flump
Well-Known Member
If you arrived at the field to find shivering horses in this weather what would you do?
assuming you cant bring them in to dry off? id scrape the worst of the wet off them and towel dry a bit and give extra hay and a bucket if they have one. theres not a lot more you can do if theyre unrugged and wet tbh
Me too except mine aren't clipped so I don't rug. I too find they prefer to shelter next to buildings rather than go in them especially in high winds.Agree with Pale Rider.
Terri
I hate to see horses shivering, it means that they cannot find a sheltered place or are not eating enough. Very often a combination of the two.
What I have found is that given the choice they like the freedom of a shelter as opposed to being shut in, but need forage in front of them all the time.
I once kept 4 horses in a row of 4 stables. I decided to let them choose how they wanted to live, to a degree, so opened the doors of the stables and allowed them all to go where they wanted. In or out, together or separate.
Each stable had hay and a fully made up bed, and you could see over the wall into the next stable.
The horses would move in a group from one stable to another until all the hay had been eaten and then go off and graze. They appeared to prefere to use the stable block as a wind break and shelter, rather than going inside in bad weather. Occasionally, they would sleep in a stable, three lying down and one always watching by the door.
What they never did was isolate themselves into individual stables.
I like to rug horses, as the new lightweight rugs are fantastic being breathable. I feel that keeping them dry is an advantage, but I don't like to use heavy rugs. I believe that food and movement is better than being heavily rugged and confined to a stable.
I hate to see horses shivering, it means that they cannot find a sheltered place or are not eating enough. Very often a combination of the two.
What I have found is that given the choice they like the freedom of a shelter as opposed to being shut in, but need forage in front of them all the time.
I once kept 4 horses in a row of 4 stables. I decided to let them choose how they wanted to live, to a degree, so opened the doors of the stables and allowed them all to go where they wanted. In or out, together or separate.
Each stable had hay and a fully made up bed, and you could see over the wall into the next stable.
The horses would move in a group from one stable to another until all the hay had been eaten and then go off and graze. They appeared to prefere to use the stable block as a wind break and shelter, rather than going inside in bad weather. Occasionally, they would sleep in a stable, three lying down and one always watching by the door.
What they never did was isolate themselves into individual stables.
.