FairyLights
Well-Known Member
http://horsetalk.co.nz/2013/08/13/stabling-no-life-horse-professor/#axzz2bqdVQBkJ
let your horses live more naturally.
let your horses live more naturally.
However in practice I do not see it changing. If you brought in a requirement that horses had to spend x amount of time with access to a minimum turnout area per day say, even if there were adequate resources to police it you would not have enough room for the existing horses.
I mentioned in another post earlier that I used to like stabling my horses at night and would do it all year round.
However I now believe the more turnout the better, especially for young(er) horses! I will only bring a horse in over night if the weather is treacherous, i.e. severe, heavy and relentless rain or snow. Better on the joints, mental stimulation, digestion etc etc.
As for individual turnout- I do do this, especially with a young horse during their training. I feel it helps make them mature & confident, cutting out the crappy, clingy, nappy behaviour when with "friends." Always make sure there is a horse next door though, social interaction still very important and a good scratch over the fence!!!
Working animals do need discipline and a bit of order- imo
What would Danes do then if they had a horse who is a danger to itself and others when turned out in a herd?
I wonder if you have been to a yard in Denmark. I spent some time at a top trainer's yard. It was April it was still snowing. Dressage horses went from their box to the indoor school, after being ridden they went under lamps the back to this box. The ground was frozen out side and plenty of snow lying. They may go out in summer but not in the long cold winter.
Back in the UK I have 2 they are out and in during the day currently when the rain and wind begins they go out after breakfast and in at night.
They are out alongside each other never together. If you have a horse you want to compete you are mad if you turn out in a big herd. It is difficult enough to get a horse to P.S.G without adding to the chance it might be kicked!"
I suspect, the poster that asked what would happen with a horse that cannot socialise and therefore needed individual turnout, I don't know, but I suspect, they'd approach the problem with common sense and manage it with the best interests of the horse.
Different culture, different approach, very unlike the UK.
It was me who asked that, as I am the proud owner of such a horse, and I can assure you that I too approach the problem with common sense and manage it in my horse's best interest. I am not from the UK, although I now live here.![]()
In an ideal world I would like them all out 24/7 in company. In reality ,they get ill and need stabling, it gets wet and windy and they beg me to stable them, or some are just antisocial beasts that like a groom over the fence but won't share their paddocks without trying to kill any others!