Preparing to travel, with top event groom Zanie Tanswell

  • 10m 43secs
  • Views:3176
  • Rating:Video Rating - 5 stars
  • Posted: 08/05/2008
About this video
Zanie Tanswell was Pippa Funnell's groom during the Grand Slam years and a past Groom of the Year. She is based at her own and event rider Chris King’s Gloucestershire yard. Having travelled the world with Pippa, Zanie is undoubtedly one of the country’s leading grooms. She shows us how to dress a horse for travel, prepare the lorry, load a horse and offers some very handy travel tips. Zanie is a great tutor, and advanced event horse, Isandhlwana, plays his part impeccably! Presented by Harry Meade.
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Zanie Tanswell's advice on travelling a horse

  • Zanie starts by rugging the horse, so it doesn’t get cold while you get him ready.
  • She uses breathable rugs so that if the horse sweats, the moisture will be wicked away. She likes to use rugs with simple straps in case she needs to take them off in transit.
  • A tail guard offers more protection than just a tail bandage but they are best used together.

Comments

Bay Triangle 10 Apr 2010 Good video, and good advice re rugging and boots/bandages, and so clear. I've never bandaged a horse's tail, but had no idea that a horse could lose its tail from a too-tight bandage! We listened to a presentation not long ago, from our vet (in Calgary, Alberta), about transporting horses. One of the biggest issues that they http://www.mooreandco.com/ deal with around transporting horses is a type of pneumonia. Sorry, I can't remember the name of it - but it turns out to be caused by the fact that horses cannot get their heads down during travel. It is all microscopic, and to do with the direction that foreign objects are pushed in in the esophagus; and to do with the fact that they are grazing animals who have their heads down. So - I think the recommendation was not to feed during travel, preferably put them in box stalls, not straight, although angle stalls are next best. We do live in a dry climate that's dusty, so it might be more of an issue here than in England, but it was felt that there should be no bedding on the trailer, and no feed, to cut down on dust getting into the horses' lungs.
LadyJennivieve 4 Sep 2009 How do grooms get over/around the dividers and horses to water horses and remove rugs?

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