Spyda
Well-Known Member
Reading this post I am horrified at the suggestion that youngsters that are brought in at night during the winter (or when the weather is vile) are not going to develop properly. What codswollop! Total tripe.
Of course it would be a wonderful world if all babies could spend their first 3 years out on rolling pastures 24/7, but Hey! This is England in the middle of the wettest couple of years, in a long while. If I left mine out 24/7 year round they'd be riddled with rainscale and mud fever. No sireee.... mine come in at night from around late November/early December until late March/early April. And I'd like anyone to say any of mine look worse developmentally wise than any one else's living out 24/7!
Of course it would be a wonderful world if all babies could spend their first 3 years out on rolling pastures 24/7, but Hey! This is England in the middle of the wettest couple of years, in a long while. If I left mine out 24/7 year round they'd be riddled with rainscale and mud fever. No sireee.... mine come in at night from around late November/early December until late March/early April. And I'd like anyone to say any of mine look worse developmentally wise than any one else's living out 24/7!