Summer Riding: When the Rider is Hot, the Horse is Hotter

A hot humid day. One rider. One horse. Both are exercising at a moderate level. Who is more likely to overheat?
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Summer Riding: When the Rider is Hot, the Horse is Hotter
Photo: Anne M. Eberhardt/The Horse

A hot humid day. One rider. One horse. Both are exercising at a moderate level. Who is more likely to overheat?

It might surprise you to know that your horse gets hotter, much faster than you and is more susceptible to the negative effects of heat stress.

Michael Lindinger, PhD, MSc, an animal and exercise physiologist at the University of Guelph, explains: “It only takes 17 minutes of moderate intensity exercise in hot, humid weather to raise a horse’s temperature to dangerous levels. That’s three to 10 times faster than in humans. Horses feel the heat much worse than we do

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