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- Horseware® Ireland Rambo® Fly Buster™ Fly Sheet with No Fly Zone™

Horseware® Ireland Rambo® Fly Buster™ Fly Sheet with No Fly Zone™
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Attention: Nichole Andrews or Ellie Monteith
400 Broadway
Methuen, MA 01844
52 Ash St
West Newbury, MA 01985
How to Protect Your Horse from Flies

You can help your horse avoid the annoying effects of flies by using a combination of these items of horse clothing and topical treatments like horse fly repellent. For effective methods of reducing the fly population on your farm, refer to How to Control Flies on the Farm.
Note: If you intend to compete with your horse wearing an ear net, be sure to check the rules and regulations regarding your classes. The use of ear nets may be prohibited except during warm-up and schooling.
Dover Saddlery product advisors recommend that you test any new batch of fly spray on your horse prior to a full application to check for allergic reaction. For optimal performance, be sure to follow manufacturer's guidelines for any horse fly repellent, and apply it to a clean horse as directed on the label. Also, check the application rate recommended by the manufacturer. Some are designed to be sweat resistant and can be applied less frequently. Apply horse fly repellent or insecticide to your horse's face carefully by wiping it on or using a targeted product such as a roll-on to avoid his eyes.
Sweat, urine and manure stains make horses more attractive to flies. Be sure your horse is clean before applying your fly product to achieve the best results. Also, you should rotate between the types of fly sprays you use because over time, flies can become accustomed to the scent of a spray, making it less effective. However, bathing your horse between applications of different types of fly sprays is wise to prevent reaction between the active ingredients.
Note: When you're spraying fly repellents and insecticides on your horse, remember that the over-spray may kill any fly predators in the immediate area.

How To Control Flies On The Farm

For proper fly control and to reduce the fly population in a horse barn and barnyard, you have to have the right tools in your arsenal. There are many methods of winning your war against flies, and your horses will love you for your efforts!
To prepare for battle, here are some key fly control weapons designed to kill flies at their various life stages.
- Traps do a great job of catching adult flies. Two basic types of traps exist on the market, each designed to attract a different kind of fly. Stable flies are attracted to their traps visually. House flies are attracted to their traps by odor, which can be fairly offensive to humans. Both types should be hung outside, away from your barn, near potential fly breeding locations. If you hang traps inside your barn, you'll actually invite flies in. Generally, traps should be hung less than four feet from the ground, but be sure to follow manufacturer's recommendations for your trap to achieve the best results. You may also want to test various sites on your property to see which locations capture the most flies.
Note: Sticky traps and tapes without lures catch flies when they land to rest. These can be hung successfully inside a stable, but be aware that you may also inadvertently catch small birds, bats and beneficial insects such as dragonflies.
- Misters and space sprays, such as the Country Vet Dispenser, provide quick knockdown of flies and other insects within your barn. This battery-operated dispenser is inexpensive and easy to install, and it releases insect killing insecticide according to a built-in timer.
Biting Stable Fly
House Fly
- Starbar® Fly Relief Disposable Fly Trap
- Farnam Trap-N-Toss Fly Trap
- Revenge Fly Ribbon
- Country Vet Dispenser
Tips:
- Any insecticide that kills stable and house flies may also kill your fly predators.
- You may find it necessary to rotate different products throughout your fly season. A trap or spray that works in one area during the spring may not be as effective in the same area in late summer.
- See How to Protect Your Horse from Flies for a variety of suggestions to keep your horse comfortable.
Actions to Take to Reduce Fly Populations
In addition to the products you can purchase for fly control around your property, you can also take these significant steps to create an unfriendly environment for them.
- Because flies need warm, moist breeding grounds in which to lay their eggs, remove all decaying organic matter from your property. Piles of rotting leaves, grass clippings, decaying fruit or vegetables from gardens all provide an attractive environment in which eggs can be laid.
- For the same reason, maximize heat in your manure compost pile by keeping it piled vertically as much as possible rather than spread horizontally. Turn your pile to introduce oxygen, which is necessary for decomposition. Add lime to speed up decomposition, and make sure your manure pile stays slightly damp. Increased heat makes your manure pile a less attractive breeding area for flies. If it becomes hot enough, all but the outer edge of your manure pile will be too hot to allow flies to lay eggs. You can also cover the manure piles with black plastic to further increase heat.
- If you spread your manure on your property, do it thinly (less than 1/2 inch thick) so that the matter dries quickly before it can become a fly breeding ground.
- Remove fly resting areas near your barn and pastures by keeping grass and weeds cut short. Flies rest on long grass to escape direct sunlight.
- Solve any drainage problems on your property. Remove moisture and debris that accumulates around watering troughs and level areas where puddles occur. Make sure your hoses and pumps don't drip as the moisture there will attract flies.
- Clean feed tubs, mangers and areas where horses eat to avoid accumulating crumbs and moist, decaying food waste that becomes attractive to flies.
- Use ceiling and portable fans in your barn to keep the air moving. Circulating air is difficult for flies to navigate and it inhibits their ability to land on your horse. Stall fan holders enable you to mount a portable box fan at the top of a stall at a 45 degree angle so that the air streams down over your horse.
- Keep stalls free of manure and urine as the odors are attractive to bothersome house flies. Products such as Odor-No-More and Stable Fresh can help you keep your stalls even fresher and more odor-free than regular mucking alone.
- Encourage natural insect predators —birds and bats— to set up residence on your property by hanging bird and bat houses.
Tips for Fitting Horse Blankets or Sheets

