Magicmillbrook
Well-Known Member
My daughter has just started A levels. I went to parents evening last night and it seems that things have changed a lot since my day, no more 1 3/4 years of dossing follwed by a few months of frantic cramming. Anyway I am trying to work out how to pare down our routine to make minimal work as daughter is going to have to study a lot, plus get a part time job, I work full time amnd OH is strictly non horsey.
In the past we have had our horses out 24/7 but during the winter (nov - march/april) they are in at night and out on our home paddocks, just outside the back door . We have them in to preserve the paddock and eke out what grass is on there, its usualy gone by the end of January so they only have a month or so on hay only.
Our other paddocks are up the road, not far but not ideal when you are pushing barrows of hay and water
barrels in the dark and icy weather, the road is narrow and the main throughfare in and out of the village, also it is the one and only hill in the village and gets very slippery with even the slightest frost.
So new plan is to build another field shelter (so one in each home paddock) and leave them out 24/7 on the home paddock, just bringing them in if it is very wet/snowing. On weekends and holiday we will take them over the road so they can have some grass and will be able to take hay/water etc in daylight, bringing them back up to the house on sunday afternoons before it gets too dark.
We have four in total, 2 x welsh A's a Cob x TB with Arthritis and dust allergy and a young TB. I was thinking I could separate the littlies from the biggies,that way I only have to soak the hay for the biggies or give haylage which will save more time. I can then also mix the littlies hay with oat straw and make up ther hay nets over the weekend. I have some massive small holed haynets to keep them going over night. The cob x and TB will be rugged.
How does that sound - I am trying to convince myself that spending time in a field with no grass, just hay is not much different to standing in a stable every night with just hay. It will be better for the old girls arthritis and COPD. Do you think I am being a mean cruel mummy? Will the TB be ok? Are they likely to get colic from being in a paddock mon to fri with virtualy no grass?
Any comments welcome - also does anyone else have any other 'time saiving advice.
In the past we have had our horses out 24/7 but during the winter (nov - march/april) they are in at night and out on our home paddocks, just outside the back door . We have them in to preserve the paddock and eke out what grass is on there, its usualy gone by the end of January so they only have a month or so on hay only.
Our other paddocks are up the road, not far but not ideal when you are pushing barrows of hay and water
barrels in the dark and icy weather, the road is narrow and the main throughfare in and out of the village, also it is the one and only hill in the village and gets very slippery with even the slightest frost.
So new plan is to build another field shelter (so one in each home paddock) and leave them out 24/7 on the home paddock, just bringing them in if it is very wet/snowing. On weekends and holiday we will take them over the road so they can have some grass and will be able to take hay/water etc in daylight, bringing them back up to the house on sunday afternoons before it gets too dark.
We have four in total, 2 x welsh A's a Cob x TB with Arthritis and dust allergy and a young TB. I was thinking I could separate the littlies from the biggies,that way I only have to soak the hay for the biggies or give haylage which will save more time. I can then also mix the littlies hay with oat straw and make up ther hay nets over the weekend. I have some massive small holed haynets to keep them going over night. The cob x and TB will be rugged.
How does that sound - I am trying to convince myself that spending time in a field with no grass, just hay is not much different to standing in a stable every night with just hay. It will be better for the old girls arthritis and COPD. Do you think I am being a mean cruel mummy? Will the TB be ok? Are they likely to get colic from being in a paddock mon to fri with virtualy no grass?
Any comments welcome - also does anyone else have any other 'time saiving advice.