An interesting read on the stress for a horse of moving to a new location

Marigold4

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I found this FB post by the Whole Horse Journey about the stress created on a horse by moving their location. How it plays havoc with their nervous systems. Particularly repeated moves. As I'm probably about to move mine after many years in the same place, I found this a useful read.

There is something we do routinely with horses that we would struggle to accept for ourselves: we relocate them. Frequently. Sometimes with careful thought, sometimes casually, sometimes because the timing suits us. New yard. New field. New companions. New routine. New handlers. New expectations. And we rarely pause to consider what this actually demands of them, not emotionally but biologically.
A horse experiences the world through their nervous system, not through concepts like practical or necessary. That system is continuously assessing: Am I safe. Is this predictable. Where is threat. Can I recover. When we move a horse, we are not just changing their address. We are erasing the entire sensory map their nervous system relies on to answer those questions.

For a prey animal, every detail of their environment provides information. The terrain underfoot. The pattern of sounds. The quality of shelter. The rhythm of the day. How light moves through the space. Where other horses are. Whether they can move away when they need to. When a horse arrives somewhere new, the body immediately starts reassessment. Muscle tone shifts. Sleep patterns change. Digestion can alter. Startle responses may rise. Some horses become hypervigilant. Others go quiet and still, a state that often looks like settling in but may actually be conservation mode. This is not dysfunction. This is biology doing its job. But disruption without adequate recovery time carries a cumulative cost.

Horses do not simply live beside other horses. They regulate with them. Established herd relationships offer shared vigilance that allows rest, predictable social structure, buffering through proximity, and safety through numbers. Every time a horse is moved, these regulatory relationships are severed. Even when a horse appears to make friends quickly, the nervous system still has to renegotiate hierarchy, boundaries, proximity, and trust. Some horses do this obviously. Others do it quietly. Both require energy. A horse who has been moved many times may eventually stop investing deeply in connection, not because they do not want it, but because repeatedly rebuilding it is metabolically expensive.

After relocation, people often notice changes that get labelled as behavioural problems. Sudden spookiness. Separation anxiety. Irritability or shutdown. Resistance under saddle. Digestive changes. Altered movement quality. Loss of curiosity. Reactivity to touch. These are not random. They are often the nervous system saying: I am still orienting. I am still assessing threat. I am not yet resourced. When we ignore these signals, push through them, or try to suppress them, we do not build resilience. We build defensiveness.

To understand this without anthropomorphising, consider a human parallel. Imagine being repeatedly moved into unfamiliar homes in unfamiliar neighbourhoods with unfamiliar people, no choice, no preparation, and no stable base to return to. You would not need to feel emotional about it for your nervous system to register instability. Your sleep would shift. Your baseline tension would rise. Your tolerance for novelty would narrow. Your capacity to relax deeply would shrink. That is not a flaw in character. That is physiology. Horses operate under the same biological principles.
Some horses cope better than others depending on temperament, early experience, genetics, and support. But coping is not the same as thriving. And the absence of visible distress does not mean regulation. A horse can appear functional while carrying elevated baseline stress, and research in stress physiology shows that the body keeps score even when behaviour looks fine.
Before relocating a horse, it is worth slowing down to ask different questions. Is this move necessary or simply convenient. What does this horse stand to lose in terms of predictability, relationships, and environmental familiarity. What support will they need neurologically, not just behaviourally. Am I allowing enough recovery time, or expecting performance before safety is re-established. Am I watching for subtle strain in sleep, digestion, curiosity, recovery after work, or social engagement. How many times has this horse already faced this disruption. History matters.
When moves are necessary, we can support the transition responsibly. Give the horse several weeks for genuine settling rather than surface adjustment. Maintain as much routine consistency as possible. Reduce performance expectations at first. Provide choice where possible. Integrate into the herd gradually and thoughtfully. Watch for signs that the nervous system is still working hard. Recognise that turnout with compatible companions supports co-regulation. Understand that some horses need weeks or months, not days.

