MissieSFW
Well-Known Member
Hi everyone,
My first post so please bear with me! Would love some advice on how those of you with limited grazing manage it, particularly in winter and particularly with regard to poo picking (do you really have to, are there other ways of managing eg. harrowing, and how to do it in least labour-intensive way possible!!)
I have a 15hh TB, and a shetland, on approx 2 1/2 acres at home. The land is reasonably well draining though it can get quite wet in places in winter, and is divided into 1 large field and 1 small one. Both horses are out 24/7 as I have no stables. They have been at my dad's farm all summer as I had my second baby 4 months ago, but I really feel I should take them back, however after last winter which was horrendous, I need to find a better way of managing them living out all winter. I can't cope with poo picking every day or so like I did when they were at home before - just don't have time with 2 little ones to look after. Plus our fields back onto our garden and driveway and I can't stand to look out of my window onto a horrible mess of mud, poo and hay everywhere!
Here are the options I'm currently considering - any advice very welcome!!
1. Section off a smallish area and put down some sort of base (eg. thick base of bark chippings) where I can shut them when it's very wet, and put large round bale hay feeder in there. Then clear it out in spring and hope the grass comes back. But what to do with the poo? Can you just keep putting more bark on top or would I have to keep clearing poo out?
2. Buy field shelter and put hay in there, but for the size I would need is about £2000 - ouch!! And presumably would need to keep clearing poo out of there, and also would it need some sort of base/bedding?
3. Section off the bottom of the large field furthest from the house and let them trash it, and hope to repair damage in the spring... Again - is it necessary to poo pick?
4. Divide large field in 2 and rotate between the 2 halves and the smaller paddock - but guess I'd end up with all the fields getting trashed plus I'd have to move the hay feeder around which isn't ideal as I have to borrow my brother's forklift which is 30 min drive away!
Thanks very much in advance for your thoughts!
My first post so please bear with me! Would love some advice on how those of you with limited grazing manage it, particularly in winter and particularly with regard to poo picking (do you really have to, are there other ways of managing eg. harrowing, and how to do it in least labour-intensive way possible!!)
I have a 15hh TB, and a shetland, on approx 2 1/2 acres at home. The land is reasonably well draining though it can get quite wet in places in winter, and is divided into 1 large field and 1 small one. Both horses are out 24/7 as I have no stables. They have been at my dad's farm all summer as I had my second baby 4 months ago, but I really feel I should take them back, however after last winter which was horrendous, I need to find a better way of managing them living out all winter. I can't cope with poo picking every day or so like I did when they were at home before - just don't have time with 2 little ones to look after. Plus our fields back onto our garden and driveway and I can't stand to look out of my window onto a horrible mess of mud, poo and hay everywhere!
Here are the options I'm currently considering - any advice very welcome!!
1. Section off a smallish area and put down some sort of base (eg. thick base of bark chippings) where I can shut them when it's very wet, and put large round bale hay feeder in there. Then clear it out in spring and hope the grass comes back. But what to do with the poo? Can you just keep putting more bark on top or would I have to keep clearing poo out?
2. Buy field shelter and put hay in there, but for the size I would need is about £2000 - ouch!! And presumably would need to keep clearing poo out of there, and also would it need some sort of base/bedding?
3. Section off the bottom of the large field furthest from the house and let them trash it, and hope to repair damage in the spring... Again - is it necessary to poo pick?
4. Divide large field in 2 and rotate between the 2 halves and the smaller paddock - but guess I'd end up with all the fields getting trashed plus I'd have to move the hay feeder around which isn't ideal as I have to borrow my brother's forklift which is 30 min drive away!
Thanks very much in advance for your thoughts!