palo1
Well-Known Member
We are moving! Our new place is my OH's childhood home and is in need of huge amounts of tlc. It is at about 1300ft up a Welsh mountain and the buildings on the yard were never designed with horses in mind. Currently,here we have an open fronted barn with 2 huge stables that are open with beds made up. We don't use either of the 2 other stables. The barn is on a hard yard that we put in which in turn leads to a winter turnout paddock and summer paddocks. It is super easy, really civilised and the hard standing has been roomy enough for 3 horses to spend a few days on when the winter turnout is under water or grimly muddy. Winter accommodation is probably about 1/2 -3/4 acre total but the horses have room to whizz around and play and can come and go indoors or out. I would like similar at our new place BUT there are a few problems and I could do with advice/experiences. It is possible that in a bad winter horses would need to winter primarily on the yard rather than have access to consistent grazing/mud paddock over winter. I would plan to turn out whenever possible but that will be limited due to clay/mountain/bog conditions!! All horses will be in work/regularly exercised unless veterinary reasons preclude that.
I have to consider the needs of 2 blood type horses (an anglo arab type and another half arab) and a Welsh D with asthma!! I arab type feels the cold and loathes the rain, the other doesn't care what life throws at him. The Welsh mare needs excellent respiratory hygiene but is otherwise v hardy.
2 possible barns/yards for the horses:-
Option 1: huge very open fronted but quite exposed and dire in the occasional easterly wind. Barn is around 100 ft long and 1 bay wide. Apparently can be a struggle to walk from the house to this barn on windy/bleak days (and impossible with an easterly wind which can also blow snow and rain into the barn) !! It could have a good yard in front of it but further expansion beyond about 20- 30m x 10m yard would be impossible. It has good access to the primary fields identified for horses (which is important as I don't want to trudge up a steep hill with excited horses in bleak conditions lol) but inconvenient to OH due to needing modification of current sheep handling pens and one farm track that access is needed to etc. Water but no lighting currently in this barn. Earth floor.
Option 2: Really vast sheep shed; could be opened up somewhat to create better airflow and could be relatively easily split into smaller parts or more flexible use. Earth floor, water and potentially easier to fix lighting. Would require a short walk to turnout fields. Currently a 15m x15m yard possible (and desirable to OH) with further expansion quite possible later on. This barn is sheltered by bands of trees and possibly could have a woodchip paddock installed at the rear or further hard standing as well as the planned hard yard at the front. This shed is more complex but could have sides removed to be more 'open'. Much less bleak generally and designed for lambing so out of really difficult wind conditions. It needs a lot more work to get that option workable and turnout is much less easy. I can walk to this barn from the house very easily even on a vile day without having to seriously fight the elements. The walk to turnout is not difficult BUT OH would rather we either used option 1 with more turnout or option 2 with much less turnout. There are reasons - not least because option 2 is so much bigger ! (think medium sized indoor arena). Horses could easily canter around in this barn (as long as they mind the uprights!!). More expensive to sort out and would need temporary fencing I think for a bit.
Both options would allow for the flexible creation of a box-rest pen of 15x15ft (gates with stockboard).
Budget is quite small for both yards - around 10k but I would prefer to spend the least possible to start with until we know what works and what doesn't. Barns are certainly structurally good enough (though option 2 needs more work to create a big open barn as it has much internal 'furniture' currently.
Turnout will be on 4-5 acres of hill field (ie like an open hill but essentially enclosed). Unlikely to be viable all winter but should be totally sufficient for the horses we have in summer and through dry spells in Autumn and Spring. Trying to work out which option will be best for the horses is really doing my head in tbh!! I hate the idea of them not having easy access to grazing for 6 months of the year potentially BUT at the same time I don't want them to be knee deep in a bog or to trash the hill fields for summer grazing.
I want my mare to have the best possible air flow and respiratory conditions (probably option 1) but my senior horse would not thrive in seriously bleak weather and I would prefer the option of a bigger yard (option 2). I am going round and round in circles not knowing what is likely to be best.