Stability is not a luxury. Horses do not reset simply because they arrive somewhere new. They carry their nervous system history forward. Every relocation adds to that history. Every disruption registers. Every period of stability is protective. This does not mean never moving horses. Life happens and circumstances change. Sometimes relocation genuinely improves welfare. It simply means acknowledging that movement is not neutral. Environment matters. Herd continuity matters. Predictability matters. Recovery time matters. And a regulated nervous system is not optional. It is the foundation for everything else we ask.

 
I agree strongly - horses are not just another inanimate object that can be moved around as we please. I am often dismayed by posts on here where people have bought a new horse or moved their existing one and are surprised at all the behavioural issues that seem suddenly to appear. I increasingly despair at how many horses are treated now - much better in some ways than the ‘old days’ but far worse in other ways.
 
I definitely saw this with my mare. She'd been away for schooling, through the sales, and then to the lady I bought her from in a big herd for a couple of years. The first few weeks she was very quiet. Then we had spooky, reactive and unsettled and then when we moved to the summer field a few months later her brain fell out. I think tha is the first year (year 3) where she has been on an even keel even when moving to the winter field. It has taught me so much about reading levels of anxiety and trigger stacking, I think I can count on one hand the number of times she's spooked in the last couple of months and we've been out in 40mph winds 😅

I will have to move her again in a couple of years and I'm seriously considering getting her a pal before then.
 
As an only child whose first friends were dogs and cats and horses, not humans, I have always found the pervading attitude that horses are somehow not thinking, feeling ‘people’ weird.

They are social animals. They communicate, they have thoughts and feelings and opinions. They like and dislike, they bond to friends and caregivers. They are also a lot easier to understand if you account for that fact.

People come to look at a pony for sale/loan/share and a good chunk of them either think the pony is supposed to be a magical unicorn capable of teaching their child to ride all on its own, or think a pony is like a bike - inanimate and to follow instructions only. Finding someone who understands that a horse is a horse is increasingly difficult!

I currently have a pony who happily picked a new child and went on loan last June. She adored her new child and their younger siblings and envisioned a long happy time with them looking after the little ones as they grew. Then the yard became unsuitable all of a sudden (sycamores and oaks overwhelming the grazing) and they had to move - no cheap enough yards locally, pony came back to me. She was angry and sad and just heartbroken. We gave her time, she’s happy at home again now but she’s not at all entertaining the idea of going back out on loan. Borrow a friend’s kid? Fine. Angel pony, kind and steady and perfect. Have a possible loan family come? Oh no thank you. She’s not being difficult, she’s afraid to love again then lose her child, she wants to stay with her friends here and not risk that heartbreak again.

Back to the moving thing - I have moved mine around as a herd and they couldn’t care less. Couple of days to get used to new sights and smells and they’re sorted. Last winter I rotated them between yards and they were absolutely fine about it given that I kept them in their preferred groups with their friends. It is much more the new companions and people issue than it is new locations.
 
I agree strongly - horses are not just another inanimate object that can be moved around as we please. I am often dismayed by posts on here where people have bought a new horse or moved their existing one and are surprised at all the behavioural issues that seem suddenly to appear. I increasingly despair at how many horses are treated now - much better in some ways than the ‘old days’ but far worse in other ways.
Me too. Sometimes you have to move for financial or other reasons and there's no way round it. But constantly moving horses to suit your own needs is just not fair on them. It is NOT a small thing for them.
 
I've had two of my horses for 13 years and I moved yards last year, but ended up moving back to my old yard 6 months later, I didn't think it would cause any issues as they'd been there for the previous 11 years but my ridden horse ended up with ulcers, and I'm sure that was due to the upset caused! even though they were very happy to be back home!
 
My only disagreement with the article is that the reasons they give for moving are only the people-centred ones - timing, practicality, necessity (which yes I agree aren't factors for the horses). Sometimes, and often if you read threads on here, people move very genuinely because their horse is already stressed somewhere or needs aren't being met, and they move to try and make the horse happier and healthier, sometimes at the loss of their own practicality etc. All that the article says is true, but the basic argument is about moving a happy settled horse to a new environment, which is just one of the many conditions in which a horse moves home.
 
Many years ago, sister and I bought a mare and put her in livery at a small RS. She was very unsettled for many reasons, including that this was her 3rd location in a short time (she had been on sales livery). Our yard choice wasn't working out, so we decided to go back to the valley where our 1st horse had been kept.

