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RideCamp@endurance.net
Re: White hairs on a chestnut
Lori, The white you are describing
comes from irritation of the skin. The fact that your pad walks out from
underneath your saddle indicates that your saddle is not fitting properly.
If you cinch it down on your horse, you will most likely find that there is a
lot more pressure at the front of the saddle than at the back. This causes
the saddle to swish side to side walking the pad out and causing friction burn
to her back. The white where your cinch fits, is also caused from
friction . Neoprene girths can cause burns big time! Your saddle may
need a built-up or roper style pad. Thicker in the front of the pad and
thinner at the back. This will raise the front of the saddle in an attempt
to distribute the pressure more evenly across her back. Or, You may try a couple
of mouse pads glued together and place them underneath the forks of your saddle
on each side. Take care not to have the pads so far up that they are next
to the spine. This will cause problems of a different sort. Never
crowd the spine area. The hairs around the girth area can be caused
by a cinch that is too loose, too far forward, too hot. Too far forward
will not allow freedom of movement at the area between the elbow and rib cage.
As the foreleg moves back and forth the skin drags past the girth. I
have seen horses burn and blister from having fly repellent and or soap residue
on their skin before being saddled and wind up with a chemical burn.
2 cents worth .
gesa n clovis
Hi there all. I sure could use some help
on a problem I am starting to have. My chestnut mare is starting to get
white hairs where my English saddle sits. She has never had dry spots, or
any soring, yet the hairs are definitely there. They are about half the size
of the bars on my saddle. And on both sides on her backbone. I will say that
she has a problem with pigmentation, since she is a solid colored paint. She
even has an area between her hips where the sweat would form from the hot
Bakersfield days that has lost it's color and is now large whites spots. And
she has roaning at the girth area, though she has never been sored up. Those
same white hairs on her back first showed up after spending a week at a
clinic when I used a western saddle on her. And again, there wasn't any
soring or dry spots. The hairs went away but are now back again. Anyone have
any idea as to what could be going on? My saddle is a Whitman with a spring
tree, and my pad is a coolmax that refuses to stay in place. Weather
permitting, I always wash her off after a ride.
Thanks for any help.
Lori
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