You’ve selected a blanket or sheet for your horse, but now you’re wondering how all the buckles and straps should be fastened. Follow these steps to learn how to properly adjust the blanket to ensure his comfort. To view our entire collection of horse sheets and blankets online, click here.
Horse Blanket Prep
The best way to put a sheet or blanket on your horse is to tie or cross-tie him or have someone hold him so that his movements are limited. Fasten closures by working from the front to the back, starting at the chest closure and working toward the belly surcingles and finally the leg straps. By fastening in this order, the blanket will be more stable should your horse suddenly move. For the same reason, the best way to unfasten a blanket is to start at the back and work your way to the front.
Now You're Ready
1. Place the garment on your horse and fasten the chest closure. A well-fitting blanket allows fabric at the chest to overlap, and the fastener to be adjusted near the middle. When the chest closure is fastened appropriately, the tail seam should sit at the point where you want the clothing to end. This point corresponds to the measurement you took as described in the article How to Measure Your Horse for a Blanket.
2. If your horse’s blanket fits well, you can slide your hand under the blanket all around the neck and over the withers with your horse’s head in a grazing position and when raised. If the opening is too large, your horse could get a foot caught, and it may rub your horse’s shoulders. If the opening is too small, the blanket will pull or rub the withers, mane or points of the shoulders or tug at the base of the neck.
3. Belly surcingles should be adjusted next. Your blanket may have a belly band, two bias (angled) surcingles that should cross under the belly, or one or two straight surcingles. No matter what type you have, these straps should be adjusted so that you can slide only one flat hand between the strap and your horse’s belly. Looser straps can allow a horse’s leg to get tangled while lying down or rolling; tight straps can make the blanket rub.
4. If the blanket has a tail strap, it should be adjusted so that you have about a hand’s width between the strap and the horse.
5. If the blanket has leg straps, pass the left strap through the horse’s hind legs and clip it to the d-ring on the left side of the blanket. Cross the right leg strap through the left leg strap and clip it to the d-ring on the right side. These straps should be adjusted so that you can fit only one hand’s width between the strap and the inside of the horse’s leg. If they are too long and hang down to the horse’s hocks, then a leg can become entangled. If the straps are too short, they may inhibit movement and chafe the tender insides of the gaskin or groin area.
6. With fastenings done, stand back and look at the overall effect of the clothing on your horse. The shoulders of the blanket should not be stretched or tight over your horse’s shoulders, yet the blanket should not appear to sag or look too large either. The hem should not hang at or below the horse’s knees.
Related Topics:
How to Measure Your Horse for a Blanket
About Blanketing and Horse Clothing
How and Why to Use an Exercise Rug or a Quarter Rug
How to Body Clip a Horse


How to Measure Your Horse for a Blanket

For your horse's comfort, any sheet or horse blanket he wears must fit him appropriately. You can measure your horse to determine the overall size you want, and then choose from a variety of cuts and manufacturers to find the optimal fit. To view our entire selection of horse blankets and sheets online, click here.

This picture above, shows how a manufacturer determines a blanket or sheet sizing. The horse blanket is placed flat out with all fastenings undone and the fabric spread smooth. If the blanket has gussets or darts, they should be spread flat too. A soft fabric tape measure with inch measurements runs from front binding to back binding, and it sits at the base of the neck opening.
Follow these steps to determine the size blanket or sheet your horse needs:
1. Decide where you want the sheet or blanket to end. Some people prefer the tail portion to be long enough to form a “tent” over the top of the horse’s tail, especially for turnout coverings. Others prefer to have horse sheets and blankets stop just short of the tail.
2. Stand your horse squarely on level ground.
3. Measure from the center of your horse’s chest (where the base of the neck meets the chest) over the point of his shoulder, to the point at which you want the sheet or blanket to end. A soft fabric tape measure with inch increments works well for this. The diagram provided here shows that the horse’s tail will be covered by the blanket, because the tape measure is stretched to the center of the tail (dock).

