Tuesday, August 28, 2012

What Every Horse Owner Should Have in Your Equine Emergency First Aid Kit

Whether you board your horse or keep him at home, as a horse owner you need to be prepared to deal with potential injury or illness your horse might suffer.  Having your own well stocked first aid box means you will always have basic supplies on hand to deal with minor injuries or help your horse until the vet arrives.

Store your kit in a waterproof container like a metal or plastic tool box or Rubbermaid box.  You may want to have one main kit to keep in the barn and a smaller more portable one to take when you go trail riding or travel to a show.

You don't have to break your budget to set up your first aid kit.  Many items can be purchased at the grocery, drug or discount store.
  • Digital Thermometer - normal temperature for an adult horse is between 37.2 and 38.3C (99.0 and 101.5F)
  • Stethoscope for listening to heart or gut sounds. Your horse's heartbeat can be heard most clearly just behind his left elbow.
    Click here for information on normal horse temperature, heart rate and breathing rate.
  • Absorbent padding like gamgee padding, gauze or disposable diapers, or sanitary pads for bandaging cuts. Disposable diapers are great on knees, hocks and feet.
  • Duct tape works well as a hoof wrap, to hold on a loose shoe or to secure stable bandages
  • Zinc Oxide Ointment (diaper rash cream) for sunburn and minor cuts/scrapes
  • Epsom salts mixed with water for rinsing cuts/scrapes or made into a poultice for drawing out infection
  • Antiseptic wound cleaner such as iodine (brand names such as Betadine and Hibitane)
  • Antibiotic cream encourages healing of wounds by keeping the skin moist and clean. 
  • Saline solution for flushing eyes and cleaning wounds
  • Hot/Cold Gel Pack (Microwave or Freeze) for injuries with swelling, heat or soft tissue damage.
  • Bandage scissors for removing bandages without cutting your horse in the process
  • Fence Wire Cutter to free a horse tangled in wire or fencing
  • Clean sponges and/or towels for washing injuries
  • Vaseline for preventing scalding below an oozing wound or lubricating a thermometer
  • Large Ziplock type freezer bags to store and keep materials organized & clean
  • Plastic wrap for leg sweats
  • Small flash light and spare batteries

Other items for your first aid kit can be found at your local tack, farm or feed supply store:
  • Self sticking bandage (eg. 3M Vetrap 4" X 5 yd Roll
  • Standing bandages and cottons for soft tissue leg injuries and wounds
  • Antiseptic wash such as Hibitane or Chlorhexidine
  • Blood clotting product such as WonderDust
  • Hoof pick
  • A First Aid Reference Book 
  • A small notebook to record vital signs and other information you want to tell the vet.
Include a card or sheet with emergency contact numbers including yours, your vet's, your farrier, your insurance company as well as the street address and directions to the stable.  Seal the card or sheet in plastic and tape it to the inside of the lid of your first aid box.

Dealing with a sick or injured horse is stressful enough without scrambling to find supplies or finding you don't have them.  Keeping a well stocked, organized and easily accessible first aid kit is well worth the effort.







If you would like to help share these horse keeping tips with people who keep their horses at home, please share this blog with 5 friends, send a Tweet or post on your Facebook page. The horses thank you. You are welcome to use this article in your newsletter or blog as long as you include my credit information: Written by Anne Gage, Confident Horsemanship (www.annegage.com). I would also appreciate it if you’d send me a copy for my media files.
 Anne Gage Confident Horsemanship
 www.annegage.com 
www.facebook.com/ConfidentHorsemanshp 
www.twitter.com/AnneGage

Friday, August 3, 2012

5 Reasons for Using Slow Feeder Hay Nets for Your Horses

The horses' digestive system is designed to eat small, frequent meals so that food moves continuously through the digestive tract.  For horses that live on pasture 24/7, this is not an issue.  Unfortunately, most domestic horses don't have access to this type of grazing, many can't cope with high quantities of grass and not many properties have healthy pasture to offer them.   So, most horses are fed larger meals less frequently.  When horses go for even a couple of hours without food, they can suffer insulin spikes and there is a build up of gastric acid in their guts.  This acid is the cause of damage to the digestive tract, ulcers, cribbing, and wood chewing.

Slow feeder hay nets are an economical way to encourage your horse eat in a way that more closely imitates grazing.  Here are 5 reasons for using slow feeder hay nets:


  1. Save money and hay.  The slow feeder hay nets stop hay from being wasted by being trampled and soiled with manure and urine.
  2. Stops your horse gorging at feeding times.  Eating more slowly makes the hay last 2-3 times longer and imitates grazing behaviour.
  3. Horses eat at a more natural level.  The small holes (1 1/2" to 2") allows the nets to be put on the ground or hung low.  If your horse has shoes, it best to hang the nets up high enough that your horse won't step on it and get his show caught in the netting.
  4. Saves you time.  A full bale hay net can last one horse 24 hours so you don't have to feed as frequently.
  5. keeps your horse healthier.  By having hay available more frequently the gastric acid that causes stomach upsets such as ulcers and colic is reduced.
When you first introduce your horses to slow feeder hay nets, make sure there is loose hay available as well. It takes them a day or two to learn to adjust how they eat.  Hungry horses who are used to gorging themselves will paw the nets or bite through the netting.  As they adjust, they use their lips to pull the hay through the holes.  

Tying the net inside a box or a tractor tire helps stop the horses from pawing the net, keeps it out of the mud and manure and allows your horses to eat at a natural height.

Slow feeder hay nets come in several different sizes:
  • small ones to hold a few flakes (good for ponies & minis)
  • small square bale
  • large square bale
  • round bale
I originally started using the slow feeder hay nets for my insulin resistant horse.  It was easy to soak his hay in the net, hang it to drain and then keep him happy for a few hours with a few flakes of hay.  Because insulin resistant horses are also hungry all the time, he was happier because he had in front of him for longer periods of time.  

I liked how it worked so well that I bought a few small square bale sized nets for feeding the 3 geldings that live out 24/7.  One is allergic to dust so I can't give them a round bale.  He also has had ulcers in the past, so keeping food in front of him more often is much healthier for him.   I spread the hay nets around their paddock and away from their water trough to encourage them to move around rather than standing in one place all day and night.  Now, they prefer to eat from the hay nets than from loose hay.

With the drought this summer and the scarcity of hay, I just bought a round bale net.  It took the mares 2 days longer to finish the round bale than without the net.  That's going to save a few round bales this winter.  And, there was absolutely no wasted hay.  I was already using a Duplessis hay feeder and now with the slow feeder net, the results are even better.

You can save more money by buying the netting to make your own hay nets.  For my North American readers, this company is located in Welland, Ontario, Canada and ships across North America.

For the DIYers, you can build many different styles of feeders from scratch or from materials around your farm.  Check out the ideas on Paddock Paradise for photos, videos and instructions.

Give the slow hay feeders a try and share your experiences by posting a comment below.



If you would like to help share these horse keeping tips with people who keep their horses at home, please share this blog with 5 friends, send a Tweet or post on your Facebook page.  The horses thank you.
 
You are welcome to use this article in your newsletter or blog as long as you include my credit information:
Written by Anne Gage, Confident Horsemanship (www.annegage.com).  I would also appreciate it if you’d send me a copy for my media files.
 
Anne Gage
Confident Horsemanship
www.annegage.com
www.facebook.com/ConfidentHorsemanshp
www.twitter.com/AnneGage