Wagtail
Horse servant
Whilst we are in the midst of summer and all our horses are looking great, I thought I would raise the contentious subject of horses that lose condition in the winter.
I have cared for many horses over thirty years. No horse has ever lost condition over the winter whilst in my care. My personal belief is that if a horse can look great during the summer, then so long as it is adequately fed and kept warm and dry, there is no reason for it to lose condition over the winter months.
People might argue that it is because the horse is old or losing teeth, or ill. These are all valid reasons for a horse to lose condition, but these horses will lose condition at any time of the year, not just the winter. If they can eat enough to keep the weight on during the summer then provided they are given the correct forage (hay replacers etc) during the winter and kept warm, then they will thrive.
What do others think?
Incidentally, I think it is also bad to let horses get overweight. The yoyoing of weight from fat in the summer to thin in the winter is even worse IMO.
ETA there may be the occasional horse that loses condition due to the stress of being kept in during the winter. I can accept this scenario, even though I have not experienced it myself.
I have cared for many horses over thirty years. No horse has ever lost condition over the winter whilst in my care. My personal belief is that if a horse can look great during the summer, then so long as it is adequately fed and kept warm and dry, there is no reason for it to lose condition over the winter months.
People might argue that it is because the horse is old or losing teeth, or ill. These are all valid reasons for a horse to lose condition, but these horses will lose condition at any time of the year, not just the winter. If they can eat enough to keep the weight on during the summer then provided they are given the correct forage (hay replacers etc) during the winter and kept warm, then they will thrive.
What do others think?
Incidentally, I think it is also bad to let horses get overweight. The yoyoing of weight from fat in the summer to thin in the winter is even worse IMO.
ETA there may be the occasional horse that loses condition due to the stress of being kept in during the winter. I can accept this scenario, even though I have not experienced it myself.
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