sandi_84
Well-Known Member
I'm asking as my mum is considering a shetland or two as companion for her mare when I (eventually) move me and my horse out 
I will watch this post with great interest as considering the same thing ;D
They are giant horses in tiny bodies. They live on fresh air and not a great deal else. They can escape through any type of fencing known to human kind. They think they rule the world. Every yard should have one![]()
Sandi it sounds as though we share the same concerns.......
We can watch each other threads and hopefully find a nice one and not a mini terrorist![]()
I always think that it is creating problems if you get a companion horse with different "issues" to that of your current horse - ie if you have a good doer then you buy something you can't keep weight on. I would get a retired horse of a similar type to your mum's horse that would happily live in the same way..
Shetlands may seem an easy choice, but if you have to create strip grazing, seperate the horse that needs grrazing, catch the shetland when it escapes, try and get muzzles for it small enough, treat it for laminitis.... it becomes not such an easy option.. If the shetland were going in with a fatty who needed weight controlling, it would be easier.
I understand, she's not a fatty good good doer but she isn't a poor doer either if you know what I mean?
I was just wondering if she got a shetland would it need strip grazed and what the thoughts on feeding hay in the field for my mum's mare were?
I tie my haynets up really high
Seriously though - these can be real concerns, and only work for me because in winter mine only wants to be out for about half a day so I can control what the shetland is eating that way (ie she's stabled a lot of the time, with tripled netted hay. And in summer I've split my shelter in half and created a tiny paddock for the shetland and about another 9 acres for the TB. It took a bit of setting up but it generally works.
I have recently got one as a companion for my mare. It is still very new, but working out very well so far. To be honest I put hay down for my mare and the shetland gets a token amount. She then goes off munching around the field as my mare is quite protective over her hay. The shetland also gets exercised alot to !! She is also the sweetest little thing!!
Their only downside is the lami thing but as others have said, careful control and lock your feel bin as they can and will get in there.
I didn't want to hijack your thread but I've been reading it too
Kellybee,
Laminitis was something that I was worrying about, would she be best to strip graze them in the warmer months?
What about when she's feeding hay to her mare?
We usually give them a bloomin great load of it (may as well be ad lib without actually leaving the bale in the field) but my OH was saying you probably wouldn't want a shettie eating hay as it'd probably end up a fattie with laminitis
We don't have stables and my mum looooves to pamper horses so I'm sure a shettie wouldn't get bored as she'd probably love to not only groom and fuss it but play with it too![]()
It's worth remembering that, titchy as they are, they still need annual jabs, farrier, worming, vet care etc same as any other horse or pony. I'd underline a zillion times too that they are often bought as companions to horses such as TBs etc that need totally different management and feeding so beware. Also echo the fencing thing...some owners think that shetlands spend their entire life working out ways to get under, round, through or over any kind of fencing known to man. Quite often though it's simply that they don't see poor fencing designed as a deterrent to big horses as a barrier and just walk under it! I've experienced this where just a strand of BT rope or wire at about 3ft put off the big horses but titchy ones just walked straight under it without even noticing that it's supposed to be a fence. Shetlands as companions often work out a LOT more expensive than people realise!