now_loves_mares
Well-Known Member
I have a grazing dilemma as one horse is the size of a house, the other is like a whippet, as she insists on spending the whole day hanging out by the gate, where there is no grass left. So I'm going to have to create two adjoining paddocks - one forcing the whippet into the decent grass, the other a small strip for the fatty.
The area I need to create it has pretty decent spring grass. So I need to get it grazed down as safely and quickly as possible. What's a fair sized area to start off with? I think I'll put both of them in the same area to start with. It needs to be big enough as they like to run about; but if it's too big then obviously it'll never get grazed down. If I make it say 20m x 40m will that get it grazed down quickly enough, so I can then move the other one to the remaining grass (of which there is plenty).
Or am I better just putting the fatty in a tiny bit on her own from the off; and if so, how tiny? Obv I could make it really small, say 10m square, but that hardly seems fair on her.
Sorry if these are dumb questions
I've only ever really had TB's before so no idea how to "do" starvation paddocks 
The area I need to create it has pretty decent spring grass. So I need to get it grazed down as safely and quickly as possible. What's a fair sized area to start off with? I think I'll put both of them in the same area to start with. It needs to be big enough as they like to run about; but if it's too big then obviously it'll never get grazed down. If I make it say 20m x 40m will that get it grazed down quickly enough, so I can then move the other one to the remaining grass (of which there is plenty).
Or am I better just putting the fatty in a tiny bit on her own from the off; and if so, how tiny? Obv I could make it really small, say 10m square, but that hardly seems fair on her.
Sorry if these are dumb questions