Sew&Sew Horse Rug Wash and Repair

Sew&Sew Horse Rug Wash and Repair One stop Rug Wash and Repair to condition and service all types of rugs and apparel. One stop Rug Wash and Repair and optional Re-proofing.

02/01/2026

Quick blanket check:
Make sure chest clips are facing toward the horse.

When clips point out and away from the horse, they’re more exposed and easier to catch on fences, hay nets, or even other horses. Turning clips inward helps keep hardware tucked closer to the body and reduces obvious snag points.

It’s just a simple habit that can help make blankets a little safer.

Free-hand engraved tags for tack or rugs €5 each.They measure 50mm X 30mm black or silver backgrounds and come with a fr...
10/12/2025

Free-hand engraved tags for tack or rugs €5 each.

They measure 50mm X 30mm black or silver backgrounds and come with a free gift card and presentation bag if required.

Postage is €2.95

05/12/2025
27/11/2025

Blanketing is not just about adding warmth. Horses heat themselves very differently than we do and understanding that helps us support them instead of accidentally making them colder.

Horses heat themselves from the inside out. Their digestive system ferments fibre all day which creates steady internal heat. Their winter coat traps this heat when the hair can lift and fluff, a process called piloerection. This creates a layer of warm air close to the skin and acts as the horse’s main insulation system.

A thin blanket can interrupt this system. It presses the coat flat which removes the natural insulation. If the blanket does not provide enough fill to replace what was lost the horse can become COLDER in a light layer than with no blanket at all.

Healthy horses are also built to stay dry where it matters. The outer coat can look wet while the skin stays warm and dry. That dry base is the insulation. When we put a blanket on and flatten the coat, the fill must replace that lost insulation.

Problems begin when moisture reaches the skin. Wetness at the base of the coat flattens the hair and stops the coat from trapping heat. This can happen in freezing rain, heavy wet snow, or when a horse sweats under an inappropriate blanket.

Checking the base of the coat tells you far more than looking at the surface. Slide your fingers down to the skin behind the shoulder and along the ribs. Dry and warm means the horse is coping well. Cool or damp means the horse has lost insulation and needs support.

Horses also show clear body language when they are cold. Look for tension through the neck, shorter and stiffer movement, standing tightly tucked, avoiding resting a hind leg, clustering in sheltered areas, a hunched topline, withdrawn social behaviour, and increased hay intake paired with tension. Shivering is a clear sign but it appears later in the discomfort curve.

Ears can give extra information but they are not reliable on their own. Cold ears with a relaxed body are normal, but cold ears paired with tension, stillness, or a cool or damp base of the coat can suggest the horse is losing heat. Always look at the whole picture instead of using one single check.

If you choose to blanket, pick a fill that REPLACES what you are removing. Sheets and very light layers often make horses colder in winter weather. A blanket that compresses the coat needs enough fill to replace the trapped warm air the coat would have created on its own.

Blanketing is a tool, not a default. Healthy adult horses with full winter coats often regulate extremely well on their own as long as they are dry, sheltered from strong wind, and have consistent access to forage. Horses who are clipped, older, thin, recovering, or living in harsh wind and wet conditions will likely need more support and blanketing. The individual horse always matters.

It would be easier if a single number worked for every horse. But in my own herd I have horses who stay comfortable naked in minus thirty and others who need three hundred and fifty grams (+) in that same weather. That range is normal. It is exactly why no one chart can ever work for every horse, and why watching the individual horse will always be more accurate than any temperature guide.

Thermoregulation is individual. Charts cannot tell you what your horse needs. Your horse can. Watch the body, check the skin, and blanket the individual in front of you.

22/09/2025

We have a collection to do in the Castlebar/Westport area in the next few days if anyone has rugs for servicing please PM thanks

A fail-safe way to make sure your horse ends up in the right rug! Hand engraved name tags to attach to the front closure...
30/08/2025

A fail-safe way to make sure your horse ends up in the right rug! Hand engraved name tags to attach to the front closure. Made to order.
Simple but effective.

First tag €6.40 including postage
Additional tags €5 each
Silver or Black.

Plastic covered Tail Straps to clear €6 eachReplacement rainbow Leg Straps with elasticated end for safety and ease of a...
30/08/2025

Plastic covered Tail Straps to clear €6 each

Replacement rainbow Leg Straps with elasticated end for safety and ease of attaching. €12 a pair.

Postage available €6

For Sale reconditioned, washed and re-proofed. 1. FAL Original 5'6" with removable neck. Rug is a lightweight 40g fillin...
30/08/2025

For Sale reconditioned, washed and re-proofed.

1. FAL Original 5'6" with removable neck. Rug is a lightweight 40g filling €60 but comes with an optional 200g liner €25 making a very useful combination for all seasons. This rug is in exceptional condition and of a quality largely lacking today.

# 2. Premier Equine (Red) 6'0" but these come up large so ideal for up to 6'3" 100g lining. complete with detachable neck cover €60

# 3. Premier Equine (Navy) 6'0" but these come up large so ideal for up to 6'3" 70g lining. complete with detachable neck cover €60

Collection preferred nr Castlerea or can post at buyers expense €10

Free Rug Collection Service – April OfferWe're offering a free collection service for customers with 12 or more rugs whe...
03/04/2025

Free Rug Collection Service – April Offer

We're offering a free collection service for customers with 12 or more rugs when booked during April!

Collections will take place in Sligo, Galway, Roscommon, and Mayo on a later date. If you're interested, simply WhatsApp us with your location and the number of rugs, and we'll get in touch to arrange a convenient time.

This gives you plenty of time to gather your rugs before collection.

Looking forward to hearing from you 🦄

Please drop us a line or message
WhatsApp 089 227 1155
Thanks!

Sew&Sew Horse Rug Wash and Repair September 2025 Price List Guide.RUG WASH AND REPAIRS in the Connacht AreaRug Washing G...
29/01/2025

Sew&Sew Horse Rug Wash and Repair September 2025 Price List Guide.

RUG WASH AND REPAIRS in the Connacht Area

Rug Washing Guide Pricing
€7 for Saddle Pads / Numnahs/ Dog Coats
€8 Calf Rugs
From €12 for Coolers, Fly Rugs and Fleeces
€15 to €18 for Stable Rugs
€15 to €18 Standard Turnouts
€20 to €25 Combi Turnouts
€7 Separate Neck Rugs
€10 - €15 for optional Reproofing

Repairs from €8. Replacement clips, buckles, straps and repairs to outer and liner using first class materials. I will advise if they are not economical to do on very damaged rugs. Unfortunately the time and complexity of a repair can seem more than it's worth.

I can also replace broken clips on webbing head-collars, lead reins etc, replace leg and tail straps, but sorry no leather work.

Based in Lisacul c Roscommon for drop off and collection.
I can collect large quantities from a single yard by arrangement. Minimum of 10 rugs or a small charge might apply. Please message to arrange or call to book your rugs in.
Turnaround is currently 2 - 3 weeks.

Address

Ballaghaderreen

Website

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