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Veteran
Posts: 294
Location: Fort Worth, Tx | I just found an interesting horse cleaning hint that I have not seen before...now that it's too cold in most places to bathe your horse. Use Swiffer cloths to wipe down your horse and they will remove all the dust and old hair and leave him nice and shiny! Anyone ever try this? |
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Elite Veteran
Posts: 824
Location: Kansas | They come in wet or dry-which ones were they using? |
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Expert
Posts: 2614
| I would think that it would not be the wet swiffers,since those contain cleaning chemicals suitable to use on floors,ect. |
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Expert
Posts: 1989
Location: South Central OK | Microfiber cleaning cloths work great and have no chemicals to irritate the skin and you can wash them and re-use! |
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Veteran
Posts: 294
Location: Fort Worth, Tx | They were the dry ones. I'm going to try and remember to take one out and see what it does. I've used a vacuum before, which works great, but don't have one now, and hot toweling is a hassle. |
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Elite Veteran
Posts: 824
Location: Kansas | I know that sounded like an obvious question but I know about some people whose horse had some sort of skin infection so they took it to a car wash to wash off the scabs. It takes all kinds... |
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Veteran
Posts: 294
Location: Fort Worth, Tx | OMG I am dying laughing just now. I wish you had pics of that to post, were these people the same ones hauling that monstrosity of a trailer that someone posted a few weeks ago? |
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Expert
Posts: 2614
| WHAAAAT????? |
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Expert
Posts: 2828
Location: Southern New Mexico | We used to take our 4-H steers to the car wash and wash them. We'd tie them to the back of the tractor, walk them down and use the scrub brush to wash and then rinse. (with it the way the water comes out with out holding down the handle for the pressure!) |
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