----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, November 21, 2002 12:01
AM
Subject: Re: [RC] How cold is cold ? How
fast do horses adapt to no stalls?
I read some research once that said the most comfortable temperature for
a horse was about 50-55 degrees F.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, November 20, 2002 1:23
PM
Subject: [RC] How cold is cold ? How
fast do horses adapt to no stalls?
I just had a very weird discussion this afternoon with my
buddy Babsi over moving my horses from mainly stall living to paddock
living. She's convinced that they are going to die of pneumonia or
something from the bitter cold of the Egyptian winter. Here's the set-up.
I'd like opinions. Any vets?
I've recently invested in some land next
door to my friend Babsi's palace so my horses can live in paddocks
instead of boxes. I would have liked to do this over the summer, but the
opportunity came up in September while Kelly was here. We planted grass
on two thirds of the land and the other third is sand for maybe a little
house or something (and for a room for tack and groom, etc). Things have
gotten a bit strange over at my old stable (just the OTHER side of
Babsi's), so I plan to move the horses to temporary paddocks in the sand
part until the grass gets settled. The paddocks are pipe and the area
where I'm planning to put up a shelter (just a roof for shade and the
every-five-years rain drop) will not be ready for two or three weeks.
This year I haven't clipped any of my horses because I figure that the
fuzz will help them get used to being outside, and anyway, my life
still basically is far too-office oriented for them to overheat from
excess work. <G> Even the month or so they are on the sand, they
will be getting a better diet in terms of forage than they have now.
Having grown up in the mountains behind Ventura in California where
it was hot as Hades all summer and we would really have the odd morning
with ice in puddles in winter AND most horses were just pastured, I
figure that the horses will be fine. A REALLY cold night here is about 10
C or about 45 to 50 F. I seriously doubt that horses will up and die of
shock from not being in boxes at night with those temperatures. The most
exotic of mine is the Appaloosa/WB cross and he gets pretty fuzzy. The
Arabs are baladi, so they are used to all sorts of things, but they do
tend not to get too fuzzy. I figure it's just not cold enough for
fuzz.
Don't know if she will listen to outside opinions, but I hate
to see her worry needlessly. (She'll probably say, "But they don't live
in Egypt!" like she does to me. Virtually everyone keeps their horses in
stalls here because land is expensive and they think I'm nuts to waste it
on leaving horses out on it.)
Maryanne Stroud
Gabbani Cairo, Egypt maryanne@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx www.ratbusters.net
Get more from the Web. FREE MSN Explorer download : http://explorer.msn.com
|