Horsey item you can't live without but hardly anyone else has?

Shadowdancing

Well-Known Member
Joined
29 January 2016
Messages
505
Location
Newcastle
Visit site
Share your little gems! For me:

Lightweight rubber mats- they're not the conventional black things, they were from ebay and are grey and were sold as equi mats. They make a super bed with a dusting of straw on top and I just lift them up each day to let the floor dry then put them back down. They can move a little but not much and my horse is happy with them.

Harbridge- what a revelation. My horse's reaction to spooky stuff is to chuck her head in the air and keep it there getting more and more uptight and disrupting schooling or lessons, but under too much pressure she just dips behind the the bit. On her spooky days the harbridge is the best training aid I could use, don't even need to have it tight, but with regular use that muscle that was developing on the underside of her neck is easing and we're getting much more stretching down. Hurray! Still many people have no idea what it is!

What's yours?
 

Shay

Well-Known Member
Joined
17 August 2008
Messages
7,345
Visit site
The perfect PC Pony. And he's not going anywhere!

(Off-set by the mad ISH - everyone has to have balance....)
 

pennyturner

Well-Known Member
Joined
1 August 2006
Messages
2,594
Visit site
Round sprung curry comb. Just the thing for turning your equihippo into something you can put a saddle on from the field.
Currently leaving a carpet of hair an inch thick on the ground around every pony :)
 

Ella19

Well-Known Member
Joined
25 May 2010
Messages
2,320
Location
Surrey
Visit site
A grooming kit! People always comment how clean and shiny my pony is. They ask what on earth do I do to keep my ponies so clean. the answer is a full groom every other day and a curry comb and body brush on the other - simples! you'd be suprised how many people don't know how to full groom a horse let alone use a brush every now and again!
 

Wimbles

Well-Known Member
Joined
20 December 2007
Messages
1,842
Location
Derbyshire
Visit site
Probably not all that rare but I couldn't live without Gentian Violet spray. Fantastic stuff for all types of injury and I often use it on myself too (helped with some terrible symptoms of my glandular fever!!)
 

9tails

Well-Known Member
Joined
20 January 2009
Messages
4,763
Visit site
Speediskip rake. I can pick up scattered poos on the grazing and leave nothing behind. Those poop scoops with metal sticks are useless in comparison.
 

JenJ

Well-Known Member
Joined
11 January 2010
Messages
2,169
Location
Surrey
Visit site
Cactus mitt. My boy has a fairly fine coat year round, and this gets rid of all mud/sweat/dust and leaves him super shiny. I've never even touched him with a brush.
 

FfionWinnie

Well-Known Member
Joined
20 July 2012
Messages
17,021
Location
Scotland
Visit site
A grooming kit! People always comment how clean and shiny my pony is. They ask what on earth do I do to keep my ponies so clean. the answer is a full groom every other day and a curry comb and body brush on the other - simples! you'd be suprised how many people don't know how to full groom a horse let alone use a brush every now and again!


Funny, they say the same to me and I only brush when necessary ;)
 

Dubsie

Well-Known Member
Joined
26 January 2009
Messages
4,756
Location
The Edge of Suburbia, Berkshire.
Visit site
My daughter's old terry squares. Dampen, run over the (bay, we don't do grey) pony/horse. Takes all the dust off leaves horse gleaming.

Small pot of Ranipur - the people at shows who polish your shoes. SHines any tack or boots very quickly.
 

tina60

Well-Known Member
Joined
9 June 2014
Messages
79
Visit site
A Furminator that I also use on my dogs its brilliant for when he's losing his winter coat and it comes up lovely and shiny too! My pony could stand all day having this done - he loves it!
 

Leo Walker

Well-Known Member
Joined
19 July 2013
Messages
12,384
Location
Northampton
Visit site
A wheelie bin for his hay and a thing with wheels that holds a water trug. I'm physically a bit knackered so everything I have and do is about making life as easy as possible! Other than that I have a weird curry comb thingy with roller balls in it, the cob LOVES it!
 

ironhorse

Well-Known Member
Joined
28 November 2007
Messages
1,775
Visit site
Jelly comb - very soft flexible curry comb. Excellent for getting hair out, removing dust and sweat as well as mud.

Nylon sheet with no front fastenings - they never rub, breathable, very lightweight summer sheet. Sadly have to be imported from the USA or Europe :(
 

Deltaflyer

Well-Known Member
Joined
1 September 2014
Messages
776
Visit site
These: http://www.horsehealth.co.uk/grooming/grooming-box/grooming-mitts/hands-on-grooming-mitt

I've only had them a few weeks but I will never be without a pair from now on.

This is my post about how my horse reacted to them.

http://www.horseandhound.co.uk/foru...s-being-brushed&highlight=horse+hates+brushed

I bought these, they are brilliant and Sam absolutely adores being groomed with them. Trouble is, he loves it so much he gets quite grumpy when I stop LOL
 

Kezzabell2

Well-Known Member
Joined
9 April 2014
Messages
2,975
Location
Basingstoke
Visit site
I seem to be the only person at my yard that uses the shallow style trug buckets to feed! everyone else uses tall buckets, which i'd only use for water!
 

Jo1987

Well-Known Member
Joined
9 June 2013
Messages
882
Visit site
Eucalyptus oil for killing off thrush! And my waterproof fly sheet, not that uncommon I know, but only one other person has one on my (very large) yard, such a useful invention!
 

Limbo1

Well-Known Member
Joined
20 March 2009
Messages
456
Visit site
Wet wipes - great for nose, eyes etc. Doubles up for me too.

Ragwort fork (not mine my liveries but amazing bit of kit).
 

NZJenny

Well-Known Member
Joined
9 August 2013
Messages
1,793
Visit site
Hemp seed cake. Like linseed, only better. However, given it is only available in limited quantities, I'll happily keep it a secret.
 

Enfys

Well-Known Member
Joined
11 December 2004
Messages
18,086
Visit site
Automatic heated water troughs, heated water buckets, and heated bowls for smaller animals. I simply cannot fathom why all these are not readily available in the UK. Of course they are the norm here.

Also expandable hose pipes.

Rope reins, I don't mean twisted lead rope s, but lovely soft big clip on reins. I tried regular flat leather reins again recently, I actually came back home and changed them out again, hated them :( How bad is that?
 

ElleSkywalker

As excited as Kitty about to be a bridesmaid
Joined
9 March 2011
Messages
11,988
Location
Tiny farm some where in UK
Visit site
My tack cupboard, I helped design mine so fits in the tiny space I had for it perfectly and can stores 6 saddles and countless other bits and bobs all while looking like a humble coat cupboard ��
 

rachk89

Well-Known Member
Joined
11 May 2015
Messages
2,523
Visit site
Wound cream. No one else at my yard seems to have it at least but then they don't have a clumsy horse who picks fights. Currently being used everyday.
 
Top