T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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156.1 | safety tips! | NRADM2::CIAMPAGLIA | | Mon Dec 01 1986 10:19 | 72 |
| I just had to reply to this one! I trailer horses as a second income,
so I have become familiar with different horses personalities and
have acquired safety tips about trailering.
I have learned that a horse should never be left alone in a trailer
unless he is a fool proof, old pro at trailering and used to being
left alone. He should never have been left unattended, but unfortunately
this is done so often. I am always seeing horses left unattended
at shows, owners leave them a haynet and go off to watch some classes
and before you know it the haynet runs out of hay and the horse
gets restless and starts to fidgit, this can only lead to trouble.
My point is: rule #1, never leave a horse alone in a trailer, unless
you are very confident that it won't bother him.
I also have a question, why was the horse in the back stall of the
trailer? When trailering two horses in a four horse trailer, the
heaviest horse should be in the front left stall and the lighter
horse in the back, right stall, this helps to balance the long tailer
for easier and safer hauling.
I too had a trailer accident in early October when a baby I was
hauling (he was 16.1 hands at 1200 pounds at 2 1/2 years) who had
never been hauled freaked out and jumped over the breast bar and
really did a nasty job on himself. It took a long time to free
him and there was alot of damage to him and to my trailer. I guess
you can never be too careful, we thought we had done everything
correct in hauling a baby, he had even had Ace Bromozine (sp?) to
tranquilize him, but he still managed to get hurt.
The bottom line is this, I have some safety tips that I usually
try to stick by, especially if I don't know the horse or if I haven't
hauled him before:
- Always haul in a leather halter. They will break more easily
than a nylon if the horse gets hung up.
- If trailering a single horse in a 2-horse trailer always haul
on the left side, this will balance the trailer on the road, especially
if the road has a sloping right shoulder.
- If trailering 2 horses in a 2-horse trailer always load the
heavier horse on the left.
- If hauling 2 horses, one of which is green at trailering
load the more confident one first. This will ease the timid one.
- I never will haul by myself but that is up to the person hauling.
I just feel more confortable if someone is with me in case of an
accident or any trouble.
- When loading always put the butt bar across before you tie
the horse and always untie the horse before you un-do the butt bar
when unlaoding. This is a safety measure so that the horse doesn't
back out suddenly when tied and possible panic and hurt himself.
Of course when driving I have some tips too, which are mostly common
sense. Such as: Make as few stops as possible so as not to upset
the horse. If driving a standard try to down shift when possible
instead of hitting the breaks. Never haul without trailer lights
in good working order and of course a safe hitch, with safety chains.
Sorry to be so lengthy but the subject of hauling horses can be
a very long one. There is so much to remember and sometimes the only
way to learn is thru experience and trial and error.
I am glad to hear that the horse you hauled last week is recovering,
he is lucky, that could have been even worse, unfortunately I have
horror stories about trailering accidents where horses were not
so lucky. I am sure that you learned from your experience. Hope
my info helps in the future.
- Jenny -
|
156.2 | We had a similar incident this weekend! | PLANET::NICKERSON | Bob Nickerson DTN 282-1663 :^) | Mon Dec 01 1986 12:06 | 26 |
| I just had a similar incident happen to me over the long weekend.
A filly we were trucking to Connecticut who has never been loaded
went over the chest bar in our four horse trailer. Our stall dividers
are floor to ceiling so she couldn't get any further. She ended
up with only a few cuts and scrapes but none that required more
than a little topical ointment. I also had her in the right side
rear stall which I chose this time because I wanted to get at her fast
if there were a problem and if she came out I wanted her as close
to the side as possible. Normally I would load the same as Jenny
stated in .1. I also had some `Ace' with me but chose not to use
it because she was so quiet in the trailer.
Next time I'll open up the back as a box stall and let her go loose,
something I hate to do but it prevents her from being able to fight
anything. I don't like it because they have a tendency to kick
the sides which were not designed to take that kind of abuse.
I agree with everything Jenny said in .1 except that I always open
the middle door last instead of the butt bar and I keep the critter
tied until everything is out of the way. I especially do that now
after seeing a gelding who has shown all his life last year take
over a hundred stitches from trying to slide under the butt bar.
He probably didn't see it and thought it was OK to back out and
when he hit it he panicked. There's no way he could miss seeing
the middle door (if you have one) and even if he did he would still
be tied. Everyone has different experiences I guess. I'm glad
to hear that your horse is recovering.
|
156.3 | Watch the Escape Door! | TRNING::PJOHNSON | | Mon Dec 01 1986 17:08 | 13 |
| Also, be careful with use of the "escape door". I no longer open
or use this after an experience which I had three years back at
a horse show. We were loading up to leave. Conditions were good
- daylight, no rain or loud activity. The horse was experienced
in riding in a trailer. Normally, I ask the horse to step in, but
this one was a bit cantankerous, so I led him in and went out the
escape door. Unfortunately, he tried to follow me. Being a rather
strong quarter horse, he pushed his front legs through and got himself
wedged in tight. After several hours, we finally had to bring out
a torch and cut the side off the trailer. Quite a mess! Fortunately,
the horse suffered only minor abrasions.
