Chestnutter
Well-Known Member
<font color="purple">My TB lives out all year and he's much prefers it to living in. He has two heavyweight turnout rugs on in the middle winter and a heavyweight throughout the other times (lightweight in the summer and medium in the middle months).
Anyhoo,
since i've been buying turnout rugs, I have noticed that stable rugs are always a much much heavier weight. Our competition horses have two 375g-ers and another 200g when its really cold at night. they have over 900g on at night.
So is it that my horse is not warm enough in 6/700g or that they don't need as much?
Seeing his coat in the winter, you wouldn't think he lives out, because he's so rugged up, so he must be warm enough? but anyway,
rug companies often claim that a horse can be snug and warm all winter in a 300g-er and don't often go higher than 350g, yet heavy weight stable rugs are often 375g - 450g, and are often not used as just one individual rug, two heavy rugs together.
This may be a stupid question, but why is this?! Surely it's much colder outside!!! </font>
Anyhoo,
since i've been buying turnout rugs, I have noticed that stable rugs are always a much much heavier weight. Our competition horses have two 375g-ers and another 200g when its really cold at night. they have over 900g on at night.
So is it that my horse is not warm enough in 6/700g or that they don't need as much?
Seeing his coat in the winter, you wouldn't think he lives out, because he's so rugged up, so he must be warm enough? but anyway,
rug companies often claim that a horse can be snug and warm all winter in a 300g-er and don't often go higher than 350g, yet heavy weight stable rugs are often 375g - 450g, and are often not used as just one individual rug, two heavy rugs together.
This may be a stupid question, but why is this?! Surely it's much colder outside!!! </font>