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    Teague Farrier Service

    5.0 (1 review)
    Closed 3:00 pm - 6:00 PM

    Services - Teague Farrier Service

    Farriers

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    4 years ago

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    McGuire Horseshoeing - After

    McGuire Horseshoeing

    (3 reviews)

    I grabbed Alex while he was at my new barn and asked if he could trim my ottb barefoot mare. He…read moremade time for me even though I hadn't scheduled an appointment. His apprentice (I don't recall her name ...sorry) did Lydia's feet and she did great re-balancing her. I liked that he talked me through the process. I'll definitely go with McGuire Horseshoeing again.

    I was referred to Alex for his greatness in balancing a hoof, by a friend who he helped her sore…read morehorse. I have 2 horses, one has thin soles, one who is sound and never taken a lame step in her life... until Alex. He shod my "sore" horse first. Little sore still, not his fault. He then shod my SOUND mare, who trotted off LAME. Tried to "fix it" only for her to be worse. "I don't know why she is lame, she is balanced" he said. I am not complaining for my "sore horse" that was sore. I am complaining for my SOUND horse, that is now lame. 2 days later, vet x-rays Confirm BOTH my horses are unbalanced. He may be helpful in taking a lame horse, to a lesser lame. However, he can sure take a sound horse and lame it up. I have multiple pictures and videos prior to him shoeing them, as well as multiple after. MULTIPLE farriers have since messaged me, commenting on his lack of balancing a hoof, taking both my horses extremely too short, and toe pressure. His wife, has since accused me of "setting Alex up, with intending to make a fuss" All because I asked for one shoeing back. I never complained about BOTH my horses being unbalanced and sore, only the ONE horse that has NEVER taken a lame step. IF you are going to use Alex, I hope you proceed with caution. Pictures attached are the before and afters.

    Jackpot Veterinary Center - Dr. Mackenzie performing equine surgery

    Jackpot Veterinary Center

    (84 reviews)

    Friendly staff, very helpful. I started going here when our previous close their doors. Was…read morerecommended by a friend very happy with them

    I had a heartbreaking and deeply disappointing experience at Jackpot Veterinary Center. I brought…read moremy dog Elio in on April 11 with serious and sudden changes in behavior: lethargy, urinating in the house, and sleeping in odd places. Dr. Grady dismissed these symptoms as signs of aging and did not run any diagnostics, not even basic bloodwork. Less than three weeks later, Elio passed away from undetected abdominal cancer. What followed made everything worse. I reached out multiple times to express my concerns and grief and was met with silence for nearly three weeks. Arianna Carter, the practice manager, eventually responded but made repeated attempts to call me despite my being Deaf and having made it abundantly clear, verbally and in writing, that I can only communicate by email or text. This disregard for my access needs added to my pain and made me feel completely disrespected. Even after I explicitly requested email communication, I was still told a phone call had been attempted and only then received a generic response explaining the nature of the cancer. While I appreciate the medical explanation, it did not address the lack of urgency, the poor communication, or the failure to acknowledge the harm caused by their delay. I'm sharing this not out of spite, but because I would not want another pet owner, especially one who is Deaf or disabled, to go through what I did. I hope Jackpot Veterinary Center takes a serious look at how they handle client communication, medical concerns, and accessibility.

    Full Circle Horse Training

    Full Circle Horse Training

    (2 reviews)

    Aldo did a 30 day refresher for our rescue Arab, who was seemingly…read moreunlungable/unmountable/unrideable. He was amazingly patient yet insistent on the result I was looking for and kept every promise he made. I've had just two months of riding lessons with him and Aldo had my horse and I going down the trail in the 30 days we agreed to. Would highly recommend Aldo for training with any horse or person for riding lessons/horsemanship - highly knowledgeable, honest and will do exactly what he says/promises. I'm a beginner - he's provided so much knowledge for myself and my daughter via horsemanship lessons and has been incredibly patient with my learning curve. We couldn't be happier working with him!

    I'll explain my issue in detail because I think it's important to understand just how bad it was…read moreand how much progress Aldo made in just 1 visit. I purchased a 3-4 year old mare recently knowing I'd have to put a little training into her. She was barefoot (never shoed), I was told she had not had her back feet trimmed because she would not let the farrier handle them, and the last time they had her fronts trimmed it had "been a fight"... and this is only a 13.1hh horse! Her previous owner had worked with her but made no progress and for that reason just wanted her gone. I myself had helped friends with their large horses who had issues with their back hooves being touched, I've helped them teach their horses to stand still, allow their feet to be touched and I have even helped them twitch a couple horses when needed. But THIS mare would not relax, twitching did not work and she did not just try to pull her feet away (as my friends horses would do) she would actually try to swing her rear towards you and intentionally kick out at you if you reached towards the rears, she'd also attempt to bite you in the back if you tried to handle the fronts. Other than this foot issue she is actually very sweet and has decent ground manners. Her fronts were in bad shape when I got her to my stables so I had a farrier out the very next day. The morning of his visit I gave her some magnesium and a light sedative to help calm her, even with sedatives I had to hold her head to prevent her from biting while he worked on her fronts which she continuously pulled away from him, he said he would try the back feet last because he "had a feeling" she was going to lose it when it came time for the rears, well, he made 1 attempt to pick up a rear hoof and she made it very clear it wasn't going to happen, so once again she went without her rears getting done. I had another trainer come out, he spent some time with her but never even put hands on the rear legs, he actually looked perplexed about how to go about the issue because she kept kicking at him, he said he thought she might have had a bad experience previously because she was abnormally apprehensive, he made NO progress and his only advise was that if I was going to have him come out again that he would like me to ride her for 40 minutes prior to his visit to get rid of some of her energy ($40 down the drain). Then I had Aldo come out, although it seemed everyone else who dealt with her felt like she was a special case and weren't sure how to handle her, he knew exactly what to do. Being that she is a mare with a little attitude, I was glad to see she became comfortable around him pretty quickly and after doing a few exercises she had no issues allowing him to pick up her fronts. By the end of the lesson he was able have her stand free and untied and lift her front feet fairly effortlessly, she would also stand still and allow him to touch her back legs which she had not done before. He had also taught her to "stand" still on command, I wasn't sure she'd remember the "stand" command after his lesson but she has totally retained it and it has come in handy quite a few times since the lesson! She also has continued to allow us to lift her front feet. I was thrilled to have undeniable results after just a single lesson and would highly recommend Aldo for any horse training needs.

    Teague Farrier Service - farriers - Updated May 2026

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