=paul=
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156.4 | Definitely | USSCSL::IZZO | Ann Izzo...DTN: 255-5377 | Tue Dec 02 1986 09:16 | 7 |
| Re .3
I've seen that happen too...I think escape doors are a mixed bag
of problems. On the other hand, I was once pinned between a freaked
out mare and a closed escape door. I don't think you can win.
Ann
|
156.5 | Escape doors, Don't leave home without them | PLANET::NICKERSON | Bob Nickerson DTN 282-1663 :^) | Tue Dec 02 1986 12:09 | 9 |
| Re Escape doors
I always keep the door closed but unlached just in case. I open
it after the chest bar is latched shut. My safety philosophy is
people safety first, horse safety second. Both are very important
but it's harder to replace people.
Bob
|
156.6 | Try trailering backwards | NEWVAX::AIKEN | I love Crabbet Arabians! 301-867-1584 | Wed Dec 03 1986 17:36 | 16 |
| A trick we use trailering freaky horses: tie them facing the back
of the trailer. I have a four-horse stock trailer with divider
at mid-point. We put up 5/8" plywood sides in the front of the
trailer and on the divider to make a "baby stall" for hauling foals
and moms. The back stall is open (slats). When I have a nervous
horse to haul, I tie her to the back corner and let her stand on
the diagonal facing oncoming traffic. She can watch cars approach
her at a reasonal speed, rather than see cars zoom past going in
the opposite direction. I tie a hay net in the corner with her,
but tie up the bottom end, too, so the net hangs across the top.
She travels in the back stall provided there is another horse in
the front section. If she is by herself, I still tie her facing
backward and let her find her own balance. Usually, at shows, I
can untie her and let her use the double stall as a box stall.
Works fine, even for this flaky filly.
|
156.7 | DIVIDERS?? | DASXPS::LCOBURN | | Tue Apr 17 1990 13:25 | 24 |
| I have a question for those experienced at hauling....I am going
to be doing a reasonable amount of hauling this year, and am the
process of "fixing up" my trailer...it is older but in excellent
condition, and is really starting to look sharp now that I have
washed and waxed it inside and out. My question is about dividers.
My trailer is loaded with "extras", has about every feature imaginable
save a dressing room, and one of them is that the center divider
is in reality 4 seperate pieces: a head divider, a stallion guard,
and two pieces between the stalls. Any and all can be removed
seperately and what I am wondering is if it is generally better
to leave in the bottom piece of the part between the stalls that
extends it down to the floor, or to remove that piece and have
the two horses seperated only by the upper portion. Never having
hauled two horses together I am curious if having that piece out
causes them to step on each others feet, or what?? I will be hauling
to two shows in May, our own TB both times along with friends'
horses and want to make the trip as comfortable and safe as possible..
Thanks for any suggestions! Btw...if it matters at all, both parts
are fully padded...
thanks!
Linda
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156.8 | | CSC32::M_HOEPNER | Remember to drain the swamp... | Tue Apr 17 1990 13:39 | 16 |
|
Most horses I have dealt with haul better WITHOUT the divider going
straight to the floor. In fact, I have hauled several that went
bananas with the divider going all the way to the floor. These horses
liked to travel with their feet spread as far as they could.
I have not had problems with them stepping on each other. But I use
bell boots and shipping wraps when we travel just in case.
And there are other advantages to having a partial divider. If one
goes down in the trailer, I have had an easier time of pulling out the
partial divider to get them up (since they aren't likely to be kicking
it or laying on it).
|
156.9 | I send the partial divider. | GENRAL::LEECH | Customer Services Engineer ** We do the job ** | Tue Apr 17 1990 13:43 | 13 |
|
I agree with only using a partial divider. The horses seem to scramble
less and do not fight the trailer for footing as much as they would
with a full divider. It is also a great help if the horses are
claustophobic by letting them think they have more room than they
actually do.
The only way that I would use a full divider is if I were hauling a
horse that liked to be a pig in the trailer and kick whoever he was
riding with.
Pat
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156.10 | | DYO780::AXTELL | Dragon Lady | Tue Apr 17 1990 15:27 | 11 |
| I will NEVER use a partial divider again. I was hauling a horse
who unexpectedly paniced and fell in the trailer (it wasn't moving
at the time). She got stuck under the divider and couldn't get
up. It was a very ugly scene.
I've taken to using a stock trailer these days. The horses have
enough room to spread out their feet and they don't step on each
other.
-maureen
|