We use the blue bottle pyranha or the marys botanicals fly spray on our dogs when the flies eat them up. Only sprays that worked and lasted for them. Be carful though and look closely at the labels to see if they are safe on dogs
Keelari thanks so much Keelari! I will definitely look into those. I always read labels on everything it may say natural but in the end once you read the ingredients it’s not good 😂
I would like to inform you and your viewers, who may not know, that rope halters are extremely painful to horses. Especially the ones with 4 knots over the nose. Should a horse spook while being tied with a rope halter, the pain inflicted upon them could kill them. I am glad you untied your horse while applying fly spray as your horse did not stand still. There is a time and place for rope halters and it’s knowing when to use them. I highly recommended that you and all your viewers to learn more about halters. To be honest you will see a HUGE improvement in your horse’s behaviour when using leather or higher end nylon halters. Low end nylon halters should be used with halter fuzzies or covers to prevent the halter from cutting your horse’s head open. Run your finger nail along the edge to feel how rough it is. If you use your fingers they could be cut open....trust me I have learned the hard way.
Seeing that horse are handled and learned by pressure and the release of pressure I have to disagree. I’ve never seen a horse endure that much pain from a rope halter that it would harm them. If one has been correctly doing ground work with their horse then a rope halter wouldn’t affect them negatively. The four knots are there to contact the pressure points located across the nose when pressure is applied. If you correctly desensitize your horse then you wouldn’t have to worry about your horse spooking or pulling back during something as minor as spraying.
Hey I love your horses as well ❤️😘😘🤗😘😘🐴🐴
Thank you soooo much! 😊😊😊
@@BudgetEquestrian your hair is getting so long and pretty hope your quarantine is going well.
Thanks for the video fly spray is so pricy!❤️❤️
Awesome!
The Dumor equine fly spray is $3-4 and works just as well if not better in my opinion.
Endure is the absolute best fly spray I’ve used..probably more than $20 but well worth it ..
I used to use that, it's the best. But it's $100/gallon now on valley vet. If you have a lot of animals, it's not doable any longer.
Do you think any of these will help dogs? I spend a lot of time outside with my dog🤗 my dog absolutely hates flies or anything that flies 😂
Equine Diana probably❤️❤️❤️
We use the blue bottle pyranha or the marys botanicals fly spray on our dogs when the flies eat them up. Only sprays that worked and lasted for them. Be carful though and look closely at the labels to see if they are safe on dogs
Keelari thanks so much Keelari! I will definitely look into those. I always read labels on everything it may say natural but in the end once you read the ingredients it’s not good 😂
Horse Loafers thank you 🥰
I like it
First!!!!!! First comment ,first view , first like love you Lisa!
Awwwww! Thank you Addison! 😘
The Budget Equestrian thanks for replying!
love from australia
Thank you for the video! It was very informational! I appreciate you doing my idea 😊. It means a lot to me.
No fly spray lasts over one day. The Pirhana gives my horse hives
Well, if you have a refill size of a liquid product you could use a small garden pump sprayer.
I really like bronco gold for an effective oil based spray and Mary’s botanicals fly spray for a more natural spray on my sensitive horses.
I have had no luck with the green pyranha fly spray in texas. The yellow pyranha works the best out of anything I've tried from the store
That' s good to know. Maybe flies in different regions are effected differently?
@@BudgetEquestrian I bet so! Probably depends on what is used the most in certain areas and what the flies have gotten used to
I would like to inform you and your viewers, who may not know, that rope halters are extremely painful to horses. Especially the ones with 4 knots over the nose. Should a horse spook while being tied with a rope halter, the pain inflicted upon them could kill them. I am glad you untied your horse while applying fly spray as your horse did not stand still. There is a time and place for rope halters and it’s knowing when to use them. I highly recommended that you and all your viewers to learn more about halters. To be honest you will see a HUGE improvement in your horse’s behaviour when using leather or higher end nylon halters. Low end nylon halters should be used with halter fuzzies or covers to prevent the halter from cutting your horse’s head open. Run your finger nail along the edge to feel how rough it is. If you use your fingers they could be cut open....trust me I have learned the hard way.
Seeing that horse are handled and learned by pressure and the release of pressure I have to disagree. I’ve never seen a horse endure that much pain from a rope halter that it would harm them. If one has been correctly doing ground work with their horse then a rope halter wouldn’t affect them negatively. The four knots are there to contact the pressure points located across the nose when pressure is applied. If you correctly desensitize your horse then you wouldn’t have to worry about your horse spooking or pulling back during something as minor as spraying.
Early❤️