Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts

Wednesday, 29 January 2014

outerwear for your horse.....




WINTER14 FASHION:
How to make sure your horse is correctly attired for the cold wet weather, rain macs and their importance this season!

Now if Burberry made a trenchcoat for horses Tom and Henry would get one each, sounds amusing I know, but in all seriousness this time of year, when it's oddly mild and wont stop raining, a lightweight waterproof is just the ticket for the stylish horse about town (or even in the field).







Accessorise correctly with udder cream in pink, the hot 'pop' colour from the catwalks and some protective hoof grease to keep the water out, I always go with neutral on their feet, because this goes with everything.








Here you can see Tom and Henry wearing the newest shade a muddy tone of red.  Worn with optional neck covers for added style and protection with the newest sporty detailing velcro straps.

Keep it lightweight, keep it simple.














Thursday, 20 December 2012

the Best Medicine






HORSES:
Tom & Henry can beat any night out or new handbag hooves down without trying.
I am often asked why do I get up so early, in all weathers, and travel nearly 2 hours to work every day, the answer is simple, because I love to.

Just look into their faces, their dark brown huge eyes is all I need to know, life just would be dull without them.




The boys are currently in the yard throwing haylage everywhere and making a mess, I will of course go out and clear it up several times today, because I have to have a tidy and clean yard.  

But this is how I get to know my boys, by spending time around them, during their days. This time is when you learn a lot about your own horse.

 
Horses simplify everything, because their own life is simple survival, they don't over complicate things like we tend to do, they either like something or take off, simple as that.

...learning his moods and what makes him alert or the atmospheres that allow him rest and to relax, are his way of dealing.





...and consequently this has an effect on my own moods and how I deal with life's little dramas. Trying not to complicate things, and it helps too.
My work life is quite stressful, and a day of dealing with difficult people is simply fixed by spending time with the boys.  Any foul mood I am in, simply dissipates as I get close to home and disappears entirely once I get into the yard. 

 Tom & Henry are good medicine.
I'd like to think Tom & Henry get something from me too, thats' not just dinner, and as another year rolls to an end, we all wish you a Happy New Year from WW!


Tuesday, 27 November 2012

Worming





WORM CONTROL:
and why we shouldn't panic!
There's a minefield of information regarding the worming regime of horses, and how you choose your own strategy depends entirely on your horse and how he is kept.
 
  
A large yard, for example is likely to have it's own shedule which you'll likely follow, and how that treatment manifests depends on the enlightenment of the yard manager and how much 'work' is required, because regular poo-picking acres of land grazed by twenty horses or more, takes an agonisingly long time.
 

People, like me, who keep their horses at home have other problems, with no organised plan to follow we must develop our own strategy.
 
Of course your vet will help, my own vet practise will send you a detailed year planer with exactly what worm to target at a given season and the precise chemical needed to treat it, they'll even send you the wormers in a timely fashion to deliver their strategy.

 
 







BUT, this may not suit everyone's own philosophy or horse, and if like me you prefer a less invasive approach then worm counting is for you.









I poo-pick twice every day regardless of the weather. 




This keeps my pasture in brilliant condition, thats aproximately 20 poos every day for Tom & Henry,. 

I send T&H manure samples to a lab periodically without fail, and the lab I use: Westgate even email me a reminder, which is brilliant.

 
Now obviously there are things wormcounts don't tell you about, and repeated 'no eggs seen' can only give you a partial window of your horses gut health.
 
 
And though always happy with these results, I am also aware of the parasites it can't tell you about:   like encysted small redworm larvae or tapeworm, so every few years I worm them with an oral gel paste in Winter and Spring containing moxidectin and praziquantel.  as I have just done this week (3rd week November), and the next Spring dose will be 13 weeks from that date.
 
 
The boys don't much like being wormed, and they sulk once it's done it puts them off their food for 5 minutes, and generally they have loose droppings the next day too, then they are back to normal again.
 
another job done.
 
 
 

Sunday, 18 November 2012

Horses don't Nest







...it all started with Brandy: 'Ginger Nut'. In his twenties in this picture, I loved him so much.  The same age as me, he died when I was 26.


WINTER:
HAYLAGE&BEDDING
In the old days, we used bales of soft golden straw to bed our ponies down for the night, teenagers in love with their shaggy show jumpers, we'd have done anything for them wouldn't we?  Their beds were very deep and had banks, pony-club style all round the edges, and we never really knew why, it was either something to do with getting stuck in the stable, or was it to stop draughts!? We just did it because that's just what everyone did, no question.
  
Of course many of our ponies developed coughs, depending on how much turn-out time our DIY  livery yard would allow, and mine was in for 7 months and out during the day, in at night only the rest of the year.  We didn't know better, we all just did what everyone else did. 

 





Luckily, at the time my pony Brandy (here being 'ridden' by John) had a cough, HorseHage was available, and I was the first on my yard to buy it, now everyone I know uses a haylage from one source or another, and you don't hear yards of coughing horses anymore do you? 
 
And we're all getting much better at feeding off the floor or using Haybars instead for a more natural feeding position.  because it lets fluid containing nasties drain away. Thank goodness we are so much better advised, thanks to horse magazines, our knowledge isn't simply passed on wrong advice from yardees or people who think they know it all, magazines are here to help, written by people who DO know stuff.

