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Backyard Horsekeeping

~ One woman´s experience with keeping her horses in her own backyard

Backyard Horsekeeping

Category Archives: Tack and Equipment

I’m Eating, Don’t Bother Me

25 Tuesday Feb 2014

Posted by Joan Fry in Conformation, Feeding, General, Tack and Equipment

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Tags

Backyard Horse, Feeding, fitting fly masks and halters, fly masks, Rescue horses

For horses, eating is a serious business—so serious that in the wild, when they’re not sleeping, they’re eating.  Eating is even more serious for domesticated horses, because they’re usually fed by the whim of those who own or train them, and not according to their own instincts.  Once your horse has finished breakfast, he starts waiting for dinner.  It’s usually a good idea to let them eat in peace.  It’s also a good idea to feed them three times a day.

Because of the shape of Gunsmoke's head, it's also hard to find halters to fit.  (Photo by Charles Hood)

Because of the shape of Gunsmoke’s head, it’s also hard to find halters to fit. (Photo by Charles Hood)

I had never paid much attention to a horse’s eating patterns when I only had Prim (before Gunsmoke, in other words) except to note that if I did feed a midday meal—and most veterinarians and equine nutritionists prefer you to feed three small meals a day rather than two large ones.  Their reasoning is that such a horse has something in his stomach at all times, which will keep his gut happy.  But Prim didn’t seem too interested in a noon meal, so after a couple of weeks I stopped doing it.  (Grass hay is your best bet because it will keep your horse happy and his digestive track healthy—it’s high in fiber and low in protein.)  But I also learned that Prim didn’t like me to put her fly mask on while she was eating.  She took this behavior to such extremes that I often spent five minutes following her, treats in one hand and a fly mask in the other.   Every time she passed her feeder she’d snatch a mouthful of hay.  Because I’m not really awake first thing in the morning—which is when I feed—it took me a lot longer than it should have to figure out that if I put her fly mask on before I fed, life was a lot easier for us both.

When I brought Gunsmoke home, he gained weight fairly rapidly, even though he and Prim shared a 24’ x 24’ pipe corral.  Prim was clearly the boss, and would drive him away from “her” hay with her ears flat and her teeth bared.  Gunsmoke and the mare he had been stabled with (both by the same sire) belonged to a man who didn’t live on the property, and apparently didn’t notice their skeletons were protruding so obviously under their skin he could have hung clothes on them.  It took me about a year of owning Gunsmoke to realize that while he was in much better health—he was even growing a mane—Prim was losing weight.  She wasn’t accustomed to having a stable mate.  Gunner was, and as soon as he finished his hay, he ate hers.  If she wasn’t interested in eating at the moment, she would let him.

Gunner objected to anything that came between him and eating, and I learned to work him in the afternoon and then lead him back to the corral and not feed him until the evening.  During winter’s short days, this was a challenge.  But I didn’t want him to associate the end of a work session with food.  It didn’t make sense to reward him for dragging me back to his corral.  We finally had to separate the two horses by dividing their big corral in half, using the same pipe-and-wire-mesh construction as the original.

When the days finally grew longer again and the flies came back, I thought that putting a fly mask on him was going to be an ordeal, given his history, even though I fastened it before I fed either one of them.  But getting it on him wasn’t the challenge.  The Velcro fastener was the challenge, because he has these dinner-plate Quarter Horse jaws.  If the mask is snug enough to keep the flies away, it won’t fasten over his jaws.  If it’s big enough to fit over his jaws, it’s too loose around the noseband.  I’m still looking for a brand and size of fly mask that takes “Quarter Horse jaws” into consideration.

If you have just bought or rescued a horse, it’s smart idea to stay away from him while he’s eating, at least for the first week or two.  First, see if he’ll allow you in his corral or stall while he’s eating so you can clean up after him.  Keep an eye on his ears and his back end.  If he pins his ears and bares his teeth, walk out the gate.  If he doesn’t mind your presence, clean while he’s eating.  Some horses are real mischief-makers.  If you try to clean when they’re not eating, they will try to “help” you, usually by chewing on one of the handles of your wheelbarrow and, as soon as it’s full, turning it completely over.  (I just described Gunner.)  If you have to clean around his legs, let him know where you are.  Most horses won’t mind.   But most horses will let you put a fly mask on while they’re eating, too.  Like snowflakes, every horse is one of a kind.

The Horse in Winter

10 Friday Jan 2014

Posted by Joan Fry in A Day in the Life, Horse Health, Tack and Equipment, Weather

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Tags

Backyard Horsekeeping, Blankets, feeding for the winter, horse's age, Winter

If the title of this post sounds familiar to you, it should—it’s the title of a book written by Susan McBane and published in this country by the Lyons Press (2005).  The book is a common-sense look at how to do all the usual horse chores when it gets cold outside—and to judge from Tuesday morning’s headlines, it is frigid outside!  Living in California—even its inhospitable high desert—does have its advantages.  Like many owners, Susan McBane—as well as William Healey, the guest blogger who discussed blanketing in my previous post—advocates blanketing horses in the winter.  I do not, except under certain very specific circumstances.

