30 Grooming Tips to Transform Your Horse

- Ask your vet about adding vegetable oil or an essential Omega-3 fatty acid supplement to your horse’s well-balanced diet for added shine.
- Sponging your horse’s face clean after exercise helps prevent fungal hair loss.
- Keep different sized sponges for different duties (face, body, dock) and remember which is used for each task.
- Hoof picks are cheap. Always use a sharp one to remove rocks and debris, and replace the pick when it no longer does the job easily.
- Use a tail bag to keep your horse’s tail thick, long and protected. Make sure to wash, condition, detangle and rebraid once a week, securing the tail bag below the tailbone.
- Spend two minutes every two weeks running your clippers over your horse’s bridlepath and whiskers.
- Hoof oils and dressings for health or show are available. If you have a particular concern in mind, such as hooves that crack easily, ask your farrier for product suggestions.
- Use a detangler and a wide-toothed comb (or your fingers) to remove any large snarls from mane and tail.
- Dark coats often fade or bleach in the sunlight, so provide plenty of shade and consider adding a sheet. Sweat in the coat accelerates the fade, so rinse a sweaty horse before allowing him to bask in the sunshine.
- Bathe your horse but don’t overdo it—frequent shampooing may actually dull his coat.
- An equine squeegee, rather than a hard sweat scraper, makes removing water from equine legs and hips easier and kinder.
- For extra shine on special occasions, spritz your horse’s coat with a sheen product.
- Regular use of coat polish sprays right after bathing has the added bonus of deterring dust—it slides right off.
- Horses with pink skin need extra sun protection—use sunscreen on susceptible pink noses.
- To help protect against skin infections, regularly disinfect grooming brushes and combs.
- Keep brushes clean as you go: After every few strokes with your body brush, clean the bristles on a metal or rubber curry held in your other hand.
- Brush from front to back, top to bottom, for the most efficient effort.
- Curry first in a circular motion to loosen dirt and hair; then use your stiff dandy brush to remove it. A flick of the wrist at the end of your long flat brush stroke helps lift the dust off.
- Multi-task: use a brush in each hand!
- Show-ring veterans have long known that grooming wipes are ever so handy.
- If you have a gray horse or one with a lot of chrome, keep some spray-on equine stain remover—created to deal with manure and grass stains—at the ready.
- As you groom, inspect your horse for injuries, skin irritations or areas of sensitivity. Run your bare hands down his legs to check for heat or swelling.
- Keep up with routine grooming chores, such as mane pulling, trimming fetlocks, et cetera. That way you’re not overwhelmed with last minute clean-up before a show.
- If your horse objects to having his mane pulled, try doing a little each day after exercise, while his pores are open.
- Check your horse’s stall or paddock fencing for protruding objects: Wounds lead to blemishes and worse.
- Let sweat and mud dry before attempting to brush it out. Or, hose your horse off.
- When braiding, banding, or even training a mane over to one side, use a mane mousse to help get wayward hairs under control.
- Color enhancing shampoos accentuate your horse’s natural tones and bring out the highlights of his coat.
- Using oil specifically designed for your horse’s face, rather than baby oil, will collect less dust at the show.
- Let your horse roll—dirt isn’t permanent.

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