 
 
Then we all changed to wood chips because straw was thought of as bad, we got them wherever we could, there weren't many places to buy speciality horse&pony type wood chips, but if you travelled around, you could find some.
 









So  then we had a new dilemma, how do we make a soft snugly bed fit for our best friends: our ponies,  so they'd have the cleanest, tallest, snugliest bed on the yard?  The answer was, we couldn't treat our stables the same way ever again, and our ponies really didn't mind...why?
 
 
Because Horses don't nest.
 



By and large, if a surface is quite dry and safe a horse can sleep on it.  We make our beds because all the while we're sprinkling the 14 times dust-extracted, dust-free, lemon scented wood chip down we're thinking, would I like to sleep on this aren't we?  Well horses don't need hypo-allergenic togg20, orthopaedic bedding! they are horses!

 
 
 
 
 
 
 


This time of year, Tom & Henry are usually still out, and actually last year they didn't come in at all at night even, but then we got mud-fever, and we're NOT going through that again!
 
 

Its very very wet here, so to keep my boys feet in tip-top condition, and not standing soaking wet for 24 hours a day, I have just brought them in at night.  thus I have been thinking about bedding and haylage.
   
When they come in I bring their beds all the way forward to the doorstep of their stables, so they don't stand all night with their arses in the air! 



It's about 5cm deep with a clean sprinkling of BedDownExcel shavings.  Its smells nice, but again, this is just for me since I'm certain the boys are only interested in what goes in their buckets and haybars!
 
They don't have a deep bed at all, just a couple of inches beneath the clean sweet smelling surface is the rubber matting John installed before they got here, I wish I'd have had this when Brandy was alive.









Then John installed anti-cast strips all round their walls, about a metre from the floor (depending on the height of your horse), 10cm wide strips of rubber (John used off-cuts from doing the floor), screwed to the wall, and skid marks ending at these strips mean they really work too, it just gives their hooves something to grip on.
 
Tom & Henry are eating 1-2 bales of HorseHage daily and at night I hang a net outside their stables too.

(I hate haynets, they're not only dangerous, but all that reaching and pulling with his nose in the air isn't natural, and probably bad for your horse too, not to mention he probably gets quite frustrated getting the hay out, especially if this is his only source of feed), but with a small amount local haylage in a net: HaySoft in it just for variety, I think it's ok. 

They love this haylage, and it now comes in 3 easy to use chunks per bale. and they love this arrangement too, they can look out, chat and eat, what could be better?  I swap the sides each night too so they don't get bored or use only one side of their necks.
 
  
Tom&Henry have never had a cough, our new modern ways of working have made certain of that, and they don't have to wade through a deep bed full of dust spores either, it's all very simple and as natural as possible, except being in the stable, but until my vet can give them an injection against mud-fever, I'm taking precautions!

 
 happy winter xx
 
 
 

Saturday, 8 September 2012

And Now for Something Completely Different








A POST (nothing to do with mud fever...well, maybe a bit...):

 
 
 
 
 
It's funny how you can so easily get wrapped up in your horses' afflictions you almost can't see anything else, do anything else.  But apart from Henrys' MF, all things are fine back at base.
 
Though Tom did fling off a shoe Thursday night which John and I found, funny how it's always the white foot that loses the shoes...I wonder why that is, all new advice suggests the white and black hooves are just as strong as each other, but that's not what we are seeing here at WW.

Steve came today in the baking heat to put Tom's shoe back on,  he puts himself in the yard exactly where Steve shoes him, not tied up and waits....how cute is that?
 
 
 
...anyway, Steve said he's never known 2 horses to get their shoes off like my 2 in all his 20something years as a farrier...well Trakehners are special...athletic, sharp, and they manage to twist the metal too, very skillful!
 

 
 
The boys are looking fantastic, healthy and shiny.  They have just been bathed for the last time before the weather gets chilly.  They seem very chilled and happy.  Have come through harvest without so much as a sniff.   Have watched as John and I did our August bank holiday hedgerow prune and trim (this is also an attempt to avoid any village hullabaloo). 
 
 
They witnessed as the builders had a skip delivered and didn't bat an eyelash at anything.
 
 
I guess it's just that time of year, they are looking slimmer, although because of all the rain we've had the grass has been plentiful and they will go into winter well 'conditioned'.
 

 
 
In preparation for winter, I am planning on altering my strategy from last year.  Last winter they didn't spend a single night indoors, but then we got mud fever, and that's very nasty, so we won't be doing that again.  Prolonged contact with wet conditions without any respite, not again.  I thought I was doing the right thing, treating them like horses, but of course in the wild they'd wander for miles making sure they didn't stand in wet all day long wouldn't they? Tom & Henry will come into nice clean dry stables at night during the worst weather as we had done every other year, that's what we'll be doing.
 
 
Plan your winter now, get your rugs cleaned and mended, stock up on your first aid kit, bandages and boots, get your order for shavings in too just in case there's a shortage.
And the wet summer we've had will undoubtedly affected the hay crops all across the country, plan for a shortage and get your order in now, otherwise you may have to contend with less than perfect quality, and it's just not worth the worry, even if your horse likes hay from the bin (like mine do).
 

 
...and the boys do like their nice soft clean beds...and lots, and lots......and lots of haylage.
 
 
happy hacking x