We led her a distance of a few miles, so she was able to see exactly where she was going. She settled far better in the new yard, although on paper they were very similar, each had a resident stallion.

Over the years we added 3 more mares to our own herd and after 10 yrs we moved the herd, on a lorry, to a friend's farm and about 3 months later, on the same lorry brought them to our own smallholding. None of them seemed worried by either of those moves, presumably because they moved together.

I agree that moving with known and trusted companions helps horses to adjust to new living arrangements.
 
I am a firm believer this is why so many people run into issues with horses from dealers. Of course a few are genuinely miss-sold, but we often forget these horses have likely changed hands potentially 2-3 times in the space of a few weeks. They may have just found their feet at the dealers yard and started to settle into a bit of a routine with the consistency that a working yard provides, then they are uprooted again and find themselves in a private home where that routine and consistency can be lacking, along with a new handler/rider that doesn't have the confidence to give them firm direction. I always allow a horse at least 3-6 months to decompress in a new home before making any judgements about them and personally I think it takes a good year before you see the 'real' horse coming through with a completely new environment and owner.
 
I have felt so much guilt both times I've moved the pony. First to come to me from the rescue she left her sister, and if her sister hadn't also just found a lovely home (I did the homecheck, which helped, she is very happy) I don't know how I would have justified it. The second time I had wanted to move for months but couldn't justify it for my happiness. She was happy and settled. It was laminitis that made the decision, physical welfare nudged it's way to the forefront over her happiness, but I still felt terrible about it. Still do sometimes tbh, she did find another best friend at the new place but then SHE moved. She has one pony she tolerates now, but it's not the same 😭
 
Many years ago, sister and I bought a mare and put her in livery at a small RS. She was very unsettled for many reasons, including that this was her 3rd location in a short time (she had been on sales livery). Our yard choice wasn't working out, so we decided to go back to the valley where our 1st horse had been kept.

We led her a distance of a few miles, so she was able to see exactly where she was going. She settled far better in the new yard, although on paper they were very similar, each had a resident stallion.

Over the years we added 3 more mares to our own herd and after 10 yrs we moved the herd, on a lorry, to a friend's farm and about 3 months later, on the same lorry brought them to our own smallholding. None of them seemed worried by either of those moves, presumably because they moved together.

I agree that moving with known and trusted companions helps horses to adjust to new living arrangements.
When I move, I am hoping to move two of them together and hoping this will help. They are coming from an at home situation to a livery yard for the first time. I have arranged for them to have stables next door to each other and to share a field, at least to start with. I expect it will be a huge upheaval though.
 
My only disagreement with the article is that the reasons they give for moving are only the people-centred ones - timing, practicality, necessity (which yes I agree aren't factors for the horses). Sometimes, and often if you read threads on here, people move very genuinely because their horse is already stressed somewhere or needs aren't being met, and they move to try and make the horse happier and healthier, sometimes at the loss of their own practicality etc. All that the article says is true, but the basic argument is about moving a happy settled horse to a new environment, which is just one of the many conditions in which a horse moves home.
100% agree! To give them credit though the majority of horses are absolutely fine after a move, its the more extreme reactions you read about. Its all a balance at the end of the day...and becoming harder with fewer and fewer livery yard or even private yard options!!
 
My only disagreement with the article is that the reasons they give for moving are only the people-centred ones - timing, practicality, necessity (which yes I agree aren't factors for the horses). Sometimes, and often if you read threads on here, people move very genuinely because their horse is already stressed somewhere or needs aren't being met, and they move to try and make the horse happier and healthier, sometimes at the loss of their own practicality etc. All that the article says is true, but the basic argument is about moving a happy settled horse to a new environment, which is just one of the many conditions in which a horse moves home.
I agree. I've had to move when the yard owner at the new yard has completely forgotten all that they'd agreed to offer when I went to view the yard, or, they have been less than honest in reply to the questions I'd asked. If you'd stated clearly that you needed suitable grazing for a very good doer and then a few weeks after arriving they put you in a paddock full of lush grass, what do you do? When I expressed my concerns I was told, 'Don't worry, they'll soon eat it down'!!
 
