
Exercise will tax your horse in extremely hot weather, but periodic hosing can help him beat the heat.
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Sweltering
summer heat is more than just very uncomfortable for your horse. It’s as much a health hazard
for your horse as it is for you. Young, old or ill horses are least equipped to
deal with extreme heat. But if you don’t manage your healthy adult horse, he
could easily get into trouble, too, with dehydration, weakness, colic, poor
exercise tolerance—even heatstroke.
Here are
some bare minimum measures you should take:
Keep clean water in limitless supply
available 24/7. Make sure plenty of shade from
trees, shelters or run-in sheds is available. If a herd situation, observe
carefully to make sure weaker, older or less-dominant horses are not being
chased away from water or shade. If you provide free-choice salt,
horses should be eating at least 2 oz./day. Weigh your blocks or bricks every
two weeks to make sure. If they’re not consuming this much salt on their own,
start adding it to their feed. If not feeding grain regularly, make a small
daily meal of soaked beet pulp or wheat bran with 2 tablespoons of salt
added.
With really bad conditions, consider
one of the following:
Bring the horses in during the
hottest part of the day and treat them to a hosing. Some horses really enjoy and will
use a sprinkler system. Keep it outside your pasture/paddock fencing and set it
to spray into the pasture. Set up large fans in your run-in
area. (Make sure cords are safely out of reach of chewing, curious
horses.)
| Quick Cooldown |
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An overheated horse,
either from exercise or simple heat exposure, needs aggressive cooling. It is
simply not true that you can’t use cold water on a hot horse. That’s a myth. In
fact, such cooling may prevent a life-threatening condition from
developing.
Using cold water from
a hose, run water over the horse’s chest, the jugular grooves of his neck, and
the lower legs. These areas have many superficial blood vessels that can be
rapidly cooled by the water and will carry the cooled blood to the interior of
the horse.
Once the horse seems
less distressed (breathing eases), progress to hosing the entire body. Continue
the hosing until the water running off underneath the horse’s body feels cool.
This means the water is no longer picking up large amounts of heat from the
surface of the skin.
The horse should then
be slowly walked in a shaded area. Observe him carefully to make sure the
respiratory (breathing) rate doesn’t climb again or that the horse begins to
sweat. If this happens, repeat the cooling process. Offer
tepid water at frequent intervals throughout this process. If the horse is very
distressed at first, or breathing/panting heavily, he probably won’t drink. Keep
trying. |
Black/brown
horses and overweight horses will have the most trouble regulating their body
heat. Foals and older horses may also be less heat tolerant, and horses with
Cushing’s disease very often have trouble regulating their body heat. Watch
these high-risk groups very carefully for signs of extreme depression, weakness,
drenching sweat or failure to sweat, and even panting. If these occur, go to
“quick cool” (see sidebar).
With
sweltering heat, if someone isn’t around to observe the horses during the
hottest part of the day, it may be best to confine them to the barn or a small
area you know has adequate shade. Horses lowest in the pecking order should
definitely be considered for special treatment.
Picnics
It’s also
normal for appetites to drop off during periods of extreme heat. If this
happens, don’t panic. Your horses will start eating again when they feel more
comfortable.
Because of
its high water content, grass is the ideal food. If your horse doesn’t have
enough grass available for it to be his main food, try tempting him with
carrots, celery, apples, watermelon, squash or salad greens added to a high
moisture mixture of soaked beet pulp and wheat bran.
Start with
small meals if your horse isn’t used to these feeds. Adding about 1 teaspoon of
salt per pound of the mixture improves appeal and is a good way to get that
needed salt into your horse.
Sweating
Sweating is
the most important mechanism horses have for eliminating excess body heat. It’s
therefore important to know if your horse is sweating normally.
As a rule,
dark horses (like dark clothing) hold more heat. They will sweat more easily and
more profusely than light-colored horses. Overweight horses heat up faster than
slimmer ones because the layer of fat is an insulator, trapping body heat. They
will sweat more and at lower air temperatures and work levels.
Unfit
horses usually sweat earlier, sweat more, and have more frothy, sticky sweat
than fit horses doing the same level of exercise. Horses just loafing in the
field or barn in hot weather will often have a light layer of sweat, just like
we do when outside in the heat. You may or may not be able to see this, but you
can usually feel it.
Very young
foals (first week or two of life) may not regulate their body temperatures very
efficiently and should be protected from extremes of heat by making sure they
have adequate shelter from the sun.
Older
horses, in particular horses with Cushing’s disease, also often have trouble
regulating their temperature. This may be seen as excessive sweating and panting
or exactly the opposite, failure to sweat (anhidrosis) with panting and
distress. (See “Anhidrosis” in the June issue of Perfect Horse.) Horses moved
from northern areas to the deep South may also develop anhidrosis. These
conditions call for aggressive and frequent cooling, including hosing and the
use of fans.