no i dont think so ive mixed it with vegetable oil and have been using it like thea on my horse for 13 years now and it has not affected her if any it has really helped her hooves.
I don't even know what Stockholm tar is but I'm willing to bet that someone, somewhere is allergic to it. With as many people as there are in the world, someone is allergic to just about anything you can think of.
Call your farrier! He should have the answers. For dry and brittle hooves, coat in oil daily to soak in moisture. Stockholme tar and cornucrescent is excellent for dry cracked hooves.
Stockholm tar could help to make your cat water repellent, although the cat may not like having tar on it's fur. One also might consider that coating your cat with tar could lead to spots of tar all over your house. It does smell nice though. Alternatively you could use waterpump grease on all overhead surfaces and don't wear pants in the house.
It can be, depending upon the formulation of the pine tar, the concentration, and the amount consumed by the horse. Concentrated pine tar is pretty bitter, so most horses won't eat it unless forced to. Pine sap, on the other hand, is fairly safe for horses.
Yes, that's why i don't chew gum. All sweets ( including Gum) have Pigs, Cows, or horses hooves in them. Sweets have Gelatin in them. Harribos have lots more than other sweets though.
I have never heard of such a remedy. Pine tar is often used to keep a horse's hoof healthy, but to pack it with tar is something else entirely.
Tar is a noun (the tar) and a verb (to tar).
In maths terms tar tar is another word for calculus
tar mummies are mummies that were preserved in tar
It was the neck tar tar tar
It wasn't. Two types of tar exist naturally: Petroleum tar and Pine tar.
Tar has no patron saint. There is no patron saint of tar. Of course ther is a paitron saint of Tar. Jack Tar is a name for a sailor. Tar's patron saint is St Elmo