sheep
Well-Known Member
Yes but Wagtails comments in respect if the bloodbank BUckinghamshire is relevant which is what I was referring to.
Not to be pedantic but Wagtail hasn’t been online in almost 3 years?
Yes but Wagtails comments in respect if the bloodbank BUckinghamshire is relevant which is what I was referring to.
I’ve also seen many over wintered horses in barns. Well mucked out am, and skipped out during the day. With fresh straw daily.Errr.... I have seen many, many over-wintered barn kept horses in my life. I have never seen one mucked out daily or even weekly, the horses end up walking around on a mattress of dirty bedding with a clean layer on top of it. Regarding space, nobody can give them the same space in a barn as they have in the field, it isn't practical, whole fields would have to have rooves on.
It's a common way to keep both young stock and retired horses over winter.
.
I didn't give any sort of an opinion on it. Perhaps you're confusing me with other posters who did, and who you didn't snark at in reply.Yes maybe so, horses don’t give consent to anything we ask of them. I’m asking more about how it’s run/practicalities etc not personal opinion though.
I’ve also seen many over wintered horses in barns. Well mucked out am, and skipped out during the day. With fresh straw daily.
I don't like it either it can't be good for there feet because a degree of wet will come to the top and it can't be good for the breathing either.I don't know if you saw that in commercial units breeding youngstock in volume or retirement livery, which is where I've seen them.
I've only seen horses deep littered, standing on an increasingly high bank of wet straw until a full bed removal is done either at intervals of several weeks or at the end of winter. But even clean straw of a decent depth for a bed isn’t easy for a horse to walk around in or play or run away from another horse that's snapped at it in a bad mood one day. And they are in there for months at a time
When I was looking for retirement livery last year I rejected any that over wintered in barns as I did not believe the lack of availability for movement was the way to keep a horse which retired young, which is the very reason horses go to blood banks.
I'm sorry if that upsets anyone who has chosen it, but that's my personal choice.
.
Is that aimed at me or in general?Presumably it’s got either physical, or mental issues which occurred while in the current owners care.
It was meant generally. Apologies if you thought different.Is that aimed at me or in general?![]()
Sorry @KittenInTheTree i wasn’t meaning to sound snarky.I didn't give any sort of an opinion on it. Perhaps you're confusing me with other posters who did, and who you didn't snark at in reply.
Okay then, cutting to a length where they won't get dragged through the mud, caught up in brambles, or branchesHorses, IME, don't walk on each others tails. Arzada's tail has never been cut nor those of the little herd and other herds that he has lived with. Free living bonded herd members eat, drink, move, stand, mutually groom and lie very close to each other and they simply don't stand on each
Please re read reply 54. Wagtail made a reply to the original OP on the thread I attached from 2017 saying she had been to the bloodbank and spoken to, presumably David Tombs who appears to run it. I attached Wagtails comment because its a first hand account unlike so many on here that are supposition.Not to be pedantic but Wagtail hasn’t been online in almost 3 years?
I'm going to try and see if one of the equestrian publications would be interested in doing an article about this. But I could well understand with the snowflake yoke brigade and animal rights activists that Manager of Preston Farms might not wish to comment.Unless someone comes on with actual first hand up to date knowledge I think we should accept this debate always goes round in circles and should be left in the past where it belongs. I don’t think the demand is what it was anyway but as it’s all so secret it’s impossible to find out and going by what Wagtail said seven years ago seems a bit foolish.
This.Horses, IME, don't walk on each others tails. Arzada's tail has never been cut nor those of the little herd and other herds that he has lived with. Free living bonded herd members eat, drink, move, stand, mutually groom and lie very close to each other and they simply don't stand on each other.
Sorry @KittenInTheTree i wasn’t meaning to sound snarky.
I just wanted details from anyone who knew what it was like/what the deal is rather than peoples own opinions, of which there are a lot.
To be perfectly honest, obviously without seeing the place I’m still not really getting what’s so awful about it IF the place is well run and the above better replies are true.
It’s not something I’m doing but I’ve seen a hell of a lot worse sounding livery and or retirement places.
I feel like the blood bank, as any option would need proper in person research.
When you sell a horse you also have no say in its future. You also may never see it or visit again.
I can’t see it’s all that much different.
At this point I’d feel more guilty if I sold him to someone who kept him at livery with rare turnout in a postage stamp paddock.
As there is a slight thread diversion onto equine tail care.
I like my horses’ tails full and on the long side, but I still have to trim the length several times a year or else the tails get so long that the horse treads on them as they get up from lying down and yank large portions out by the roots.
How do other people’s horses self trim their own tails so that this doesn’t happen?
I have a retired horse and probably have trimmed his tail once in the past 18 months, I only did that to straighten it really.I don't get it either with the self trim. I guess it could happen since I've met horses that seem to have manes that just stop at a certain length? I've always trimmed tails, some more than others. Mostly because if I didn't the tail would drag, or I'd notice long strands pulled out because the horse stepped on it whilst backing up or playing in the field.
I also cut shorter, about mid cannon, in the winter when it is more muddy.
I have a retired horse and probably have trimmed his tail once in the past 18 months, I only did that to straighten it really.
It's a secret and it hasn't been shared with meAs there is a slight thread diversion onto equine tail care.
I like my horses’ tails full and on the long side, but I still have to trim the length several times a year or else the tails get so long that the horse treads on them as they get up from lying down and yank large portions out by the roots.
How do other people’s horses self trim their own tails so that this doesn’t happen?
Yes! And the mane. We're currently sporting the winter version ie longer than usual and very thick. Then at some point it will magically become a summer mane, shorter and less thickSo, so some of them have like a "stop" signal programmed into the tail?
I totally agree!Manes should be no more than 4”long and tails 4” below the hocks. Me and traditional cob turnout don’t mix.![]()
You'd be no good with hairy natives thenManes should be no more than 4”long and tails 4” below the hocks. Me and traditional cob turnout don’t mix.![]()
My part bred Dales grows hair at warp speed! I butchered her mane one winter and the vets needed all her feather off and 3 months later you wouldn't have known.Manes should be no more than 4”long and tails 4” below the hocks. Me and traditional cob turnout don’t mix.![]()
Oh yes but the point I was making (badly) was that not having your tail brushed isn't really a trauma or neglect for a horse if it were to go to the blood bank and not be brushedOf course they do. But in agreement with @Clodagh i like a short (longer in summer) tail and mane. Who wants to deal with dreadlocks in the winter? Plus it looks smarter.
I completely agree with you.Oh yes but the point I was making (badly) was that not having your tail brushed isn't really a trauma or neglect for a horse if it were to go to the blood bank and not be brushed
Surely horses in the wild manage without any tail care regime