I have questions about earth floors and some really conflicting thoughts about trying to use such tricky turnout in winter. Would plenty of barn and yard space be 'better' than hoping for decent weather for turnout?
What are the potential issues with earth floors (likely to be quite dry and parts could be rubber matted)?
Would an earth floor have implications for respiratory health? I pick up poo 2x daily in any case and could create an area of rubber matting with shavings for horse's convenience lol.
I would be hugely grateful for any insights/experience or advice! I can't really do photos sorry as the property still belongs to my OH's family and it feels insensitive to share before we legally take ownership. Thanks for any thoughts.
I have to consider the needs of 2 blood type horses (an anglo arab type and another half arab) and a Welsh D with asthma!! I arab type feels the cold and loathes the rain, the other doesn't care what life throws at him. The Welsh mare needs excellent respiratory hygiene but is otherwise v hardy.
2 possible barns/yards for the horses:-
Option 1: huge very open fronted but quite exposed and dire in the occasional easterly wind. Barn is around 100 ft long and 1 bay wide. Apparently can be a struggle to walk from the house to this barn on windy/bleak days (and impossible with an easterly wind which can also blow snow and rain into the barn) !! It could have a good yard in front of it but further expansion beyond about 20- 30m x 10m yard would be impossible. It has good access to the primary fields identified for horses (which is important as I don't want to trudge up a steep hill with excited horses in bleak conditions lol) but inconvenient to OH due to needing modification of current sheep handling pens and one farm track that access is needed to etc. Water but no lighting currently in this barn. Earth floor.
Option 2: Really vast sheep shed; could be opened up somewhat to create better airflow and could be relatively easily split into smaller parts or more flexible use. Earth floor, water and potentially easier to fix lighting. Would require a short walk to turnout fields. Currently a 15m x15m yard possible (and desirable to OH) with further expansion quite possible later on. This barn is sheltered by bands of trees and possibly could have a woodchip paddock installed at the rear or further hard standing as well as the planned hard yard at the front. This shed is more complex but could have sides removed to be more 'open'. Much less bleak generally and designed for lambing so out of really difficult wind conditions. It needs a lot more work to get that option workable and turnout is much less easy. I can walk to this barn from the house very easily even on a vile day without having to seriously fight the elements. The walk to turnout is not difficult BUT OH would rather we either used option 1 with more turnout or option 2 with much less turnout. There are reasons - not least because option 2 is so much bigger ! (think medium sized indoor arena). Horses could easily canter around in this barn (as long as they mind the uprights!!). More expensive to sort out and would need temporary fencing I think for a bit.
Both options would allow for the flexible creation of a box-rest pen of 15x15ft (gates with stockboard).
Budget is quite small for both yards - around 10k but I would prefer to spend the least possible to start with until we know what works and what doesn't. Barns are certainly structurally good enough (though option 2 needs more work to create a big open barn as it has much internal 'furniture' currently.
Turnout will be on 4-5 acres of hill field (ie like an open hill but essentially enclosed). Unlikely to be viable all winter but should be totally sufficient for the horses we have in summer and through dry spells in Autumn and Spring. Trying to work out which option will be best for the horses is really doing my head in tbh!! I hate the idea of them not having easy access to grazing for 6 months of the year potentially BUT at the same time I don't want them to be knee deep in a bog or to trash the hill fields for summer grazing.
I want my mare to have the best possible air flow and respiratory conditions (probably option 1) but my senior horse would not thrive in seriously bleak weather and I would prefer the option of a bigger yard (option 2). I am going round and round in circles not knowing what is likely to be best.
I have questions about earth floors and some really conflicting thoughts about trying to use such tricky turnout in winter. Would plenty of barn and yard space be 'better' than hoping for decent weather for turnout?
What are the potential issues with earth floors (likely to be quite dry and parts could be rubber matted)?
Would an earth floor have implications for respiratory health? I pick up poo 2x daily in any case and could create an area of rubber matting with shavings for horse's convenience lol.
I would be hugely grateful for any insights/experience or advice! I can't really do photos sorry as the property still belongs to my OH's family and it feels insensitive to share before we legally take ownership. Thanks for any thoughts.