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Hosing off horses

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Last activity 2018-05-30 10:35 AM
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chicks2
Reg. Mar 2007
Posted 2018-05-29 10:10 AM
Subject: Hosing off horses


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After you hose off your horse, do you scrap the water off, or let it evaporate naturally?
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cloverleaf
Reg. May 2004
Posted 2018-05-29 10:24 AM
Subject: RE: Hosing off horses



Quarter Horse HIstorian


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I’ve read that it’s better to scrape the excess off, but personally, I prefer to just turn mine out and let her roll. I think rolling helps keep them chiropractically in balance.

Edited to add that my girl lives outside-

Edited by cloverleaf 2018-05-29 10:25 AM
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Southtxponygirl
Reg. Nov 2006
Posted 2018-05-29 10:25 AM
Subject: RE: Hosing off horses



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chicks2 - 2018-05-29 10:10 AM After you hose off your horse, do you scrap the water off, or let it evaporate naturally?

Always scrap the water off for faster drying. And stand them in a shady area.. What do you do OP? 
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dashnlotti
Reg. Aug 2009
Posted 2018-05-29 10:30 AM
Subject: RE: Hosing off horses



Off the Wall Wacky


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If I hose them in the heat of the day, they get scraped off and put in the shade.
Last night I hosed mine when I got home from practicing at a friend's house...it was dark and cool, and he was already cooled down, so I just turned him out.
I like to hose the sweat off, but if it's really hot and I don't have shade (at a show for example) I just let them cool off and dry before loading up, then I'll wash the dried sweat off when I get home - my trailer is black and can get hot.
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Southtxponygirl
Reg. Nov 2006
Posted 2018-05-29 10:30 AM
Subject: RE: Hosing off horses



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cloverleaf - 2018-05-29 10:24 AM I’ve read that it’s better to scrape the excess off, but personally, I prefer to just turn mine out and let her roll. I think rolling helps keep them chiropractically in balance. Edited to add that my girl lives outside-

Mine roll alot anyways after I do turn them back out after they dry just to show me they can still get dirty, lol.. But rolling is a good thing to help keep things in place I think, so I dont mine the rolling.  
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OhMax
Reg. Feb 2013
Posted 2018-05-29 10:40 AM
Subject: RE: Hosing off horses


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If I’m going to tie them up to dry, I scrape it off with my hand, less dripping to irritate them and I’ve read the water on top can create an insulated layer of heat.

If I’m going to turn them back out I just let them roll.
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Southtxponygirl
Reg. Nov 2006
Posted 2018-05-29 10:45 AM
Subject: RE: Hosing off horses



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I dont like turning mine back out untill they dry off, I want them to dry off under a shade tree so they wont get in the sun and fade out their coat while wet.  
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GLP
Reg. Oct 2013
Posted 2018-05-29 10:55 AM
Subject: RE: Hosing off horses


I just read the headlines


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I ALWAYS scrape off the water because I live in a high heat/high humidity land. If I didn't scrape the excess water, the water will act as a sheet/blanket and actually hold in his body heat instead of letting it disapate(?). At least that is what my vet told me many years ago.
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GoMistyGo
Reg. Feb 2004
Posted 2018-05-29 11:00 AM
Subject: RE: Hosing off horses



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I ALWAYS scrape it off!

Imagine it is very hot and your put on a soaking wet T-shirt.  You will get hot quickly again, but if you wring it out first you will stay cooler longer. 
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imturnin3
Reg. Apr 2010
Posted 2018-05-29 11:03 AM
Subject: RE: Hosing off horses


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Hose and scrape the access off. I read an article that researched scraping vs leaving access water on the coat and it shows that it cools the horse down slower,not faster because it blocks The heat from escaping the coat. Learn something new everyday!

Edited by imturnin3 2018-05-29 11:04 AM
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1DSoon
Reg. May 2009
Posted 2018-05-29 11:03 AM
Subject: RE: Hosing off horses





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GLP - 2018-05-29 11:55 AM I ALWAYS scrape off the water because I live in a high heat/high humidity land. If I didn't scrape the excess water, the water will act as a sheet/blanket and actually hold in his body heat instead of letting it disapate(?). At least that is what my vet told me many years ago.

 how is water different than sweat?


Evaprotative cooling should be working in both cases. 
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rodeomom3
Reg. Dec 2007
Posted 2018-05-29 11:06 AM
Subject: RE: Hosing off horses



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Always get the excess water off.   I came close  to losing my gelding last year.   He was at the trainers, I stopped by to check on them and drop off feed.  He was in his stall, respiration was over 100 had him  to the vets within an hour.   The trainer had worked him that morning, her help is suppose to cool them down and  hose them off, she left to go to a rodeo so instead of the normal routine of cooling them down good and tying under a tree where this is always a breeze,  he put him in his stall soaking wet which was the same as putting a hot blanket on him and he was just cooking and on his way to having a heat stroke.   

Edited by rodeomom3 2018-05-29 11:08 AM
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hereiam
Reg. Apr 2018
Posted 2018-05-29 11:11 AM
Subject: RE: Hosing off horses


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Big flies are terrible at my house in the evenings so I just rinse them off and let them roll so they can get some protection from flies. Leave them rather wet so the dirt can get caked on. Usually by the next day its pretty much warn off. The flies at my house bite through fly sheets. They are ruthless.
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rodeomom3
Reg. Dec 2007
Posted 2018-05-29 11:23 AM
Subject: RE: Hosing off horses



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1DSoon - 2018-05-29 11:03 AM
GLP - 2018-05-29 11:55 AM I ALWAYS scrape off the water because I live in a high heat/high humidity land. If I didn't scrape the excess water, the water will act as a sheet/blanket and actually hold in his body heat instead of letting it disapate(?). At least that is what my vet told me many years ago.
 how is water different than sweat?





