Grey horse cleaning

kaisius

Member
Joined
25 October 2019
Messages
26
Location
Norway
Visit site
I have had bay horses all my life so getting a dapple grey one suddenly has got me in shambles. What are the best cleaning products? And are there any good sport removers?

Also, have anyone tried the Haas brushes? I have wanted the for the longest time, but I would have to spend a lot of money so I just wondered if they are worth the price?
 

The Jokers Girl

Well-Known Member
Joined
12 July 2017
Messages
321
Visit site
Haas brushes are a total revolution. I invested in some about 3 years ago after being lent a set by another livery.
My horse is not grey but a skewbald who is very white on one side and I find the best thing for getting her stain free and gleaming without bathing is hot clothing. I use a couple of microfibre cloths, very hot water and supreme hot oil
 
Last edited:

dixie

Well-Known Member
Joined
11 August 2005
Messages
4,879
Location
Devon
Visit site
You could be me. I’ve had bay horses all my life and have just bought a beautiful dapple grey. He does seem to like laying his face in his droppings though ?‍♀️
 

kaisius

Member
Joined
25 October 2019
Messages
26
Location
Norway
Visit site
You could be me. I’ve had bay horses all my life and have just bought a beautiful dapple grey. He does seem to like laying his face in his droppings though ?‍♀️

I haven't gotten mine yet, vet check on Thursday so hopefully going to bring him home on Friday. I've been horseless for a few months so I'm just looking at everything I might need to buy for him???
 

Peregrine Falcon

Looking forward to drier days
Joined
1 July 2008
Messages
12,769
Location
Wiltshire
Visit site
Embrace the fact that unless it is rugged to the eyeballs and you bath it every day, you will have to learn to accept a stain or two. ?

They seem to relish scrubbing their head into the mud too. My old boy used to see me coming with a saddle and go and roll. You could almost see him smirking as I went to get him.

At shows I used Tesco's lemon antibacterial wipes. Removed stains a treat. ?
 

Meowy Catkin

Meow!
Joined
19 July 2010
Messages
22,635
Visit site
I have to agree with the above. :) A relaxed approach makes for a happy owner and I think a cleaner horse (they know all about rolling in the worst muck when their owner desperately wants them to be clean).
 

teddypops

Well-Known Member
Joined
9 March 2008
Messages
2,428
Visit site
I love greys, 4 out of my 8 are grey. I think it’s funny when they are filthy and they all have lovely farmers tans in the winter. I have nice dry Sandy soil though and for most of the time, they live out and don’t get that muddy or poopy!
 
Joined
28 February 2011
Messages
16,451
Visit site
Welcome to the "Bay Horse Club"! Honestly embrace it. You will drive yourself insane otherwise and it's not worth the stress. The more you wrap them up the worse they are because they will be too hot and will roll more to try to get rid of their clothing. A good brush on before you ride and they will look bay anyway. No brush will save you from that!

As an aside for showing The Wee Coloured Job I used sheep face chalk on his white bits - it's chalk with a slight dye in it so it gets them super super white. You won't be needing that for a while though unless the horse has socks.
 

Sail_away

Well-Known Member
Joined
6 January 2019
Messages
529
Visit site
Greys are fab, welcome to the club ?
I actually managed to keep mine relatively clean when in work. Top tips would be to cut tails short in winter, don’t leave mud on legs overnight or eventually they just go yellow even when washed. When washing for shows, I do two washes of fairy liquid on the tail, then the ‘touch of silver’ human purple shampoo, then a human conditioner if I have one at hand. Legs get fairy liquid too but patch test that first, then touch of silver again. Mane is washed with tressemé shampoo (easiest way to do the forelock is to push it under the headpiece of your headcollar and wash it with the rest of the mane). His body will get stain removing shampoo or tressemé, whatever I have to hand, and purple shampoo on the worst stains. I did used to faff with stain removing shampoo on the legs/stains but touch of silver seems to whiten them more than anything else I’ve found and I just chalk anything yellowy left when he dries. Chalk is very useful for legs, especially if you’re running short of time.
If I needed him to stay clean overnight I found he stayed cleanest turned out with a thick, freshly washed fly rug on. Kept in they get all kinds of stains, unless it’s cold and you can leave them in a turnout or thick rug.
Oh and Haas brushes are lovely, I have the cavalier and it’s been so useful I have another coming in the post this week.
 

pansymouse

Well-Known Member
Joined
11 May 2012
Messages
2,736
Location
Amesbury, Wiltshire
Visit site
You have to face the fact the a grey horse's sole ambition is become a bay through the application of mud. Anything you do is just a temporary blip in their journey.

Haas brushes are a very worthwhile investment as a monthly scheduled tanker delivery of shampoo.
 
Top