Littlelegs
Well-Known Member
To avoid further confusion, when I say I'd share turnout with her as I have in the past, I mean as my mare has shared, not that I've shared turnout with Laura wheeler.
This is because they feel like they are being persecuted, look at the replies people have had if they have said their horse is alone..![]()
You just don't keep herd animals isolated, simple as. Sorry if this offends people, but it's an utterly blatant welfare shortfall. Look at the worldwide outrage caused by keeping that lone elephant in Manila zoo.
Yes I think it is selfish people keeping a horse on its own in a paddock. If you can't afford to keep a companion then you should either get a livery in yourself or put your horse in livery. Keeping horses' needs met is expensive. Equine company is one of a horses basic needs.
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Every horse is different and some horses are quite happy to live in a field by themselves where as others just can not cope. For some of us it is a big advantage having a horse that is quite happy to be left in a field by itself.
Our neighbours keep an old broodmare on a 50 acre field, alone with sheep and cattle. She has been there, seemingly happy for over 10 years. Yet if you ride past the field and let your horse stop to talk to her she goes into frantic grooming mode (obviously desperate to communicate). She has also climbed across a huge drainage ditch and got stuck to try and reach my gelding. She spends most of her time in the top part of the land, where she is next to one of another neighbour's fields that sometimes has horses in. Despite her seeming fine, she is actually a desperately lonely horse IMO.
Is that comparable? An elephant who never sees any of its own kind, who lives in a tiny enclosure, resembling no form of its natural environment. Presumably, like some of my neighbours, the posters who keep their horses on their own see and ride out and interact with other horses? Certainly I wouldn't class my neighbours horses as 'isolated'. Yes they may live in their fields alone but they're ridden out most days for hours on end with other horses. They're all on working farms so there's always something going on for them to look at, and people passing to interact with them.
Now I'm not saying I would choose to keep any of mine on their own but as someone looking at the horses living close to me I have to say I'm not concerned about any of their psycological well being; they always seem very content horses to me.