know how hard it is. I don’t care how much money you’re spending or what kind of mares you’re breeding, it’s hard to get a Grade I winner. So when you get one and they win so easily and he runs a faster seven-eighths than any other Hopeful has been run, well you get all of that wrapped together and he’s so sound, it’s amazing. He won at Churchill and he won twice at Saratoga, we think he’ll run well anywhere. Hopefully he’ll run well at Belmont.”

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