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Veteran
Posts: 116

| I'm curious to hear what everyone does when hauling their horses..
Do you use angle or straight haul? Back or front facing?
Do you use shipping boots/wraps?
On long trips, how often do you stop to give water, hay, and rest?
:) |
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 Extreme Veteran
Posts: 422
    Location: Fort Bragg North Carolina | 4 horse slant
No wraps but use hock boots on one
On long trips stop 4-6 hours feed like I would at home never spend the night on the road unless trip is longer than 15 hours |
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 I hate cooking and cleaning
Posts: 3310
     Location: Jersey Girl | Slant load, no shipping boots but I normally do haul with the BOT quickwraps on. I also put shavings in my trailer because my horse always pees in the trailer. |
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 Extreme Veteran
Posts: 554
  
| In a horse trailer of course!  |
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 I Chore in Chucks
Posts: 2882
        Location: MD | 2 horse BP slant, front facing.
just overreach boots no polos/shipping boots. my trailer has rubber halfway up the sides and rubber on the trailer so I don't worry to much about them banging around back there. THEY ALWAYS HAVE A GOOD FITTING FLY MASK ON.
hay bags hung up for 2+ hours
Water every 4 hours, or every gas stop. I keep my gas tank 1/2 full when I travel so I tend to stop frequently enough. |
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 Expert
Posts: 2604
   Location: Texas | Softride boots or Easyboots with pads and hay for trips over an hour. Shavings. |
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 Underestimated Underdog
Posts: 3971
         Location: Minnesota | 3 horse slant load.
No wraps or boots unless I was traveling a far distance, then I'd use boots.
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 Serious Snap Trapper
Posts: 4275
       Location: In The Snow, AZ | Four horse slant, forward facing. It has mangers in it, so we can put a bit of hay or grain in during hauling. No wraps or boots. Its fully enclosed, so on hot days, drop downs are down(barred windows). During cooler months, we open front and back sliders a hair for air flow. As for another question, who ties while trailering? |
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 Bulls Eye
Posts: 6443
       Location: Oklahoma | 4 horse slant with ramp. All dividers have pads on them. No wraps, just bell boots. I put 3 bags of shavings in my trailer. Keep grass hay in front of them at all times. On distance hauls, every time I fill up the truck, I let it sit shut off for 30 minutes. I offer water at the stops. I never unload. When stabling overnight, I feed bran mashes with mineral oil in them to help keep the horses systems lubricated. |
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Rad Dork
Posts: 5218
   Location: Oklahoma | 2 horse forward facing slant. Only BOT quick wraps if I will be saddling up immediately to start riding once I get there. I don't usually haul with hay as one gelding has bad allergies and I want to keep dust at a minimum, but I'll offer it and water once I get there. I have yet to make a trip over four hours away and since I'm by myself most of the time (and with a look-y horse), I would probably just pull over and kill the engine and get rid of the vibrations for a little while instead of unloading. I always tie ro try and prevent squabbles, but loose enought they can get their head down if the need to. |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 1162
    Location: White Mountains of AZ | 3 horse gooseneck slant-forward. My mare has equilibrium issues hauling in a straight load.. ( ???) I generally don't haul with hay to help with the dust. On warm days I'll open the drop windows (with bars so no heads sticking out!) I will tie, but loose where they can get there heads down to blow out, but not enough to get into trouble. And I do a quick release tie always! I like to let my horses out to stretch out after a few hours...but when your traveling with people its kinda hard if they don't do the same. Normally I don't use boots to haul short distances. If hauling with new or other horses I like to think I'm helping haha! |
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 Expert
Posts: 1857
      
| slant, forward facing, no wraps unless over 12 hr trip and then use shipping boots, I don't let mine out of the trailer until 12hr's. They get a rest when I stop for fuel, I keep water buckets in the trailer and a bucket with alfalfa cubes. I clean and refill the water buckets(1/2 full) and add more cubes every time I stop for fuel. |
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 Undercover Amish Mafia Member
Posts: 9991
           Location: Kansas | stock combo, no leg wraps with a hay bag in front of him. |
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 Expert
Posts: 1857
      
| ~BINGO~ - 2015-01-14 8:37 AM
Four horse slant, forward facing. It has mangers in it, so we can put a bit of hay or grain in during hauling. No wraps or boots. Its fully enclosed, so on hot days, drop downs are down(barred windows). During cooler months, we open front and back sliders a hair for air flow. As for another question, who ties while trailering?
We never tie... not sure if that's good or bad but works out good for us. I've had horses blow up in the trailer and if they were tied in, it would have been a nightmare to get them loose. |
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Rad Dork
Posts: 5218
   Location: Oklahoma | FlyingJT - 2015-01-14 9:20 AM slant, forward facing, no wraps unless over 12 hr trip and then use shipping boots, I don't let mine out of the trailer until 12hr's. They get a rest when I stop for fuel, I keep water buckets in the trailer and a bucket with alfalfa cubes. I clean and refill the water buckets(1/2 full) and add more cubes every time I stop for fuel.
Wow... I'm feeling like an idiot! I never thought to keep cubes like that for hauling. Great way to cut out the dust! |
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 Midget Lover
          Location: Kentucky | 2 horse slant load, forward facing. No wraps. I don't tie mine either. Hay bag in front of them unless it's short trips (under an hour). I stop for water/rest every 3-4 hours.
Edited by Murphy 2015-01-14 9:27 AM
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 Money Eating Baggage Owner
Posts: 9586
       Location: Phoenix | Don't have a trailer at the moment, but we've ways hauled in a 4-horse gooseneck slant, forward facing. No leg wraps.
On long trips it really depends....but typically we don't stop until we hit the 8-10 hour mark, and we usually rest for a good hour and try t find a fairgrounds of possible. On a longer trip I keep hay in front of them. If we stop for gas I offer water.
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Veteran
Posts: 227
   Location: Heart of Texas | Two horse slant gooseneck. Don't tie. No boots. just enough shavings to absorb pee and prevent splash back. Fly mask for sure. Windows down w/ bars up, if super hot, turn on the fans to keep air flowing. When super cold, i keep a cooler or blanket on them with the windows open, not down. Hay and water every 3-4 hours. |
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Expert
Posts: 1586
     Location: west of East Texas | 3 horse bumper pull slant. Hay is always in there. 99% of the time use shipping boots because I have a couple of horses who load and haul like a dream but do a rocket-launch thing getting out and will invariably hurt a leg if they are bare. I can step them in and out, one foot at a time, all day long, but not after hauling more than about 15 minutes. Long trips varies on weather and roadside conditions. If it's hot, every 4 hours to gas up, unload to water and wash them down, let them chill and clean the trailer out if I can. If it's cooler weather, I'll still stop every 4 hours to gas up and let them be still but probably won't unload them but every other stop. I rarely ever tie unless it's the one really mean mare that I've seen go under the divider to attack her neighbor. I only haul her about twice a year. (The shipping boots saved the legs for me there too.) |
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 Good Grief!
Posts: 6343
      Location: Cap'n Joan Rotgut.....alberta | mine are knee deep in shavings.....i use boots.....3 horse angle..i have the drop down windows open if its hot (mine has bars so they are up)......i dont tie and i dont very often feed, as most of my trips are around the 5 hr mark (and to us thats just a hop skip and a jump...lol)
m
Edited by mruggles 2015-01-14 1:44 PM
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