As winter approaches horse owners worry about whether
their horse should be tucked up warm in its stable or outside in the cold. Eileen Gillen,
manager of Belwade Farm, the ILPH's most northerly recovery and rehabilitation centre
gives her views.
How many of us as a matter of course always keep the
horse stabled during the winter months? Is it because they are in work and clipped out, so
that they do not lose condition? Is it because they will poach the ground causing more
work and expense for the human to reclaim good grazing for the summer? Or is it because we
feel sorry for them, as they cannot come into the house to sit by the fire so we stick
them into a box to make us feel better? The important way to look at this situation is by
deciding what the horse thinks about it all. They are herd animals who in general are more
resilient than we give them credit for. They can adapt to various situations if they are
given half a chance to acclimatise to their surroundings. The horse grows a winter coat
that we clip off because they will sweat too much when exercised. Good practice, we all
think. But how many of us exercise for only one hour a day and then expect the horse to
stand in for the other 23 hours? We then wonder why he has started to box walk, weave or
kick the door down. Most of us will end up acquiring objects to amuse them while they are
standing in their box bored. When all they want is to be outside doing horsy things. If
you are worried about turning the horse out in the cold, pick up any equine magazine and
you will find rugs to keep an Eskimo warm at -40°C. If you are worried about a tendon
pull as it races round the paddock then it was probably waiting to happen due to a
weakness there anyway.
I feel strongly about this because we come across too many horses that are not let out
at anytime. These are not happy horses. Sometimes you are told that the horse is worth too
much to risk. But what is a horse worth who has severe behavioural problems? An example I
came across recently was a Thoroughbred stallion. He was put into a barn and when mares
came to be covered they were put in with him. He is never let out of this barn and this
has been going on for four years. He is in good condition but quite unmanageable.
If it is necessary to keep a horse stabled to control its environment then the
following should be done. Ideally, where possible the horse should be in hard work, it
should be on controlled rations and the stable should be big enough to accommodate them
and have good ventilation. Stabled horses tend to have more ailments than unstabled
horses. It is very easy to label a horse as having COPD, when all it really wants is good
clean air. To keep the horse sane it should be allowed access to a paddock so it can relax
in its natural form. Yards with large number of horses often find turning out horses for
an hour a day impractical. One observes that horses in this sort of environment are
frequently the ones with the vices!
A final thought. In the winter when it is snowing or raining how often do you see a
horse standing outside beside its wonderful field shelter? Yet in summer, on a lovely
sunny day they are inside getting away from the flies.
Cox the Saddler would like to thank the ILPH for this article. The ILPH are available at www.ilph.org