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Big horses and heat - what do you do?

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  • #41
    Well okay, if the owners are going with what the vet said, then you might as well ignore this but . . .my experience with my big mare in Florida, having just arrived from the west, seemed to be having some allergy issues and I was feeding her Tri-hist granules. If the heat bothered her before, it was nothing like when she had that stuff in her system. She would be bone dry and panting before I put the halter on. I was mightily alarmed! Stopped the tri-hist and she was dramatically better. Didn't believe it was that easy, thinking I was crazy, so I tried it again, same result. Poor mare! We humans can be soo slow.

    She has adjusted well to the heat and humidity, gets a good sweat, but she is dark and heavy so I ride with caution in the hotter months. Training is progressing nicely.

    I'd take a second look at that Benadryl.

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    • Original Poster

      #42
      Originally posted by AllyB View Post
      Well okay, if the owners are going with what the vet said, then you might as well ignore this but . . .my experience with my big mare in Florida, having just arrived from the west, seemed to be having some allergy issues and I was feeding her Tri-hist granules. If the heat bothered her before, it was nothing like when she had that stuff in her system. She would be bone dry and panting before I put the halter on. I was mightily alarmed! Stopped the tri-hist and she was dramatically better. Didn't believe it was that easy, thinking I was crazy, so I tried it again, same result. Poor mare! We humans can be soo slow.

      She has adjusted well to the heat and humidity, gets a good sweat, but she is dark and heavy so I ride with caution in the hotter months. Training is progressing nicely.

      I'd take a second look at that Benadryl.
      Owner did stop the Benadryl as she was not totally convinced it was not the cause.

      Thankfully the weather cooled this weekend and it will be cooler for most of the week so I hope to get more ride time in. His sweating was much better but I noticed again that he didn't really sweat good until I took him for a walk trail ride after schooling in the ring. Do you think the trail work of hills and walking over tree roots is actually that hard on him that he has more sweat from the walk then from working in the ring? He was a little damp and had panting (not as bad as the prior week which I think is due to less work and the break in heat) from 30 minutes of ring work (5 minutes work with 5 minute walk breaks). He drank water right before and after the ride and I checked his skin throughout the ride and it rebounded fine so I'm confident he's staying hydrated for working in heat.

      I've come to the conclusion I prefer winter. Summer is becoming to bothersome with the heat and the bugs.

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      • Original Poster

        #43
        I'm happy to report we have cooler weather right now and he is sweating like normal. We are able to get some real work in and I will just have to be extra careful when it heats up again. I did enter him in a competition this weekend because the weather is going to be low - mid eighties with low humidity. I'm prepared to scratch if the weather heats up, but for now all if looking good. And all the issues he was having, riding like a big horse instead of his normal sensitive self, have disappeared now that the weather is cooler. I should really listen to the horse better, he's a good guy and he was telling me in many ways that the heat was bothering him and I wasn't listening.

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        • #44
          That is great news! I don't get to post much in forums at all in summer because pretty much all of my time is spent cooling our horses down this time of year, hence my interst in the subject. The only respite is in the morning from first light to about 10AM. You are doing a great job caring for the big horse. They can have a rough time especially the first summer in a hotter climate.

          Perhaps a heat tolerance scale can be developed to help horse get the care they need from owner not as concientious as the op. It is related to the size of the horse, but also to other factors too maybe. I have seen Warmblood breeds from warmer climates show more heat tolerance. They usually cool more quickly relative to average after work and have naturally low body fat. Similar to the TB that is "always in shape."

          There has been some research about heat and damage to tendons but that is a factor that affects all horses. Maybe horses that are less heat tolerant are like canaries in the mine for the more heat tolerant horses tendons. :-)

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