FrodoBeutlin
Well-Known Member
I spent quite a lot of time in Germany and it is very rare to see horses out in the fields around Munster, where they do a lot of breeding.
I remember seeing an article on a retired International German showjumper who is a well known breeder. His young horses are kept in large barns, with not a great deal of square footage per horse. What a lot of people don't realise, is that breeding horses in Germany and Holland is done on a very large scale, and the equivalent of factory farming. Freedom is totally beyond these horses experience. While people keep buying them, they will keep being produced in this way. It's big business!
When was this? I've been living in Warendorf for two years and the fields around here (20 mins from Munster) are completely overflowing with horses, it's such a joy to watch!!
I do not know of ANY breeders who do not turn youngsters out, some breeders in certain areas (e.g. Holstein) do keep horses indoors for the worst winter months, but they are free and keep living in a herd (they are not stabled, just loose in these huge indoor barns). But most of the year is spent out, often even 24/7. It's when the horses are 3 or 4 and move into training barns that the situation often (but not necessarily) changes.
As for Totilas, I have seen him a few times in the flesh and he truly is the most laid back, relaxed dressage horse around. Clearly the lack of turnout does not affect his character!
Apart from this, people fail to realise that dressage horses HAVE to be explosive - as a general rule, a horse kept outside 24/7 would never be able to perform at that level (Escapado, who was kept out 24/7 for a period of time, is the exception which proves the rule!).
This is how top dressage/sj horses are kept, throughout the world, as I said Laura B does the same with Alf, yet the outrage is only for Totilas - because he is Dutch?