SusieT
Well-Known Member
alligator40-benign neglect is not necessarily a good thing you know..
I have horses living out at the moment, variety between clipped, rugged, unclipped, old and slightly less old. I'm very much not a mollycoddle, feed them supplements, hard feed them person. But a dirty horse will predispose to lice and skin trauma. Lice to anaemia. Skin trauma to infection, e.g. a mild skin infection. It is easily solved by more bedding, and a clean horse with healthy skin and coat is generally a well cared for horse.
I don't see the 'uproar of my posts' (does that even make sense??). I simply pointed out this is not an acceptable state, OP realises that, I defended my view to others, hence the increased number of posts.
I have yet to have a horse (including box walkers, who spray poo everywhere..) not have a dry bed in the morning, because there is enough bedding in there to soak up any urine. Poo stains, not much you can do about them really, I'll give you that.
I have horses living out at the moment, variety between clipped, rugged, unclipped, old and slightly less old. I'm very much not a mollycoddle, feed them supplements, hard feed them person. But a dirty horse will predispose to lice and skin trauma. Lice to anaemia. Skin trauma to infection, e.g. a mild skin infection. It is easily solved by more bedding, and a clean horse with healthy skin and coat is generally a well cared for horse.
I don't see the 'uproar of my posts' (does that even make sense??). I simply pointed out this is not an acceptable state, OP realises that, I defended my view to others, hence the increased number of posts.
I have yet to have a horse (including box walkers, who spray poo everywhere..) not have a dry bed in the morning, because there is enough bedding in there to soak up any urine. Poo stains, not much you can do about them really, I'll give you that.