Taylor Made Too Saddlery

Taylor Made Too Saddlery English riding equipment, tack repairs, custom leatherwork, dog collars & leads
www.taylormadetoo.com
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I had the great privilege of being asked by Dinnie to ride one of her horses at the Royal Winter Fair - and we WON! One ...
02/02/2023

I had the great privilege of being asked by Dinnie to ride one of her horses at the Royal Winter Fair - and we WON! One of my best memories! :D She was a grand and gracious woman. May she rest in peace with her horses. Sending love to her family

'Dinnie' Greenway, a Londoner who blazed many trails in the equestrian world and continued to ride horses into her late 90s, has died. She was 102.

12/08/2022
10/15/2022

❤️

This is my friend's shop just outside of Owen Sound. I'm sure she'll ship to you! :D
10/14/2022

This is my friend's shop just outside of Owen Sound. I'm sure she'll ship to you! :D

Time to think about coats for you and your horse. Stock is great in rainsheet, lined rain sheets, medium and heavy winter blankets and blanket liners. Special this week - buy a Bucas blanket and you can get 30% off a Bucas quilt.

09/24/2022

09/09/2022

Queen Elizabeth II 🇬🇧
1926 – 2022

This is SO true! LOL :D
08/08/2022

This is SO true! LOL :D

Horses will always be horses 😂
credits: Pinterest

04/23/2022

Still true. ❤️

This is why we have horses!
04/20/2022

This is why we have horses!

“Twenty-two percent of millennials say they have ‘no friends,’” claimed a Vox article from 2019. While that stat was pulled from a poll of fewer than 2,000 people, the truth of it still echoes around me three years later. Coworkers, family members, and yes, friends have lamented, “Why the ...

Love this, so true!
03/20/2022

Love this, so true!

Such great words from such a seasoned competitor!
02/24/2022

Such great words from such a seasoned competitor!

Tuesday Tip:
Remember, this horse showing and riding is supposed to be FUN! That's how most of us got started. Smile, enjoy your your horse and what you are learning. It's all a process. Some days you win and some days you learn! I have found that the more you have fun, the more success you make. Being overly critical of yourself or your horse generally works against you. Always find the good in everything first. Whether you are the rider, trainer, sponsor or parent be positive, be supportive. No one tries to do poorly! SO many riders beat themselves up and are critical of themselves. They don't need help at that! Focus on the positive and you will see much more positive results! Try it and see what happens!!!

This is why we all "know" we love horses!
11/26/2021

This is why we all "know" we love horses!

I DID NOT KNOW... by Alissa Kelly

I did not know a horse could bring people into your life that end up meaning the most to you.
I did not know a horse could make the hardest days of your life bearable.
I did not know a horse could teach you to put others first.
I did not know a horse could remind you time and time again that your gut is always right.
I did not know a horse could break your heart.
I did not know a horse could pick you up when you have fallen apart.
I did not know a horse could teach you to dream again, after you thought it was not possible.
I did not know a horse could make you believe in yourself.
I did not know a horse could teach responsibility, work ethic, and dedication.
I did not know a horse could make you believe in something when no one else does.
I did not know a horse could make you learn to forgive and forget.
I did not know a horse could humble you faster than you can say humble.
I did not know a horse could make you a winner.
I did not know a horse could also teach you how to lose gracefully.
I did not know a horse could instill patience in you.
I did not know a horse could make you listen better.
I did not know a horse could give you their heart.
I did not know a horse could change your life.
I did not know a horse could do all these things...
but now I know. ❤️❤️

My previous self as a physiologist/medical researcher and my current self as a 50+ year horse owner found this very inte...
11/04/2021

My previous self as a physiologist/medical researcher and my current self as a 50+ year horse owner found this very interesting. Thought you might too! :)

What is the longest a horse can safely go without food?

More and more I see horses and ponies stood for long periods of time with no hay or haylage. Usually under the guise of a “weight control diet”. So how long can a horse be without food before damage is done? And what damage is done?

For those with a short attention span, I’ll give you the answer to begin with - 4 hours, maximum.

Why?

Horses are grazers. They are designed to eat constantly. They have no way of storing their acids and digestive enzymes, they’ve never needed to. They have no gall bladder to store bile and their stomachs release acid constantly, whether or not there is food in the stomach and intestines.

A horses stomach only holds approximately 8-15 litres. Depending on the substance eaten, it takes on average 4-6 hours for the stomach to completely empty. After this, the acids and enzymes start to digest the inside of the horses stomach and then the intestines. This causes both gastric and intestinal ulceration. It has been estimated that 25-50% of foals and 60-90% of adult horses suffer from ulceration. But I won’t go into detail about this, there is a lot of information around about ulcers.

