PL Equine Transportation

PL Equine Transportation Family owned and operated US DOT licensed and fully insured equine and livestock hauler. Also offering equipment hauling with our flatbed.

Please call for quotes. Hauling to 48 US states
*we do not haul to Hawaii or Alaska

01/14/2026

This Is A Reprint Of A Very Good Post From A Very Good Horse Woman: Really Worth The Read
Jo Christensen AERC: American Endurance Ride Conference

Hey everyone,
Temperatures inside horse trailers are a concern to most endurance riders I know. We tend to haul very long distances, both in the heat and in the cold. I had to do some winter hauling today and before I left, I installed a temperature monitor inside my horse trailer. What I discovered was surprising and fascinating and changed my mind about what I thought was going on back there… so I decided to share what I learned in case of value to anyone else.

I hauled two horses about 6 hours today through the mountains here in western Montana, to a veterinary facility in another town. I was concerned about temperatures for the horses before I left. Forecast temps along some of the route were in the low single digits. My horses have very good winter coats but I was trying to decide whether to blanket or not. I recently switched to an enclosed gooseneck trailer and realized that I had no idea what hauling conditions in the winter were like back there.

I bought an inexpensive temperature monitor with a base station- the kind folks hang out on the porch so they can see what outdoor conditions are like without going outside. Before I put it into use in the trailer, I verified its accuracy by comparing its readings to some equipment I know is very accurate.

I hung the sensor in a mesh bag (good air flow) about halfway up the side of the wall in the trailer that encloses the rear tack room. I didn’t put it on the roof (heat rises) or near the floor (cold air sinks). My trailer is a 3 horse slant load, and I put it in the stall that did not have a horse in it. It was not hanging on an exterior wall. My trailer is not insulated- no living quarters, just a standard small dressing area in the front.
The trailer did have about 3 inches of hard encrusted snow insulating the roof-this snow stayed the entire journey.

The side windows could not be opened- they were encrusted with ice- however we opened all three roof vents to their maximum extent and turned the so that airflow would be maximized.

When we left our house in the Bitterroot, the temp inside and outside the trailer both read 20 degrees. BTW I was using my truck temperature monitor to determine the outside temperature (I had previously verified its accuracy and that it read the same as my newly purchased gear).

We loaded the horses and took off this morning about 0345 hrs. By the time we got to Missoula (30 minutes later), temps in the trailer had risen from 20 degrees to 32 degrees. In contrast, outside temp was still 20 degrees. By the time we had been on the road for an hour, the temperature in the trailer was (are you ready for this?): FORTY FOUR DEGREES.

Along our route, outside temps dropped as low as 14 degrees. At the same time, temps in the trailer NEVER dropped below 39 degrees. For the vast majority of the journey, the trailer was holding at 44 degrees. Temps inside the trailer were ALWAYS OVER TWENTY DEGREES WARMER than the outside.

We stopped for a half hour pitstop did not unload the horses. However I opened the back door and let cold wind flow into the trailer. Temps in the trailer quickly dropped to the high 20s. But they were back up to the low 40s in about half an hour.
We left both horses at the vet in Three Forks and returned with an empty trailer. All the way home, temps inside the trailer were identical to temps outside.

So here are my take-aways from all this. First of all, it’s very easy to monitor temps in your trailer and I would highly encourage everyone to do it! I think I spent about 20 bucks on my monitoring stuff and it was easy to use and very accurate. Secondly, I cannot believe how fast two horses could heat up a 3 horse trailer in very cold weather and keep it warm. I never dreamed that horses radiate that much heat. And to think I had been considering blanketing them.

Of course the need to blanket and other things might be different if your horses are body clipped or your trailer is different. And of course this is an enclosed gooseneck, not a stockside trailer. But rather than just guess what might be going on back there and whether it is appropriate for your clipped horse (or sick horse or…?) just go get a temperature monitor and find out!

And believe me, my eyes are going to be GLUED to this thing come summer and I’m hauling in hot temperatures…

09/25/2023

PL Equine will be limiting our transport services to the Midwest area (WI, MN, IL, MI, eastern IA and northern IN) until approx Spring 2024 and will only be transporting certain days of the week. Thank you

06/20/2022

😊❤️

03/09/2022

Current and potential customers.

With fuel prices currently skyrocketing to over $5.00 per gallon, we are going to be forced to add a fuel surcharge on all transports until fuel costs come back down. Unfortunately this is necessary in order for us to stay in business and to continue providing quality service.

02/06/2022

PL Equine is a USDOT/MC legal commercial direct door to door transporter but we do NOT do routes. We travel to all US States except California. We do not transport to/from Canada or Mexico.

Bought a horse out of state and want it to come directly from pickup point to destination without zig zagging around picking up and dropping off horses, give us a call. Thats what we mean by direct door to door. Compare it to hiring a limo for your transport rather than putting your horse on a greyhound bus

Occasionally, I will post that we have openings along a "route" but that means that we are returning from delivering and could pick up a horse while returning home.

We are horse owners ourselves and have been in business since 1999. We have thousands of clients that we have hauled for and many local veterinarians that can be provided as references to the excellent care we take of the horses entrusted into our care.

07/26/2020

Trailer returning to SE Wisconsin from Northern Georgia next week with openings. US DOT and WI Dept of AG licensed transporter. Contact us at 262-495-4132 for an estimate.

01/17/2020

PL Equine is a direct door to door equine transporter based in SE Wisconsin. We do not do "route type" hauling, meaning that we do not wait until we have a "full load" but will transport for just YOUR horse. Purchased a new horse out of state (or in state) and need it transported to its new home but dont want it on a trailer with a bunch of other horses , contact us for an estimate. We also do transports for in state barn to barn moves and vet or dental appointments, including emergency vet transports.
US DOT 979641

262-495-4132

From 1 horse to 6, we can get you there!3 horse slant and 6 horse slant trailers available. Mares and foals are no probl...
05/31/2019

From 1 horse to 6, we can get you there!
3 horse slant and 6 horse slant trailers available. Mares and foals are no problem with the 6 horse trailer we are able to take dividers out and haul mare and foal in a open trailer.

We also have a flatbed trailer for hauling equipment.

PL Equine Transportation
Family owner and operated
US DOT licensed and legal

Please call for a quote
2624954132

05/06/2019

Family owned and operated US DOT licensed and fully insured equine and livestock hauler. Also offering equipment hauling with our flatbed. Please call for quotes.

3 available drivers Peter, Penny, Amanda LePak

Hauling to 48 US states
*we do not haul to Hawaii or Alaska

Address

Palmyra, WI

Telephone

(262) 495-4132

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when PL Equine Transportation posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share