Def saw this with my new mare. At 6 was moved from where she had lived at home all her life to a small yard to be sold. I bought her 6 weeks or so later and moved her to my yard where they go into isolation for 3 weeks. Thankfully there was another new arrival and they isolated together and she appeared to settle really well. Was turned out on her own (could see others) and wasn't clingy when the other horse was taken away in the stable.

She then came into the main yard but stayed in isolation turn out (she had pin worm). Once sorted was turned out in the herd and she immediately got clingy with my other mare. She also appeared to have a bit of a personality transplant - sharp, spooky, clingy, head flinging when ridden. I was convinced she had ulcers after the stress of moving so had her scoped - all clear so likely just the stress of all the changes and she just needs time. We are 3 months in and i just feel like she is starting to settle a little - at the end of the day she has had a huge amount of change in a short period of time so its not surprising really!!
 
I agree. I've had to move when the yard owner at the new yard has completely forgotten all that they'd agreed to offer when I went to view the yard, or, they have been less than honest in reply to the questions I'd asked. If you'd stated clearly that you needed suitable grazing for a very good doer and then a few weeks after arriving they put you in a paddock full of lush grass, what do you do? When I expressed my concerns I was told, 'Don't worry, they'll soon eat it down'!!
Sounds pretty common for yards near me! Promise the earth but the reality is somewhat different 🙄
 
Thank you for sharing.
This makes sense of the ‘ honeymoon period’ that people always say when a horse first comes to a new owner. They are usually very well behaved for the first two weeks as they are possibly a bit shut down to cope with the move. It’s only later on that they start to show the stress of the move and a few problems might arise.
 
I bought a mare at the end of the summer and moved her to a nice large field to share with a gelding. Similar set up to the previous owner. She seemed quite 'angry' to start with and a bit difficult to
handle on the ground and a bit unresponsive when ridden. It took her a while to settle but getting there now. Her old owners came to visit recently and she trotted over to see them. They seemed to think she had settled well which was great. I think kind handling and perseverance is the key!
 
I am a firm believer this is why so many people run into issues with horses from dealers. Of course a few are genuinely miss-sold, but we often forget these horses have likely changed hands potentially 2-3 times in the space of a few weeks. They may have just found their feet at the dealers yard and started to settle into a bit of a routine with the consistency that a working yard provides, then they are uprooted again and find themselves in a private home where that routine and consistency can be lacking, along with a new handler/rider that doesn't have the confidence to give them firm direction. I always allow a horse at least 3-6 months to decompress in a new home before making any judgements about them and personally I think it takes a good year before you see the 'real' horse coming through with a completely new environment and owner.
Yes, I agree, I would think horses from dealer yards must need a long time to settle..The article stresses the cumulative effect of each move, so lots of moves in a short space of time must be really stressful for horses. Added to that, the travel between yards, sometimes over very long distances.
 
It’s amazing how well horses that are used to staying away adapt. My horse only has subtle clues each time he loads as to if he’s going away for 10 days 13 hours away or 15min down the road for a hack. They trust us so much!
I used to rent a couple of fields, had stables at home and had a space on a DIY livery yard, so mine were used to field hopping, usually they would move as a pair and the field hop was quite normal so they would wander up the lory ramp like it was completely stressless. Going out for work, not so much.
 
Yes, I agree, I would think horses from dealer yards must need a long time to settle..The article stresses the cumulative effect of each move, so lots of moves in a short space of time must be really stressful for horses. Added to that, the travel between yards, sometimes over very long distances.
Mine came from a dealer. A fabulous dealer who had him 3-4 months before even advertising him and when I saw him on the yard he was asleep tied up waiting to be tacked up. She gave me access to an album of literally hundreds of videos of him doing everything with them in the time they had him and I could see he was a very nice chap. When I got him home he was a complete lunatic, absolutely unhinged. It took him a good 6 months to start to come round and turn back into the horse I had viewed, and over a year to really relax and bond with me, but I knew throughout it wasn't the 'real him' we were seeing, he's just an anxious soul by nature and was so unsettled bless him. But I could easily see how people could start throwing around accusations of drugging and being miss-sold horses based on the personality transplant that a new yard move can bring!
 
