Cxitlynn__
New User
Hi what temperatures would everyone suggest that different rugs comes out? For clipped and unclipped horses that will be living inside and outside..
Thanks
Thanks
Interesting that someone was brave enough to make a chart for it. I guess that does help to give some guidance, although it recommends rugging all horses when temperatures are below zero and I am definitely a bad owner in that case.
I agree with other posters that it depends on a huge number of factors. We no longer rug our own horses, not even when it got down to -13C a few winters ago (including mare who is primarily TB x KWPN), and they were fine but they have access to good shelter and 24/7 forage. However we now have an elderly loan pony and he will require rugging autumn onwards as he feels the cold. I don't think any guide can really be spot on and you just need to deal with the horse in front of you each day and try your best to recognise the indicators that they are too hot, too cold and so on.
It’s hard to know because she’s only a yearling! She had to be clipped as when I rescued her she had lice… and a lot of them ?
She’s quite a chunky wee thing, and has lived out since last winter, last winter she had only a lightweight rug on but she was a lot hairier then… Rugging definitely is a minefield. It varies so much! I have only owned horses for a year so haven’t mastered it yet lol.
This!A chunky yearling really shouldn’t need a rug unless there is something physically wrong with it!
My fully clipped ID wears a 50g for most of winter, unless we have one of those particularly bad cold snaps when he will wear a 200g. He is never coldYes, I'm not convinced by that chart, unfortunately. I can't see how stabled/ clipped horses need a 100g rug at 10 to 15 degrees either!? 100g is the heaviest rug I use in the depth of winter on my 21 year old TB mare. But she does get itchy and hot easily so who knows!
How long is a piece of string.
Depends on age, body condition, shelter, grass, wind chill, natural toughness, fitness.
Rugging a horse is a bit of an art!
In contrast, I have a welsh mare who is miserable at a drop of rain on her and is happiest when she is kept slightly warm.
Would never dream of rugging the other native (connie) the same, but it just goes to show it is horses for courses.
I resisted rugging up the mare into more than I thought she needed, and preferred to make sure she had ad lib forage instead...but she soon showed me that if I kept doing that she would remain miserable as sin at the first gust of wind!
Depends on the horse itself, it’s condition, the work it is in, how it is stabled, how it is fed, how much it is turned out and if it has hay when turned out.
I normally put on a rain sheet or 100 g when it is between 10-15 degrees, depending on sun/rain/wind. 200 g for 5-10 degrees. 300 g for 0-5 degrees. Then I put a 100 g neck on when it’s below 0 at night and early morning. Very, very rarely I’ll go up to 400 g, but that’s quite extraordinary.
My mare is a full clipped trakehner stabled in an outdoor stable and turned out 6-16 in all sorts of weather with ad lib hay. No excess fat and worked 6 days weekly. I prefer to rug as little as possible, but there’s also a practical aspect to it.
In that case, start by reading up on the correct weight your horse or pony should be and make sure it remains within the correct levels. She's a chunky wee thing could mean anything put like that and anything covered in fat at a year old probably won't need a rug as much as a weight plan for her future health.It’s hard to know because she’s only a yearling! She had to be clipped as when I rescued her she had lice… and a lot of them ?
She’s quite a chunky wee thing, and has lived out since last winter, last winter she had only a lightweight rug on but she was a lot hairier then… Rugging definitely is a minefield. It varies so much! I have only owned horses for a year so haven’t mastered it yet lol.