Two horses and a human, all three dressed for the cold weather.  (Photo by Charles Hood)

Two horses and a human, all three dressed for the cold weather. (Photo by Charles Hood)

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Blanketing Your Horse

09 Monday Dec 2013

Posted by Joan Fry in A Day in the Life, General, Horse Health, Tack and Equipment, Uncategorized

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Tags

Backyard Horsekeeping, Blankets, horse's age, Winter

While I personally don’t blanket my horses, I would under specific circumstances—if I had an old horse and I couldn’t keep weight on him, for example, or any horse with medical problems.

A blanketed horse.  (Photo by www.horsejournals.com)

A blanketed horse. (Photo by http://www.horsejournals.com)

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How to Clean Your Horse’s Stall or Corral

18 Tuesday Jun 2013

Posted by Joan Fry in General, Safety, Tack and Equipment

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

a pipe corral, apple picker, Backyard Horsekeeping, horse companion, how to clean a horse corral, shavings as horse bedding

Although these may not be the first questions you think of when you decide to buy a horse and keep him in your backyard, you need to think about them now, before you buy the  horse.  The real first questions are, what’s the best, most efficient way to clean your horse’s stall or pipe corral, and where do you dispose of the waste?

One of Prim's first roommates--a goat named Franklin.  The corral is 24' x 24' and bedded in shavings.  (Photo by Joan Fry)

One of Prim’s first roommates–a goat named Franklin. The corral is 24′ x 24′ and bedded in shavings. (Photo by Joan Fry)

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Breakaway Halters

11 Saturday May 2013

Posted by Joan Fry in Behavior, General, Safety, Tack and Equipment

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

a biting horse, Backyard Horsekeeping, breakaway halters, horse behavior, horse safety

Breakaway halters are useful if you have a horse that has to wear a halter all the time.   The most common reason is because the horse bites.  If he’s already haltered, you can snap a leadrope directly to the halter while standing at his shoulder, where you can deflect a nip.   I also use a breakaway halter on Prim, my old mare with the dropped fetlocks, when I turn her out to self-exercise.  (She never lets Gunsmoke out of her sight, which is the reason I turn him out in the arena first.)  When I let go of her leadrope (a very short one, called a “catch rope”) and cluck, she gallops towards him and they circle the arena a couple of times, Gunner on the inside, Prim on the outside.  It’s short, so she can’t step on it and trip, or get it snagged on something.   Even if she did manage to do that, her breakaway halter would do its job and break.  Unlike Gunner, she doesn’t wear it all the time—just when I turn her out.

The throatlatch of this breakaway halter is fastened to the top ring of the cheekpiece by a snap facing in (and into the horse's face) instead of out.  This breakaway halter is defective. (Photo by Joan Fry)

The throatlatch of this breakaway halter is fastened to the top ring of the cheekpiece by a snap facing in (and into the horse’s face) instead of out. This breakaway halter is defective. (Photo by Joan Fry)

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Text-Free Tuesday

30 Tuesday Apr 2013

Posted by Joan Fry in General, Safety, Tack and Equipment, Text-Free Tuesday

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Tags

Backyard Horsekeeping, halter, using a breakaway halter

The flimsy leather crownpiece of this halter means the halter will break if your horse gets himself hung up on something.  (Photo by Charles Hood)

The flimsy leather crownpiece of this halter means the halter will break if your horse gets himself hung up on something. (Photo by Charles Hood)

Thank you for reading my blog. Please feel free to contact me with any horse-related questions or comments you might have.

Backyard Horsekeeping: The Only Guide You'll Ever Need (Lyons Press, Revised Edition 2007). Praised by everybody from horse behaviorists to trainers to veterinarians, the book's appeal was summed up by Horsemen's Yankee Pedlar, who gave the book a five blue-ribbon rating: "It is the author's voice and commitment to detail that make this book stand apart."

Joan Fry

"Playboy, my first backyard horse, really belonged to my neighbors. But I fed him and brushed him and kept his water bucket full, and in return, they let me ride him whenever I wanted to."

“Even as a kid I loved to write. When I was about eight I typed my first novel on my parents’ Underwood typewriter. I called it Silver the Wild Horse, and it was all in capital letters because I didn’t know how to work the shift key. It was illustrated in crayon. From that little experiment, I found that I’m a better writer than I am an artist. I also discovered my future: I would write about horses.”


John Fry on Imperator, four-time World's Grand Champion Five-Gaited American Saddlebred.
Photo by Avis

Recent Posts

  • Oh No–Not Again!
  • I’m Eating, Don’t Bother Me
  • The Horse in Winter
  • Blanketing Your Horse
  • Goodbye to All That
  • Dropped Fetlocks
  • Dear Robert Redford
  • Do You Feed Your Horse on the Ground?
  • Feeding the Backyard Horse
  • Slaughtering Horses for Meat
  • What Do You Do with the Pee and the Poo?
  • How to Clean Your Horse’s Stall or Corral
  • How to Buy a Horse for Your Child
  • How to Buy a Horse
  • A Day in the Life of a Backyard Horse Owner: Day #2

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