BUCKandREAR
Well-Known Member
How do you manage yours when together?
My TB who is temporary (maybe permanently) out of action for the foreseeable future (who is a good weight and would like her to stay that way for winter) is coming home soon and i have a greedy fat cob for company, native pony and a welsh yearling colt who are all strip grazed and out 24/7 365 days a year, i may need to move the cob onto the bald only and feed soaked hay as shes getting too fat. Trying to figure out where to put them/arrange them so they have a friend for company and none get too fat and the TB gets enough!. Typically the fatty cob and TB are both mares and the colt is still entire (undescended testical) so he is with the native gelding pony.
I have a 4 acre field part of it has been grazed very short and is strip grazed the other half is waist high meadow grass............
I have lots of electric tape and posts, just need ideas
My TB who is temporary (maybe permanently) out of action for the foreseeable future (who is a good weight and would like her to stay that way for winter) is coming home soon and i have a greedy fat cob for company, native pony and a welsh yearling colt who are all strip grazed and out 24/7 365 days a year, i may need to move the cob onto the bald only and feed soaked hay as shes getting too fat. Trying to figure out where to put them/arrange them so they have a friend for company and none get too fat and the TB gets enough!. Typically the fatty cob and TB are both mares and the colt is still entire (undescended testical) so he is with the native gelding pony.
I have a 4 acre field part of it has been grazed very short and is strip grazed the other half is waist high meadow grass............
I have lots of electric tape and posts, just need ideas