Horse Summer Heat Safety
Keep Your Horse Cool in the Summer Heat
It’s as hot as a tin roof and you’ve got a day-long trail ride ahead. How can you tell if your horse gets too hot? Watch for the following heat-stress signposts that you should never ignore.
Signpost 1: Elevated Respiratory Rate
Why it happens: Hard breathing forces air to flow past vessels in your horse’s lungs and airways which help cool his blood.
Risky: When your horse’s respiratory rate is more than 40 to 50 breaths per minute and/or he’s breathing shallowly and his breathing doesn’t return to normal after two minutes’ rest.
Signpost 2: Elevated Heart Rate
Why it happens: A pounding heart transfers blood to your horse’s skin surfaces to be cooled by outside air.
Risky: When his heart rate is more than 80 beats per minute which doesn’t start to slow down after two minutes’ rest.
Signpost 3: Profuse Sweating
Why it happens: Evaporation of sweat from your horse’s skin helps him cool down.
Risky: When he’s sweating over his entire body or worse he stops sweating entirely.
Signpost 4: Elevated Temperature
Why it happens: Your horse’s cooling mechanisms have been overwhelmed.
Risky: When his rectal temperature goes up to 105° Fahrenheit or higher.
Signpost 5: Lethargy
Why it happens: Blood is being transferred away from your horse’s vital organs to his skin surfaces for cooling leading to severe heat stress.
Risky: When he shows signs of becoming depressed or lethargic, isn’t interested in food, or begins to stumble or collapse.
Signpost 6: Discolored Mucous Membranes
Why it happens: As your horse’s circulatory system becomes overwhelmed by trying to cool itself, blood may pool in his gums.
Risky: If his gums become dark red or “muddy” colored.
Related Article: 15 Strategies to Prevent Heat Stroke In Horses >>
How To Treat Heat Stress:
- Stop your workout. Dismount and prevent your horse from producing even more heat as he exercises. If he’s tacked up, remove your saddle to allow cooling air to flow over more of his body.
- Give him a cold water bath. Douse your horse’s entire body in very cold water (Don’t worry he won’t “cramp” or “tie-up.”) Another option is to sponge-bathe him in an alcohol/water solution mixed in a 1:1 ratio; he’ll cool down as the alcohol evaporates.
- Offer water. Offer your horse cold water to drink allowing him to have as much as he wants.
- Find shade. Move your horse to a shaded area away from direct sunlight that will heat him even more.
- Provide a breeze. Turn a fan on your horse or put him in a breezy location.
- Call your vet. If your horse’s signs (see above) don’t improve in 10 minutes–or if they worsen–call your vet. Heat stress can be serious and even life-threatening.
How To Prevent Heat Stress:
- Ride early in the day.
- Use less tack. Minimize saddle pads and leg boots and avoid blanketing him in the trailer.
- Provide fresh, cool water at all times.
- Provide electrolytes. Add electrolytes to your horse’s water when you know he’ll be working hard in the heat. Begin a few days ahead of time–electrolytes leach water from his system and he’ll need time to adjust his water intake to compensate. Offer him non-supplemented water as well since he might not like the taste of electrolytes.
- Keep him fit. An overweight horse requires more energy to move around so he’ll produce more heat. Also, his layers of fat make it harder for his blood to make it to the surface for cooling.
- Pay attention. Learn to recognize the signposts above and take steps before it’s too late.