I’ve seen it all now … sheath covers!

santas_spotty_pony

Well-Known Member
Joined
15 August 2015
Messages
857
Visit site

A good idea but I would be concerned they might not urinate normally because it’s different or restrictive. It would need washing everyday too! 🤔 🙈
 

Surbie

Well-Known Member
Joined
27 July 2017
Messages
3,885
Visit site
It does. But it's handy and not restrictive. We had a RDA pony that suffered from fly strike and this was brilliant. It needs careful placing or it can get filled with poo and that's revolting too
 

SpeedyPony

Well-Known Member
Joined
23 January 2020
Messages
702
Visit site
Mum had these for her old pony- he kept getting sheath infections as he was so sensitive to the flies, they do help (although not 100% effective) and are easy to velcro on and off to wash, although you need a lot of them, or to be running a wash every day.
He didn't seem to worry about peeing through them (they're pretty roomy) but they can smell a bit on a hot day, even when washed daily.
 

Gloi

Too little time, too much to read.
Joined
8 May 2012
Messages
12,292
Location
Lancashire
Visit site
There's 1 for udders to who thinks up theses things seams useful for reasons above but still
We had the udder cover for a mare with bad sweet itch but no matter how it was fitted she always seemed to manage to pee into it ☹️

The sheath covers work and stopped the lad biting holes in his itchy sheath but they need washing at least daily.

Maybe we should have put the sheath cover on the mare too.
 

Mrs. Jingle

Well-Known Member
Joined
17 September 2009
Messages
5,624
Location
Deep in Bandit Country
Visit site
I have used an udder cover for my SI mare, but it got so smelly and disgusting too quickly to keep up even with using 3 on rotation. It did help with the midges on her nether regions but unfortunately as soon as it got stinky it attracted flies. Now I just slather her undercarriage and mid line with Biteback cream.
 

poiuytrewq

Well-Known Member
Joined
3 April 2008
Messages
19,330
Location
Cotswolds
Visit site
My old horse used to get maggots in his sheath, it was a regular thing in summer. Had i known about them back then I'd definitely have used one! Its a really nasty thing to have to deal with.
 

Fransurrey

Well-Known Member
Joined
27 April 2004
Messages
7,070
Location
Surrey
Visit site
There's 1 for udders to who thinks up theses things seams useful for reasons above but still
I actually bought one for my mare. Unless you've had a horse with sweet itch that self harms through irritation (she gets open wounds from biting herself), not sure you'll ever understand the anguish. I'm already smothering her in all sorts of crap because the midge population has exploded and she's shedding too much to wear a rug, yet.
 

tatty_v

Well-Known Member
Joined
25 March 2015
Messages
1,450
Visit site
I’ve been debating one for my older boy as he has melanomas in his sheath which seem to attract the flies - we had a couple of bouts of fly strike last year which was really, really upsetting. Hoping for a better year this year but I’d try one if it could help him.
 

Fransurrey

Well-Known Member
Joined
27 April 2004
Messages
7,070
Location
Surrey
Visit site
Get bad sweet itch and even being stabled with no turnout isn't an option 😢 too easy to rub in a stable.
Yep. My mare will rub herself raw on anything. I've got destroyed water buckets to prove it. The corner of the water trough is nicely polished, too.
 

Gloi

Too little time, too much to read.
Joined
8 May 2012
Messages
12,292
Location
Lancashire
Visit site
Yep. My mare will rub herself raw on anything. I've got destroyed water buckets to prove it. The corner of the water trough is nicely polished, too.
We had to fence the water trough off and put the water in soft rubber trugs ☹️.
After 20 years I'm so glad my current one hasn't got sweet itch despite loving my old boy.
 

adamntitch

Well-Known Member
Joined
30 May 2010
Messages
449
Visit site
I actually bought one for my mare. Unless you've had a horse with sweet itch that self harms through irritation (she gets open wounds from biting herself), not sure you'll ever understand the anguish. I'm already smothering her in all sorts of crap because the midge population has exploded and she's shedding too much to wear a rug, yet.
Never once said it was not a good idea only said you wonder how people think of these things
 

santas_spotty_pony

Well-Known Member
Joined
15 August 2015
Messages
857
Visit site
I actually bought one for my mare. Unless you've had a horse with sweet itch that self harms through irritation (she gets open wounds from biting herself), not sure you'll ever understand the anguish. I'm already smothering her in all sorts of crap because the midge population has exploded and she's shedding too much to wear a rug, yet.

I do have a mare with quite bad sweet itch but she has had the vaccine this year and so far no sore spots and all I am doing is leaving her sweet itch rug on her 24/7, not even using any products! Have you tried the vaccine?
 

MereChristmas

riding reluctantly into the sunset
Joined
21 February 2013
Messages
13,064
Location
the sat-nav is wrong, go farther up the hill
Visit site
There's 1 for udders to who thinks up theses things seams useful for reasons above but still

People who have experience of horses that suffer maybe?

I actually bought one for my mare. Unless you've had a horse with sweet itch that self harms through irritation (she gets open wounds from biting herself), not sure you'll ever understand the anguish. I'm already smothering her in all sorts of crap because the midge population has exploded and she's shedding too much to wear a rug, yet.
I bought 2 of the sweet itch udder covers for a mare I used to own. She was always ‘fully wrapped’, head, neck body, belly, breast and udder.
Yes they get smelly, yes you need to change them daily, yes it is a faff, but when I sold her no one would have known she had sweet itch
 

Gloi

Too little time, too much to read.
Joined
8 May 2012
Messages
12,292
Location
Lancashire
Visit site
I do have a mare with quite bad sweet itch but she has had the vaccine this year and so far no sore spots and all I am doing is leaving her sweet itch rug on her 24/7, not even using any products! Have you tried the vaccine?
I used the bio plus capsules from the people who sell Boett rugs for about 5 years. I think they made a bit of difference especially from the second year onwards. He stopped chewing holes in himself quite as much and that was a bonus. Of course the improvement might have been due to some of the other things we were doing.
 

TTK

Well-Known Member
Joined
4 October 2010
Messages
805
Location
Herefordshire
Visit site
I have a gelding with chronic sweet itch and even smothering his sheath with creams doesn't stop him getting bitten. But I bought 3 sheath covers last year and they really do help. He has a clean one on every day and has no issues at all peeing through it.
 
Top