I suppose that I'm lucky in that I shared Little Madam before buying her and shipping her to a foreign country. I'm also lucky that even though she'd lived at the same yard all the first 9 years of her life, she's a relaxed soul and was used to going away for competitions. She unloaded off the lorry at her destination, walked right past the guy up a ladder fixing the roof of her new stable, went into the paddock, rolled and started grazing.
She was just as relaxed when she was shipped back across the Channel to a new yard, where she promptly decided she was boss of the small herd.
She was just as relaxed moving back to her original yard and then home. She's very laid back when it comes to moving around, though she has always had continuity of carer, which must count for something, though probably not as much as continuity of companion.

My Old Lady was not so relaxed, moving at 25 yo after at least 6 years in the same yard. She spent a lot of time pacing the first few weeks. She will not be moving again, except from one field to another in the same village and always with at least one member of her herd.

Little Sassy had the hardest move, leaving her herd including her dam and little brother, at 18 months for the first time and having to integrate into a new herd and location. She has coped admirably, though I found out we couldn't do the separate paddock introductions for long, she needed to go straight in with the others, or she would have taken herself in regardless of fences.
 
Thank you for sharing.
This makes sense of the ‘ honeymoon period’ that people always say when a horse first comes to a new owner. They are usually very well behaved for the first two weeks as they are possibly a bit shut down to cope with the move. It’s only later on that they start to show the stress of the move and a few problems might arise.
I would say, on average that it takes even the most laid back mare about a year to settle with a new owner. They often seem fine day to day but when you look back you can track how they changed as they settled in. I've only ever had one gelding and he was supremely confident, used to living between 2 locations in his former life and perfect for novice owners, so I can't really comment on how they settle.
 
Mine came from a dealer. A fabulous dealer who had him 3-4 months before even advertising him and when I saw him on the yard he was asleep tied up waiting to be tacked up. She gave me access to an album of literally hundreds of videos of him doing everything with them in the time they had him and I could see he was a very nice chap. When I got him home he was a complete lunatic, absolutely unhinged. It took him a good 6 months to start to come round and turn back into the horse I had viewed, and over a year to really relax and bond with me, but I knew throughout it wasn't the 'real him' we were seeing, he's just an anxious soul by nature and was so unsettled bless him. But I could easily see how people could start throwing around accusations of drugging and being miss-sold horses based on the personality transplant that a new yard move can bring!

Mine was very similar. She was so laid back and content when I went to try her. If she wasn’t sure of something she wanted to investigate.
She had the complete personality change when she got here but it’s no wonder. She came from a side of a hill surrounded my trees and shrubs to being able to see for miles in most directions. That and finding herself at the top of the herd must’ve been very hard for her.

I’ve had a few folk ask if there was something untoward with her at viewing but I’m almost positive it was just the move that’s thrown her. I can see that inquisitive, interested side to her but she is still not as confident as she was in her old home. I think to get her to settle properly I’d need someone to take over as herd leader but with the current ponies that won’t happen unfortunately.

It was such a difference to my old TB who was either shut down or drugged when I went to view her and after a couple of days out on grass with me she thrived. Of course a big difference with her was she was used to moving around a lot as an ex racer but also she wasn’t happy where she was before.
 
Thanks so much for this - it certainly chimes with Ozzy, who'd had lots of stability for years and was then moved around (long journeys too!) over the space of a few weeks.
We think Ozzy has spent a lot of time on his own in the past - so not only did he have multiple upheavals (including his time with the dealer which seems to have caused some trauma), but he also had to learn how to live with AJ and Snoopy. Plus new owners who were complete strangers; literally every single thing in his life had changed.
He's made a lot of progress since June but I do think that it might take a lot longer until he is fully settled.
 
I had a lovely mare on loan from the home she had been born at. She was almost 18 so it must have been very strange for her. We all assumed she had settled quickly but after being with me for .six months her real personality came through. I then realised she had shut down because of the move, she tolerated me grooming her but didn’t really want a fuss but became a very loving horse once she was settled.. it takes time
 
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