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COLD

Horses asked how they prefer to stay warm

Worried about the Norwegian habit of shearing off horses' thick winter coats and replacing them with blankets, Norwegian researchers have started asking the horses themselves how they prefer to ward off the cold.

Horses asked how they prefer to stay warm
Knerten, a horse owned by Ida Nova, dressed in a specially knitted traditional Norwegian sweater. Photo: Ida Nova
Grete Jørgensen, a researcher with the Norwegian Institute for Agricultural and Environmental Research, told The Local how her joint Norwegian-Swedish research project had hired a professional trainer to teach 13 horses, based at Nypan outside Trondheim, to request or refuse a warm, dry blanket.
 
"The horses soon learned, using positive reinforcement techniques, that if they want to change their situation — either to remove a blanket or have one put on — they should tap one symbol with their muzzle.  If they want to remain the same, they tapped on another,"  Jørgensen said. 
 
Most horses chose to keep their blankets on during days with wind, rain or sleet, with the number of horses requesting the removal of their blankets increasing as the temperature rose and spring brought sunny weather.
 
Jørgensen said her colleagues Knut Bøe and Cecilie Mejdell, who ran the Nypan project, aimed "to ask horses whether they really need these blankets and rugs or whether they preferred to use their own coats to regulate their body temperature in different weather."
 
Meanwhile, at a local horse farm on Alstahaug, an island off the coast of north west Norway, Jørgensen offered 16 horses the choice of a heated shelter, an unheated shelter, or staying outside.
 
"We wanted to investigate how horses from several different breeds would tackle different winter weather conditions," she explained. 
 
She found that the horses did not want to come inside the shelters when the weather was dry, even at very low winter temperatures. When there was rain or sleet, however, the horses were more likely to start muscle shivering or move inside. 
 
"The weather here up on the northern Norwegian coast is quite changeable, so you can have three seasons in one day, and rain and maybe sleet, which is really challenging for the horses to keep up their core body temperature," she said.
 

Certain Nordic breeds appeared capable of withstanding extreme cold even when it was wet.
 
"We actually have horses that even in the worst conditions never chose to go inside because the water never gets close to the skin," she explained. "Coat condition is very important and maybe even more important than breed. If the coat is really good, like on a Norwegian breed, then the coat has this cover layer which transports the water off the top of the coat so it never gets wet at the skin."
 
Jørgensen said that the project would help determine the extent to which the rugs and blankets commonly used in Norway and Sweden were actually helping the animals. 
 
"Many owners have no clue whether their horses need rugs and blankets, so they dress them up both indoors and in the paddock," she said.  "Too much use of rugs over time may produce sores and chaffing. The horse is not able to scratch in itchy places and the coat will not develop to its full length."
 
The joint Swedish-Norwegian project is titled "Impact of Nordic climate and management practices on thermoregulation in the horse". 
 
The Norwegian Project Group comprises Grete Jørgensen and Lise Aanensen from Bioforsk Nord Tjøtta, Knut Bøe from The Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU), and Cecilie Mejdell from The Norwegian Veterinary Institute. The Project is financed through the Swedish-Norwegian Horse Research fund and the Norwegian Research Council. 
 
Abstracts or the research can be found here and here

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WEATHER

Essential phrases and customs to survive the Danish winter

It’s a dark and chilly season, with the celebrations of Christmas and New Year well behind us but a large chunk of the winter still ahead.

Essential phrases and customs to survive the Danish winter
Photo: Mads Claus Rasmussen/Ritzau Scanpix

With today’s snow on Blue Monday only serving as a reminder that it’s cold outside, here are our top phrases and cultural tips to help you get through the Danish winter.

Jeg fryser!

If you’re new to Denmark and still getting to grips with the language, it’s worth bearing in mind that expressions relating to temperature are a little different from English.

Where you would be likely to say ‘I’m cold’ in English, the literal Danish translation of this, ‘jeg er kold’, makes little sense and will probably be understood to mean that you are saying you are emotionally cold. So it’s better to stick to the more emphatic ‘jeg fryser’ – ‘I’m freezing’ – which is probably more apt anyway, given the chilly winters.


Photo: Mads Claus Rasmussen/Ritzau Scanpix

Skidekoldt

Common colloquial terms for cold weather draw, for some strange reason, on toilet humour: you can say it is ‘skidekoldt’ (‘shit-cold’) or ‘pissekoldt’ (piss-cold). Easy to remember if you want to complain about the sub-zero temperature, but perhaps less poetic than the English ‘freezing brass monkeys’.

Glatis

Glatis is the Danish word for the type of ice commonly found on paths, by kerbstones and on outside steps in freezing conditions. Similar to the English ‘black ice’, it is easy to miss and even easier to slip on.

It is also used in the expression ‘på glatis’ – to be in an uncertain situation.


Photo:Liselotte Sabroe/Scanpix 2018

Using wintry ways of expression is all well and good, but much can also be learned from the methods employed by well-practised Danes to survive the cold months.

Forget about looking good

While Danes are famed for their sense of style, there’s also little reluctance to drop fashion and pile on the practical layers when the cold weather calls.

Waterproof and padded trousers, base layers, sturdy boots, woollen hats and thick gloves are all additions to your look that you won’t regret. Maybe you can find space for a flourish with a stylish scarf, as many Danes seem to be able to do.

Keep cycling

It might be tempting to lock your bike away and take the bus, metro or light rail, depending on where you are in the country. But most people don’t actually do this, even on days when a head-on snowfall provides a stinging rebuke as you pedal forwards. Perhaps this is because travelling by bicycle is so firmly established in the Danish mindset that it is not affected by the season.

In any case, bracing the outside by getting on your bike – with the aforementioned waterproof and cold weather gear and taking precautions for glatis – can help to keep you both warm and fit during winter.


Photo: Mads Claus Rasmussen/Ritzau Scanpix

Use candles and coffee

Candles help with the deficient light and temperature, and coffee helps keep you warm and awake. There’s a sense of well-being and protection from the worst of the elements to be had from settling down at home or at a café and keeping out of the cold for a bit.

Remember it’s not forever

Sometimes the Danish winter can feel neverending – the cold persists well into March and in fact, some of the most biting days can seem to come right at the end of the season. This is exactly what happened last year, before a long, hot, glorious summer finally set in. The moral of the story? Summer is (eventually) coming!


Photo: Mads Claus Rasmussen/Ritzau Scanpix

READ ALSO: Danish freeze set to continue this week, but more snow unlikely