NinjaPony
Well-Known Member
^^ Good point. I don't worry about heating up his legs normally, but when we get a rare heatwave I prefer to keep the bandages off, or use my open fronted, ventilated tendon boots instead...
To put things into perspective, i bandage my horses for work, but thats for 35/45mins 3/4 times a week, not excessive amounts of time in the scheme of things. If you look at a horses boots (as the picture earlier in the thread illustrates) its very rare to see an unscuffed boot, which shows how much the horse can knock itself. I ride big moving warmbloods and i dont want them to loose confidence and limit their movement because they are worried about knocking themselves, for example working on lateral work with youngsters, they can easily catch themselves if they loose balance etc. Or in the piaffe they may sit too much and get their legs in a bit of a knot and move too close and knock themselves. So for me, its worth the short amount of time in the horses week to have that protection, and i do instant cold straight afterwards everytime.
and indeed in some cases, boots actually amplified (increased) the damage.
Interesting link AN.
Scary. I wonder which makes and models of boots were worse than no boots?
I wonder if we see marks on boots though because the boots make the legs wider than the horse things it is.
This is what I always wonder.
To put things into perspective, i bandage my horses for work, but thats for 35/45mins 3/4 times a week, not excessive amounts of time in the scheme of things. If you look at a horses boots (as the picture earlier in the thread illustrates) its very rare to see an unscuffed boot, which shows how much the horse can knock itself. I ride big moving warmbloods and i dont want them to loose confidence and limit their movement because they are worried about knocking themselves, for example working on lateral work with youngsters, they can easily catch themselves if they loose balance etc. Or in the piaffe they may sit too much and get their legs in a bit of a knot and move too close and knock themselves. So for me, its worth the short amount of time in the horses week to have that protection, and i do instant cold straight afterwards everytime.
What about human athletes. I'm thinking skiers with big socks and ski boots. Runneis ts with socks and trainers (trainers make feet so sweaty yuk), and footballers with their socks and shin guards.
I know it's different but it's also kind of not different.. are human foot, ankle tendon injuries in elite athletes any more likely to be made worse by having hot feet and legs?
Why bandage though rather than boot? You can get boots which have been proven to provide protection and are also vented so are cooler than bandages. Also having seen more than one horse with a tendon injury through poor bandaging, there is less risk using boots (so long as they fit, but once fitted you don't have to worry about who is putting them on). Also when removing, taking boots off is much quicker and less risky (particularly with a young horse in a busy warm up).
So why would you use bandages over boots if you are using them for protection? Obviously its personal preference, and if its purely because you like the look of bandages than that is fine (some people prefer top hat to crash hat)