Goldenstar
Well-Known Member
It's a difficult one we use a sacrifice pasture for winter .
If you on clay soils fields do not recover .
Despite spending money and time on mine every year theres a big different between it and my other fields .
It's rested every year April till end of september and maintainence done .
It's is five /six acres and has four horses on it most livery yards don't have over an acre a horse to rest all summer so it's aviable in winter .
Mine looks like the Somme it's terrible it's borderline if they are safe in it this year ,and we are not in an area that's been one of the wettest .
I am using my school ( which I hate doing as its very bad for it ) and restricting turnout to a minimum tbh that not hard as they want to be in after an hour.
I have trained all of mine but one to accept stabling as a nice thing ( the summer is the time to do this ) the one that's not great is fine if you turn him out in the school first thing for a while.
Even with my five acres per horse it's not ideal.
So back to yards honestly I think that turnout pens with some sort of cheap surface is a must for livery yards I would love a big woodchip pen .
And a decent properly draining school.
These conditions are also the time when a walker can really be the most useful.
Of course things like this would but up livery costs but if winters are going to become warmer and wetter I think this will be the way things have to go YOers will have to plan for it better and liverys will have to pay for it through higher bills.
If you on clay soils fields do not recover .
Despite spending money and time on mine every year theres a big different between it and my other fields .
It's rested every year April till end of september and maintainence done .
It's is five /six acres and has four horses on it most livery yards don't have over an acre a horse to rest all summer so it's aviable in winter .
Mine looks like the Somme it's terrible it's borderline if they are safe in it this year ,and we are not in an area that's been one of the wettest .
I am using my school ( which I hate doing as its very bad for it ) and restricting turnout to a minimum tbh that not hard as they want to be in after an hour.
I have trained all of mine but one to accept stabling as a nice thing ( the summer is the time to do this ) the one that's not great is fine if you turn him out in the school first thing for a while.
Even with my five acres per horse it's not ideal.
So back to yards honestly I think that turnout pens with some sort of cheap surface is a must for livery yards I would love a big woodchip pen .
And a decent properly draining school.
These conditions are also the time when a walker can really be the most useful.
Of course things like this would but up livery costs but if winters are going to become warmer and wetter I think this will be the way things have to go YOers will have to plan for it better and liverys will have to pay for it through higher bills.