Washing Numnahs??? hairs >:(

Batgirl

Well-Known Member
Joined
4 February 2011
Messages
3,190
Location
Yaaaarkshire
Visit site
Right, washed numnah/saddlecloth in washing machine at home, put it in a pillow case to stop hairs etc clogging up machine but now numnah has hairs all over it. Do people just selotape the hairs off it or is there a magic way to stop this happening??

Advice much appreciated as I have 2 more to wash :)
 
I remove as much as I can before washing with a rubber curry comb. Once washed tumble dry and then most of them are gone. If it's still hairy, vacuum.

And if the washing machine is hairy, leave it with the door open to dry out and then vacuum the inside.
 
Hoovering them before washing is best, also if you have or can get hold of one, a rubber brush (hand held version of the ones they use in hairdressers) is very good at removing the hairs.

I just put the numnah on the carpet and stand on it to keep the tension on it whilst vacuuming.
 
I use a plasters bath with bold have a good scrub then hang on the clothes rail and jet wash clean. This way hairs don't matter.
 
I pre-wash at the yard (in a bucket), hang on a fence and brush all the hair off with a dandy brush. Then there's no need for the pillowcase in the washing machine either!
 
you can buy bags that you put them in to put in the washing machine :') have never tried them but theyre probably expensive so hoovering is probably the best option ;)
 
I just shove mine in Tge washing machine - Hubby is allergic to horses so I can get my own back by stealth on him being a messy git :D
 
My horses must have super fine coats, my numnahs don't get hairy - I only have three, and rotate them, washing every 3-5 uses? Maybe you need to wash them more often?
 
I just stick mine in the machine, if a bit hairy after I shake outside & hang on the line. I do a couple if loads of horse stuff then run the machine with nothing in to rinse it through. I do wash stuff after 2-3 uses & horse isn't hairy so machine never seems to get too bad.
 
I put mine in one of those horseware bags, they're brilliant as they catch most of the hairs. When I take it out the bag after washing I put it on the line and if it's still hairy I hoover off when dry.
 
we bought a cheap second-hand machine just for the horsey stuff.

we use one of those rubber hair remover thingies then rinse several times.
the Hoover works quite well too
 
Top