So is that it? Are ulcers the only concern?

No, having an empty stomach is a stress situation for a horse. The longer they are starved, the more they release stress hormones, cortisol predominantly. Cortisol blocks insulin and causes a constantly high blood glucose level. This stimulates the body to release even more insulin, and in turn this causes fat tissue to be deposited and leptin resistance. Over time this causes insulin resistance (Equine Metabolic Syndrome). All of these mechanisms are well known risk factors for laminitis and are caused by short term starvation (starting roughly 3-4 hours after the stomach empties). Starving a laminitic is literally the worst thing you can do. Over longer periods, this also starts to affect muscle and can cause weakness, and a lack of stamina so performance horses also need a constant supply of hay/haylage to function optimally.

Let’s not forget horses are living, breathing and feeling animals. We talk about this stress reaction like it’s just internal but the horse is well aware of this stress. Door kicking, box walking, barging and many other stable vices and poor behaviour can be explained by a very stressed horse due to food deprivation (we all have that Hangry friend to explain this reaction). Next time you shout or hit a horse that dives for their net, remember their body is genuinely telling them they are going to starve to death. They know no different.

But surely they spend the night asleep so they wouldn’t eat anyway?

Not true. Horses only need 20mins REM sleep every 24 hours (jealous? I am!). They may spend a further hour or so dozing but up to 22-23 hours a day are spent eating. So if you leave your horse a net at 5pm and it’s gone by 8pm, then by 12am their stomach is empty. By 4am they are entering starvation mode. By their next feed at 8am, they are extremely stressed, physically and mentally.

Now I know the cob owners are reading this mortified. I can almost hear you shouting at your screen “if I feed my horse ad lib hay he won’t fit out the stable door in a week!!”

I will say that a horse with a constant supply of hay/haylage will eat far less then the same horse that is intermittently starved. They don’t eat in a frenzy, reducing the chance of colic from both ulcers and over eating. Cobs included.

However I’m not suggesting you sit your cob in front of a bale of haylage and say have at it! There is a difference between ad lib and a constant supply. There is much we can do to reduce calorie intake and control weight whilst feeding a constant supply.

The easiest is small holes nets. There are many. Trickle nets, greedy feeders, nibbleze, trawler nets etc. My personal favourite is the Shires Soft Mesh 1”. They don’t cost the Earth, they are easy to fill and they don’t have knots so are much gentler to the teeth. Now often I suggest these types of nets to owners and the owner tells me “Oh no, *** won’t eat out of those” 🙄 this is nonsense. If he was left it, he would. Remember, you can give a normal net and one of these for them to nibble at after. Better than leaving them with nothing at all.

A few other tricks, hang the net from the ceiling/rafters, it’s harder to eat out of a net that swings. Soak the hay, a minimum of 4 hours to be effective. Mix with straw but be sure to introduce the straw slowly and make sure it’s top quality and a palatable type eg Barley or Oat, otherwise they won’t eat it.

Don’t forget exercise. The best way to get weight off a horse is exercise. Enough exercise and they can eat what they want!

And lay off the bucket feed and treats! Horses on a diet require a vit/min supplement in the form of a balancer but that’s it. The odd slice of carrot or swede won’t do any harm but no licks, treats, treacle, molasses, cereal based rubbish. Even if it says low sugar or the marvellously misleading “No added sugar”! Your horse would rather have a constant supply of hay, I promise.

Written by Vikki Fowler BVetMed BAEDT MRCVS

A few edits for the critics-

Firstly, feeding a constant supply does not mean ad lib feeding. It means use some ingenuity and spread the recommended amount of daily forage so the horse is never stood with out food for more than 4 hours. I am not promoting obesity, quite the opposite, feeding like this reduces obesity and IR. This can be done whilst feeding your horse twice a day as most horse owners do. Just think outside the box for your own situation.

Secondly I am in the UK and this post is UK specific, use some common sense when reading. Yes in warmer climates, soaking hay for 4 hours is dangerous and studies show 1 hour is plenty in hot weather but in the UK’s arctic climate, a minimum of 4 hours is required. Equally the UK feed exclusively grass hay. I can not comment on other types.

Thirdly, yes every horse/pony and situation is different, but this is a law of nature and all horses have this anatomy and metabolism. How you achieve this constant supply is individual, the need for it is not.

Fourthly, the use of hay nets in the UK is very very high. I’d estimate 95% of horses I see are fed this way and very very few have incisor wear or neck/back issues as a result. Yes, feeding from the ground is ideal, but a constant supply, I feel trumps this. Again with ingenuity both can be safely achieved.

