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Your grooming tricks for show season

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  • #21
    Interesting stuff!

    Being in NZ I haven't heard of many of these brands but we have similar products here. The green spot remover sounds excellent.

    One question: Is corn starch the same as cornflour?

    Rideagoldenpony - What a gorgeous foursome of yellow lovelies!
    Last edited by Kerole; Nov. 25, 2010, 02:50 PM.

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    • #22
      The one thing I have learned from the top trainers is that brushing and rubbing down will give you one of the best coats on a horse.

      Examples:

      http://unbridledoaks.wishbroke.com/p...4246_small.jpg - This colt didn't even get a bath because the weather was horrible, but as you can tell in this picture, it was lovely the day of the show! So this is truly his natural shine! LOL!

      http://wishbroke.com/jpgs/pnwwc20052.JPG

      I love conditioning and getting horses ready to show. I live and breath it. LOL! People who know me, know that is so true. I guess if you have done it for over 15 years, it kinda grows on you
      Unbridled Oaks - Champion Sport Ponies and Welsh Cobs

      Like us on Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/unbridledoaks

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      • #23
        The tips already mentioned are ones I would too, but I will add that vacumning does work (you have to be careful when introducing it, but most horses enjoy it). I can't rationalize the budget for one of the big, fancy horse ones, but my husband got me a handheld shopvac with an attachment that does a pretty good job. For someone like myself, where time is a priority, it really gets the dirt up (then I can give them a good rub down on the days when I have time).

        As for rub downs -- getting a sheepskin and a detailing rag from the auto store is a lot cheaper than the tack shop and work just as well. In the summer nothing beats rubbing a horse down with those after a good curry and brushing to bring out the shine.

        I don't really give my horses bubble baths all that often -- too drying. I will have to say, while they were a bit expensive, and left a bit of oiliness to their coats, Hilton Herbs Color Enhancing shampoos do help with coats (my horses get turnout everyday, well, my pasture has no shade to speak of, and a couple we have yet to find a fly sheet they can't tear, so while the sheet is at the repair shop -- or a new one is ordered -- there's a horse or two here outside and getting sunburnt; it's usually the black or the liver chestnut...the Hilton Herbs does help with that).

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        • #24
          Make up.
          Horse Show Names Free name website with over 6200 names. Want to add? PM me!

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          • #25
            #1. Good quality hay, feed, exercise and love.

            #2. I like mineral oil (over baby oil because of their sensitive smell) on the stallions noses and lightly over their eyes and ears.
            Here is an example of how it turns out on our stallion Sandro's Heir this fall in a CDI award's ceremony. (This is after milling in dust for 30 mins waiting to be called in).

            #3. (Tom Dvorak's wife Ellen gets the credit for this) Green Palmolive Dish Soap for washing white socks; it is very gentle on their skin and gets all the grime and stains out. Here (4th photo down) is an example of this on W.Charlot Farm's stallion Viva's Salieri W, who's nick name is "Socks" for a reason I bathed those socks the night before this pic with Palmolive, it works way better than blue shampoo and is cheap.

            #4. Although it kills me, don't brush their tails. Shampoo before the show and dump a 1/2 bottle of showsheen in, wait until dry then comb out.

            #5. My learned tale of caution. Don't buzz their wiskers off right before a show. I once shaved Harvard's down the night before a CDI and he REFUSED to eat or drink afterwards for hours!!! I basically had heart failure at 20 because I was sure he was going to colic and die on me. Eventually Harvie forgave me for taking his feelers away and decided he could peck at his feed while giving me dirty looks but there is enough stress in showing, with out shooting yourself in the foot like I did.

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            • #26
              Showsheen is terrible for a tail. Too drying. I have shaved whiskers off right before a show since I was a kid and never had a problem.
              Laurie

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              • #27
                Originally posted by Emy View Post
                #5. My learned tale of caution. Don't buzz their wiskers off right before a show. I once shaved Harvard's down the night before a CDI and he REFUSED to eat or drink afterwards for hours!!! I basically had heart failure at 20 because I was sure he was going to colic and die on me. Eventually Harvie forgave me for taking his feelers away and decided he could peck at his feed while giving me dirty looks but there is enough stress in showing, with out shooting yourself in the foot like I did.
                LOL, I've only had this happen to me with one horse--a foal and it was his first time being clipped, but he was traumatized! In this case, I almost had a heart attack because he refused to nurse. He got over it though, and when we showed him as a yearling, he didn't mind at all. Not something that would ever occur to you, though, if it hadn't happened to you.
                www.heartofgoldfarm.com

                RIP "Rio" (BW-Clarion) 2000-2009. Bright Spirit, Brave Heart, Loving Soul. I'll love and miss you forever.

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                • #28
                  I mostly do what Emy does, but with a few adjustments:

                  I don't use ShowSheen. I take the time the night before the show to wash and condition the tails. I usually shampoo with Suave, like Rideagoldenpony said OR, if they're really stained/dirty, I'll either use Orvus paste or cut some dish soap with water.

                  I'll use any conditioner I have on hand, or if their tails are really dry, mayonnaise works wonders. As the tail is drying, hand-pick all of the tangles apart. It takes forever, but you have virtually no breakage if you're careful, the oils in your hands are great for the hairs, and it gets the tails nice and fluffy and full-looking.

                  (I learned this from my old saddleseat trainer who would literally inspect the cross-tie area after I was done to make sure there were no tail hairs on the floor. )

                  If I still feel like the tails or manes need more shine, I spray them with Pink instead of ShowSheen

                  I also clip white socks a couple weeks before the show so they grow back in white. Plus the hairs are so much easier to clean when they're short. I've never tried the corn starch paste- I will have to try it.

                  I don't like giving baths to any color besides gray/white. I DO give white horses baths because I want them blindingly white, and a good scrub-down is the best way I've found to do it. All other colors, I feel that baths strip the oils out of their coat and it takes a long time to regain the same shine afterwards.

                  To get glossy coats, curry like crazy as often as possible for a month or two leading up to the show. Seriously, become obsessed with currying your horse.

                  For my black horse, he is shiny and glossy, but after he enjoys a roll in the dirt and I try to brush him you can see dust kicked up in the brush tracks. I combat this by having a spray bottle of diluted wintergreen rubbing alcohol handy. I spray it on a towel and wipe him down. The moisture "grabs" the dust, and the alcohol evaporates really quickly, so he's not damp afterwards, and the dust is stuck to the towel, not the horse. I try to use clean parts of the towel every few swipes so I'm not putting the dirt back on. Be prepared to go through a couple towels if the horse is really dirty. I also try to make sure that my brushes are clean. You can't get a horse clean with dirty brushes.

                  (p.s.- the rubbing alcohol/water spray is also GREAT at removing manure stains.)

                  That's all I can think of right now.

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