Evaprotative cooling should be working in both cases. 

Another important part of cooling out horses is evaporation.  After the horse has been sprayed off, it is very important to scrape the water off. This is because once the horse is sprayed, the water absorbs the horse's heat and becomes warm.  In order for evaporation to occur effectively, this warm water must be removed.  This process can be repeated until the horse's temperature comes down (i.e. spray then scrape, spray again then scrape again, etc.).  If the water is not scraped off, it could act as an insulating layer and actually make the horse hotter than when you started.
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Southtxponygirl
Reg. Nov 2006
Posted 2018-05-29 11:23 AM
Subject: RE: Hosing off horses



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rodeomom3 - 2018-05-29 11:06 AM Always get the excess water off.   I came close  to losing my gelding last year.   He was at the trainers, I stopped by to check on them and drop off feed.  He was in his stall, respiration was over 100 had him  to the vets within an hour.   The trainer had worked him that morning, her help is suppose to cool them down and  hose them off, she left to go to a rodeo so instead of the normal routine of cooling them down good and tying under a tree where this is always a breeze,  he put him in his stall soaking wet which was the same as putting a hot blanket on him and he was just cooking and on his way to having a heat stroke.   

Lucky for your gelding that you stoped by at the right time. 
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rodeomom3
Reg. Dec 2007
Posted 2018-05-29 11:30 AM
Subject: RE: Hosing off horses



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Southtxponygirl - 2018-05-29 11:23 AM
rodeomom3 - 2018-05-29 11:06 AM Always get the excess water off.   I came close  to losing my gelding last year.   He was at the trainers, I stopped by to check on them and drop off feed.  He was in his stall, respiration was over 100 had him  to the vets within an hour.   The trainer had worked him that morning, her help is suppose to cool them down and  hose them off, she left to go to a rodeo so instead of the normal routine of cooling them down good and tying under a tree where this is always a breeze,  he put him in his stall soaking wet which was the same as putting a hot blanket on him and he was just cooking and on his way to having a heat stroke.   
Lucky for your gelding that you stoped by at the right time. 

 Very lucky.   The rest of the summer he was very sensitive to the heat.  If I did not get him up out of the heat of the day early enough, his respiration would sky rocket, hosing and fans would bring it immediately  down to normal- he still sweats normally though. 
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GLP
Reg. Oct 2013
Posted 2018-05-29 11:40 AM
Subject: RE: Hosing off horses


I just read the headlines


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rodeomom3 - 2018-05-29 11:23 AM

1DSoon - 2018-05-29 11:03 AM
GLP - 2018-05-29 11:55 AM I ALWAYS scrape off the water because I live in a high heat/high humidity land. If I didn't scrape the excess water, the water will act as a sheet/blanket and actually hold in his body heat instead of letting it disapate(?). At least that is what my vet told me many years ago.
Β how is water different than sweat?





Evaprotative cooling should be working in both cases.Β 

Another important part of cooling out horses is evaporation.Β  After the horse has been sprayed off, it is very important to scrape the water off. This is because once the horse is sprayed, the water absorbs the horse's heat and becomes warm.Β  In order for evaporation to occur effectively, this warm water must be removed.Β  This process can be repeated until the horse's temperature comes down (i.e. spray then scrape, spray again then scrape again, etc.).Β  If the water is not scraped off, it could act as an insulating layer and actually make the horse hotter than when you started.

Also, when they had the Olympics in Atlanta, studies were done to find out the best/safest ways to cool down the athletes because the heat and humidity were going to be so high. They found that hosing the horses off and scraping the water off repeatedly was the fastest and safest way to cool them down.
This and the high humidity slows down the evaporation rate. That is why in humid places you seem to sweat more than a dry climate where your sweat evaporates much more quickly making you think you are not sweating as much. I have found when we visited relatives in the Panhandle where it is much drier than here on the coast, we thought we weren't sweating that much and had to be more aware of how much we drank in order to not dehydrate. The temperature was as high or higher at home, but it felt cooler due to our sweat evaporating so much faster.

Edited by GLP 2018-05-29 11:44 AM
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OregonBR
Reg. Dec 2003
Posted 2018-05-29 11:50 AM
Subject: RE: Hosing off horses


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I leave them wet. I'm calling BS on the water causing them to be hotter. If I have to work on a hot day, I wet my T shirt in the sink and put it on. It keeps me cooler with any breeze that might be present. Sweat works the same way. Wet washcloth on a person with a fever. ETC... It cools.
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1DSoon
Reg. May 2009
Posted 2018-05-29 12:01 PM
Subject: RE: Hosing off horses





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OregonBR - 2018-05-29 12:50 PM I leave them wet. I'm calling BS on the water causing them to be hotter. If I have to work on a hot day, I wet my T shirt in the sink and put it on. It keeps me cooler with any breeze that might be present. Sweat works the same way. Wet washcloth on a person with a fever. ETC... It cools.

Yass 
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GLP
Reg. Oct 2013
Posted 2018-05-29 12:04 PM
Subject: RE: Hosing off horses


I just read the headlines


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OregonBR - 2018-05-29 11:50 AM

I leave them wet. I'm calling BS on the water causing them to be hotter. If I have to work on a hot day, I wet my T shirt in the sink and put it on. It keeps me cooler with any breeze that might be present. Sweat works the same way. Wet washcloth on a person with a fever. ETC... It cools.

That sure doesn't work down here. When we soak through our clothes, we put nice dry ones on and start all over again. What does seem to help is a wide brim hat and a wet cloth around your neck, changed frequently.
Also, air flows between skin and shirt, that is why you are cool. Air can't flow like that between water and hide.


Edited by GLP 2018-05-29 12:29 PM
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