Haphazardhacker
Well-Known Member
As above really, have avoided mud fever so far but madam has four white socks so I want to pop some sort of barrier cream on to prevent. What do you lot all use? She comes in at night and field is revolting already.
I was on clay, horrid area for mud rash, for horses that were unaffected I used baby oil as a barrier (I had 3 white horses with pink skinned legs) Never washed legs, good straw bed and legs were as clean as a whistle the next morning.
With horses that already had mud rash scabs I would cover thickly with udder cream, wrap with cling film, bandage and leave for 24 hours. The scabs would come off cleanly. Horses would stay out of fields until legs healed and then I would do the baby oil thing.
Pig oil is pretty similar to baby oil but much cheaper. I buy 5 litres of pig oil for £22.50. I use a mug and a thick paintbrush and paint it on liberally knee down a few times a week.
So is the general consensus to get pig oil without sulphur?
I used with sulphur for about 5 years, across a range of horses. But last two winters, both my horses started losing hair on legs, by Jan / Feb. Not sore, just hair falling out. So I think they do react to sulphur eventually. Hence this year, I’ve finished the pig oil and sulphur I had left and moved on to just pig oil.
I think if your horse not sensitive to sulphur, pig oil and sulphur better, as has antibacterial properties.
Do you add 10ml of tea tree oil to 500ml of pig oil in a spray bottle and shake well? Something like this? http://www.superdrug.com/Superdrug/...gclid=COCurqOYyskCFYNQ2wodIF0Fiw&gclsrc=aw.dsI found the same - he started reacting to the sulphur. Pig oil alone was excellent on clean legs, but I started adding the tea tree oil when one of mine ad a few scabby bits, and that worked perfectly.
My favourite thing about pig oil is that you can hose mud off, and the legs stay dry!
Do you add 10ml of tea tree oil to 500ml of pig oil in a spray bottle and shake well? Something like this? http://www.superdrug.com/Superdrug/...gclid=COCurqOYyskCFYNQ2wodIF0Fiw&gclsrc=aw.ds
Have you used this on lots of horses with no bad reactions?
As above really, have avoided mud fever so far but madam has four white socks so I want to pop some sort of barrier cream on to prevent. What do you lot all use? She comes in at night and field is revolting already.