Finally, straw can be fed to horses safely, introduced very slowly, with fresh water always available, plus a palatable and digestible type of straw which will depend on your area. Again many horses in the UK are bedded on straw and most of them eat it. This is not a new concept to us.

Final finally 🤦‍♀️ and I feel I must add this due to the sheer number of people contacting me to ask, feed your horses during transport!!! I am astonished this is not normal in other countries! Again in the UK, we give our horses hay nets to transport. We don’t go 10 mins up the road without a haynet and a spare in case they finish! Considering we are a tiny island and we rarely transport even 4 hours, we never transport without hay available. I have never seen an episode of choke due to travelling with hay available. If you are concerned, use a slow feeder net so they can’t take too much in at once.

If you get to the end of this post and your first thought is “I can’t do this with my horse/pony, they’d be morbidly obese”, you haven’t read the advice in this post thoroughly.

A great read!
10/01/2021

A great read!

A thought-provoking read.
By Jane Smiley
Most horses pass from one human to another - some horsemen and women are patient and forgiving, others are rigorous and demanding, others are cruel, others are ignorant.
Horses have to learn how to, at the minimum, walk, trot, canter, gallop, go on trails and maybe jump, to be treated by the vet, all with sense and good manners.
Talented Thoroughbreds must learn how to win races, and if they can't do that, they must learn how to negotiate courses and jump over strange obstacles without touching them, or do complicated dance
like movements or control cattle or accommodate severely handicapped children and adults in therapy work.
Many horses learn all of these things in the course of a single lifetime. Besides this, they learn to understand and fit into the successive social systems of other horses they meet along the way.
A horse's life is rather like twenty years in foster care, or in and out of prison, while at the same time changing schools over and over and discovering that not only do the other students already have their own social groups, but that what you learned at the old school hasn't much application at the new one.
We do not require as much of any other species, including humans.
That horses frequently excel, that they exceed the expectations of their owners and trainers in such circumstances, is as much a testament to their intelligence and adaptability as to their relationship skills or their natural generosity or their inborn nature. That they sometimes manifest the same symptoms as abandoned orphans - distress, strange behaviors, anger, fear - is less surprising than that they usually don't.
No one expects a child, or even a dog to develop its intellectual capacities living in a box 23 hours a day and then doing controlled exercises the remaining one.
Mammal minds develop through social interaction and stimulation.
A horse that seems "stupid", "slow", "stubborn", etc. might just have not gotten the chance to learn!
Take care of your horses and treasure them.

07/21/2021
This is what it's all about!
06/02/2021

This is what it's all about!

Upping the game...

03/10/2021

Illustration by Sandy Rabinowitz

Wise words
02/16/2021

Wise words

Olympic show jumper and Kentucky Derby-winning trainer Michael Matz considers the importance of learning horse care and equestrian sports history. What do you consider a horseman? To me, a good horseman is a good caretaker. You can have a good ho...

02/02/2021

🤣🤣🤣 You'll be happy to know this is NOT how we make cookies in "My Carlisle Kitchen!" (Nan's other business)

My Minx et al. TBs 🏇🏇🏇🏇🏇🏇
01/05/2021

My Minx et al. TBs 🏇🏇🏇🏇🏇🏇

Must remember to watch this!
12/30/2020

Must remember to watch this!

For all our lovely international fans ⭐️🎉 who can’t watch the the brand new performance of ⭐️ THE BALLET OF THE WHITE HORSES ⭐️ which is being shown on Austrian and German TV on New Year’s Day, we are very happy to announce that, by the courtesy of the ORF,
we’ll show the whole performance right here on our page available
from midnight on SUNDAY 3rd of January for 24 hours (CET time 0 00 - 24 00 pm)

www.srs.at







Very good leather care advice here! If in doubt, bring or send it to us for a "Spa Treatment". We sell our Rider's Choic...
12/17/2020

Very good leather care advice here! If in doubt, bring or send it to us for a "Spa Treatment". We sell our Rider's Choice pure glycerine spray soap for cleaning and Neatslene Oil or Oakwood Conditioner for rejuvenating your leathergoods. https://theerlleathercompany.com/?p=366&fbclid=IwAR2XY-6ciRwbrSEm6KuRlmxxgNTSgNCrRC_C6brSy57JD8v5Fn-vTCRVgrw

The ERL Leather Company > Leather Blog > Leather > Leather Care:Leather Care:by Emily-Rose LeclercAugust 30, 2020August 31, 2020 Before you run out to the store and buy a whole shelf full of leather care products, consider what you want out of your leather product first:- What type of product is it?...

11/12/2020
10/06/2020

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11 Falkirk Street (a. K. A Church St. On Some Maps)
Denfield, ON
N0M1P0

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