4. The inches measurement translates to the blanket size you should try on your horse.
Putting On and Removing Horse Clothing:
- Work from front to rear as you fasten closures of a blanket: chest closures, then surcingles and finally the leg or tail straps. Doing so makes the blanket more stable should your horse suddenly move, and almost ensures that you won’t forget a strap.
- Likewise, work from the rear to the front when you’re removing the item.
Related Articles:
Tips for Fitting Horse Blankets or Sheets
About Blanketing and Horse Clothing
How and Why to Use an Exercise Rug or a Quarter Rug
About Horse Body Clipping
100% Satisfaction Guarantee
The Easiest and Best Guarantee in The Business
Shop with 100% confidence at Dressage Extensions. If something doesn’t fit you or your horse, return your original purchase within a year, and we’ll make it right with a refund, exchange or replacement.
Our experience as riders and horse owners ourselves is that in most situations a year’s time is fair enough to evaluate proper fit and function. PLUS: For manufacturer’s defects, we’ll extend the manufacturer’s warranty to a maximum of 24 months, regardless of their individual policies. (AND: Manufacturer warranties longer than 24 months will be honored and supported by us as well up to the length of those warranties).
Exceptions: Safety items such as helmets and protective vests may only be returned within 30 days, with their original tags intact. Saddles and riding boots may be returned within the one year period, but are subject to a prorated refund based on usage. Used saddles may be returned for 30 days only. For everyone’s protection, treats and vet meds which have been opened are not returnable, and returned blankets must clean and free of debris.
To protect all customers and ensure that every return or exchange is handled fairly, we may require a receipt or decline a return in these situations:
• Item was not purchased directly from Dressage Extensions. (It was purchased at a used tack sale or from a retailer or online seller other than Dressage Extensions.)
• Item is missing a label or has been defaced.
• No receipt and no valid identification in our stores.
• Item is wet, dirty or contaminated, or until it has been cleaned. (For health and safety reasons, we cannot accept returns on used, defective or poorly fitting blankets if they are UNWASHED.)
• Item has been lost, stolen, damaged, or misused.
• On rare occasions, based on the nature of prior transactions.
• Supplements have been opened or used.
• Multiple returns of the same item.
• Personalized items may not be returned unless defective.
Security Guarantee
Dressage Extensions understands your concerns regarding online security. We share in your concerns and therefore work hard with experts in the field to maintain a highly secure ordering environment. Along with our comment to security, we offer you a Secure Order Guarantee - this gives you 100% protection for your credit card transactions on DressageExtensions.com.
Our Secure Order Guarantee means that you will never have to pay any money related to unauthorized charges to your credit card account, as long as those charges are a direct result from a transaction on DressageExtensions.com.
How it works: If you experience credit card fraud, the Fair Credit Act specifies that your credit card company can hold you liable for no more than $50.00 in fraudulent charges to your account. Our Secure Order Guarantee will reimburse you for any amount up to $50.00 billed to you by your credit card company for unauthorized charges to your account, if those charges result from an order you placed with DressageExtensions.com. For this protection you must promptly notify your credit card company of fraudulent charges and follow their procedures as outlined in your credit card agreement.
Two tiers of protection! This Rambo® Fly Buster™ Fly Sheet with No Fly Zone™ features a revamped, removable neck cover that offers an improved, close contact fit and extended chest coverage. The sheet and neck are made of unique, patented, high-tech fabric with self-repairing properties to make it exceptionally durable. Lightweight, soft and ultra-breathable, it also blocks 65% of ultraviolet rays, which can burn a horse’s skin and fade hair.
No Fly Zone Technology adds powerful insect control to Horseware’s fabric as a second tier of defence against insects. Bound to the fine mesh, the treatment is odorless, colorless and remains effective through numerous washings. More convenient than sprays, it has been proven to keep flies, ticks, fleas, ants, chiggers and midges at bay while being kind to the horse’s skin.
This fly sheet has extra depth, Horseware’s Leg Arches™ and a third surcingle on the protective belly band to allow it to wrap under for maximum coverage without inhibiting the horse’s freedom to move. The patented “V” front closure allows freedom of motion in grazing. Shoulders, neck cover and tail flap have silky linings to prevent hair from rubbing.
Key features:
- Patented, self-repairing fabric is made to last.
- Removable neck cover lets you adapt your horse’s coverage according to weather conditions.
- V-front closure allows your horse to graze comfortably, removes pressure and prevents rubbing of the shoulders.
- Leg Arches promote a great fit and freedom of motion.
- Extended belly flap wraps under to provide maximum coverage.
- Three belly surcingles offer a secure fit.
- Extra-long tail flap protects tail hair from the sun.
- Adjustable web tail strap keeps it is place and eliminates the need for leg straps.
- Liner compatible.
Imported.
Manufacturer Restricted Price Product: Count on Dressage Extensions for the best quality, value and price possible. However, some of our manufacturers restrict advertised selling prices and prevent us from advertising discounts. For other items, some manufacturers allow us to offer and advertise a discount on a limited basis. Therefore, some products are not eligible for discounts.
Horseware Rambo Flybuster No Fly Zone
Horse Size | Blanket Size (inches) | Blanket Size (cm) |
---|---|---|
Petite | 30 | 76 |
Petite | 33 | 84 |
Petite | 36 | 91 |
Petite | 39 | 99 |
Petite | 42 | 106 |
Petite/Pony | 45 | 114 |
Petite/Pony | 48 | 122 |
Pony | 51 | 130 |
Pony | 54 | 137 |
Pony | 57 | 145 |
Pony/Horse | 60 | 152 |
Pony/Horse | 63 | 160 |
Pony/Horse | 66 | 168 |
Pony/Horse | 69 | 175 |
Horse | 72 | 183 |
Horse | 75 | 191 |
Horse | 78 | 198 |
Horse | 81 | 206 |
Horse | 84 | 213 |
Horse | 87 | 221 |
Horse | 90 | 229 |