Sun-bleached black mini !!

Miniature Horse Talk Forums

Help Support Miniature Horse Talk Forums:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

minihorsecwgrl

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 23, 2013
Messages
62
Reaction score
6
Location
Virginia
My Gelding is getting really sun-bleached! I out him out in the morning for a couple of hours, then I turn him out for a few more hours at night so he isn't out in the middle of the day. I was thinking about feeding black oil sun flower seeds but I worry about the shells not digesting well. I also have read about paprika but another topic on this forum says it can show up on drug tests. I really want to get his beautiful color back!
default_smile.png


Any suggestions and/or advise would be very helpful!
Thank you!
default_smile.png
 
I would love too, our large horses go out at night and they are very happy! But my mini pasture is next to the woods and we have coyotes and crazy wondering dogs, a neighborhood mini was already killed last year unfortunately
default_sad.png
But I am looking for a guard donkey so they can go out at night without me worrying:)
 
A true black will not sun bleach. His mane and tail might get reddish hairs but his coat remains jet black.

That said, I don't believe any horse should be out in the hot sun that is hot enough to bleach out any color hair coats.
 
I don't know the answer to losing color, but the black oil sunflower seeds seem fine to feed. At first I ground them up, worried about the shells. But for 7-8 years I've just fed them whole. Never a problem.
 
I put sunscreen on my black mare to keep her color from turning red. I never knew that the genetic makeup of the black determined how it bleached, but it makes sense. Good to know. My mare's coat stays pretty black, but her mane and tail get red at the ends. I bought the spray sport sunscreen that comes in a aerosol can at the drug store and spray her down (as well as the others) when they go out. I set up a field shade shelter with shade cloth, but they prefer to graze. It seems to help her coat stay dark. I always put sun screen on my horses as I lost my Arab mare to melanoma when I was a kid. Can never be to careful. I like to feed ground up flax seed (must be ground or it will not digest) and I like Farnam super 14 coat supplement. That keeps my horses shiny, and it may help if you do not want to try the coat color supplement that has paprika.
 
Was your Arab mare a grey, by any chance, Amysue? Melanoma shows up in grey horses genetically, unrelated to sun exposure as they tend to get them under the tail and internally also
default_sad.png
. My friend has a grey Andalusian battling melanoma.
 
Sorry to hear about your friend's horse. No, my mare was a liver chestnut, but in her old age she sort of grayed out into a fleabitten gray. Genetically she was chestnut with red parents. She got tumors all over her neck and withers as well as up the backs of her legs. I do not remember what specific diagnosis that it was, I always get the terminology mixed up. However she had had several tumors removed over the years until they spread too far and covered areas too large to operate on. She deteriorated so quickly that I felt it was cruel to keep her alive. I donated her remains to a university for the animal science students, as the vet that worked closely with us taught at a university. They said upon examination she was full of tumors internally that had metastasized all over and spread to several vital organs. They were not raised or callus tumors like sarcoids, they kept appearing like ringworm, flat raw flaky patches. Several specialists examined skin scrapings and blood tests and found several mutations on several different occasions concurrent with findings in skin cancer. She did have sensitive skin and was prone to sun burn, it seemed like her muzzle and ears were always burned. I kept her inside most of time after the lesions started appearing. I know that lots of professionals say that the sun has nothing to do with cancer in horses. I can't help but think that it may play a role in some animals. If the Sun's rays radiate and do damage to the DNA of the skin while it is trying to repair itself, and causes mutations over time, it makes sense to me that a creature that spends so much time in the Sun would have some effect. My vet has always told me to sunscreen my horses as a precaution, it may sound silly to people, but at the very least it is keeping their coats from sun burning. It gives me a little peace of mind anyway. Thanks for the info though.
 
Vetrolin shine and/or cowboy magic contains sunscreen. This will help but it won't prevent bleaching 100%.
 
Thank you for all the replies!! Maybe a picture will help explain! Most of the shows we go to he gets first in color classes, even with eight horses with beautiful color!

DSC_0080.JPGDSC_0081.JPG
 
Last edited by a moderator:
He's very cute! You can dye the mane tail and forelock black if you want
 
I spray everyone weekly with QuicScreen - it's a spray sunscreen from the makers of Quic Silver shampoo. They say it lasts 8 days, but I just spray every week, usually on Sunday after shows. It has worked really well for me - no sun bleached horses, and mine are out from early morning until late at night.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top