Kat
Well-Known Member
OP I would love to know how you can tell the weight of the rug just by looking at the horse!? Seriously mine are identical bar a small label.
Lol! Two things on HHO which can provide much entertainment are rugging and riding without hats
PS. I live in Canada where we get -40c winters for months and months on end. The heaviest rugs I own are M/Ws.
SF when I went to Canada about 7 years ago in the winter we visited a trekking yard to go on a woodland ride in the snow (which was beautiful btw) and none of the horses were rugged and it must have been -25/30! They all had these fantastic fluffy coats and were provided with ad lib alfalfa to eat and they looked so happy and content with a layer of snow on their back!
I'd say the vast majority of horses over here are not rugged during the winter. So long as the snow doesn't melt on their backs, it provides insulation; trouble is during the days the sun still gets hot so if the horses are going out of the wind then the snow will melt and then they are wet horses when they go back out into the (extreme) freezing wind. That's the main reason I rug mineSF when I went to Canada about 7 years ago in the winter we visited a trekking yard to go on a woodland ride in the snow (which was beautiful btw) and none of the horses were rugged and it must have been -25/30! They all had these fantastic fluffy coats and were provided with ad lib alfalfa to eat and they looked so happy and content with a layer of snow on their back!
It is fascinating I have to say. I do understand that people do what they've always done if they have never experienced a different way of doing things. When you move to somewhere with such extreme weather as I have, it's only then that you really get a handle on perspectives. Having said all that, I use the same rugs here as I used in the UK. I never owned a H/W rug in the UK either.Funny isn't it how we seem to have an abundance of horses who 'shiver' in temps of 15 degrees etc over here without a hw on, yet they don't appear to exist in countries which get really cold.
probably due to the existence of rugs for foals and other babies. This is one thing I can't get my head round why would a foal need a rug unless it was born late into a cold wet autumn or winter and even then if it had access to a shelter or barn I cannot see the point. I have always found youngstock to thrive better in just a wooly coat when I have had visiting weanlings wearing rugs they have usually been cold and lost weight rapidly. Against mine on a hillside with exactly the same management. I can and usually do persuade the owner to remove the rug over timeFunny isn't it how we seem to have an abundance of horses who 'shiver' in temps of 15 degrees etc over here without a hw on, yet they don't appear to exist in countries which get really cold.
Horses in Canada have been brought up and raised in cold environments- it has been bred into them. If you imported a French showjumper for example, and stuck it in a field without a rug at -35 I'm pretty sure you would have a cold horse....
Plus, most horses in Canada are not clipped and a large majority of Europeans horses are...
Really? I'm guessing you've never been to Canada ...Horses in Canada have been brought up and raised in cold environments- it has been bred into them. If you imported a French showjumper for example, and stuck it in a field without a rug at -35 I'm pretty sure you would have a cold horse....
Plus, most horses in Canada are not clipped and a large majority of Europeans horses are...
probably due to the existence of rugs for foals and other babies. This is one thing I can't get my head round why would a foal need a rug unless it was born late into a cold wet autumn or winter and even then if it had access to a shelter or barn I cannot see the point. I have always found youngstock to thrive better in just a wooly coat when I have had visiting weanlings wearing rugs they have usually been cold and lost weight rapidly. Against mine on a hillside with exactly the same management. I can and usually do persuade the owner to remove the rug over time
Really? I'm guessing you've never been to Canada ...
There are lots of differences between certainly NE US and the UK that I've found. 1) NE US has many fewer people clipping and those that do (the serious competition yards) quite often have heaters in the barns or they rug just as much as we do. 2) There is much more land for horses to run around in to keep warm. 3) Having lived in NE US and the UK I can seriously say that yes dry cold is seriously nasty it doesn't chill one down to their core in the same way as wet cold does. I've found myself using the same winter clothing I used in the US in the UK because I've needed it, one also seems to take longer to warm up in the UK. This isn't to say I approve of over-rugging, (my two are out tonight fully clipped (albeit 3 weeks ago) in LW's on a chilly hill) but having been camping two nights ago I can positively say it's freezing at night.![]()
I own a number of European imported horses. I brought one with me. Loads of friends of mine have European imports. They all adapt and survive just fine. Loads of people clip their horses; it's really not as unusual as you have been led to believe. I don't clip; I have no need to as none of our horses compete in the winter.No, but I think my point of adaptation still stands. My horses are used to a UK climate, and if it ever dropped below minus 10 here then they would both need a fair amount of rugging to cope with the temperature change. A horse used to regular harsh winters would, I imagine, be better equipped to cope with very cold temperatures. I'm sure some people do clip, but from what I've seen and heard, it isn't as common as clipping is over here. I could be wrong of course...
There are lots of differences between certainly NE US and the UK that I've found.
No, but I think my point of adaptation still stands. My horses are used to a UK climate, and if it ever dropped below minus 10 here then they would both need a fair amount of rugging to cope with the temperature change. A horse used to regular harsh winters would, I imagine, be better equipped to cope with very cold temperatures. I'm sure some people do clip, but from what I've seen and heard, it isn't as common as clipping is over here. I could be wrong of course... I'd like to point out that neither of mine, even the fully clipped one, are in duvets or heavyweights, or even medium weights during the day at the moment. But I don't really think comparing to a very different climate with regards to rugging makes much sense if I'm honest....
What are the temps in the UK at the moment out of interest?
Funny isn't it how we seem to have an abundance of horses who 'shiver' in temps of 15 degrees etc over here without a hw on, yet they don't appear to exist in countries which get really cold.
Ranging from about 5 degrees at night to 17 degrees in day, across the country. Where I am it's been about 17 during the day and around 12 at night, poss more. I've stood out in a t shirt in the evening still. It's slightly chilly but not cold.
Ranging from about 5 degrees at night to 17 degrees in day, across the country. Where I am it's been about 17 during the day and around 12 at night, poss more. I've stood out in a t shirt in the evening still. It's slightly chilly but not cold.
Ah that's exactly the same temperatures are we're getting at the moment. It's quarter to 3 atm and it's 17c outside and going down to 10c tonight but we have had a number of nights where it's gone down to 4c. It's been damp and rainy for days now ugh! My horses all start getting rugged when it hits -8 to -10c. The very old ones (aged 26 - 37 yrs old) are rugged once it hits about -5c.Ranging from about 5 degrees at night to 17 degrees in day, across the country. Where I am it's been about 17 during the day and around 12 at night, poss more. I've stood out in a t shirt in the evening still. It's slightly chilly but not cold.
It was 2 at ours at 8.00 a.m. Sunday morning and we had frost . . . I'm guessing it got lower than that during the night.
P
Ah that's exactly the same temperatures are we're getting at the moment. It's quarter to 3 atm and it's 17c outside and going down to 10c tonight but we have had a number of nights where it's gone down to 4c. It's been damp and rainy for days now ugh! My horses all start getting rugged when it hits -8 to -10c. The very old ones (aged 26 - 37 yrs old) are rugged once it hits about -5c.