Makes sure your horse, as well as the horses in adjacent stalls, are all well-exercised and well-fed when your horse moves in.
Before you move your horse in, go through the whole stall carefully, looking for sharp objects or surfaces your horse can cut himself on, things he could bang himself on, places where he could get hurt. Horses have always amazed me in their ability to find ways and places to hurt themselves when you'd swear there was no way they could get hurt. A new stall is a booby-trap until proven otherwise, so look for obvious hazards.
Good luck.
2007-02-22 10:37:47
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answer #1
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answered by Karin C 6
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I wouldn't advise putting two mares that are total strangers together! Other than that they will do their own thing without human intervention. Horses are a herd animal and have a definitive pecking order. They will assume that and NO human is going to do anything to alter that arrangement!
People try to integrate with horses like they are humans to which contrary to their thoughts, it's the farthest thing from reality! A horse has a brain the size of a walnut- that alone speaks for itself!
I have owned horses all my life and trained many! They learn from repetition and not IQ! The best trained horse has the capacity to terminate you at any given moment without warning!
They are a flight animal and as far as they are concerned, you are as much a predator as anything else they encounter.
My suggestion, put the horse in the new stall and let it be a day or two then turn it out to pasture with the rest. It will find it's pecking order either on its own or by domination from the others. One way or another, it will survive in the herd within its chosen place.
2007-02-22 09:48:52
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Make sure that the horses next door are friendly, and that the barriers between your horse and its neighbors are strong and in good shape. Also, check the stall thoroughly before your horse moves in- go over the walls and floor, and check for anything that your horse may potentially get hurt on. Make sure that the stall is CLEAN, and is deeply bedded with bedding that is safe for horses- NO red maple shavings, PLEASE !! If there are mats in the stall, they need to be level and straight. Mangers, buckets, and feedtubs should have rounded edges, and the hangers used to hold them up should be smooth snaps or screweyes. Stalls should be free of cobwebs, which are a dangerous fire hazard. It is also important that the stall be ventilated correctly, or your horse may wind up with breathing problems. Finally, check the latch on the door- it must work properly and be secure if you don't want your horse getting loose in the middle of the night. As for introducing your horse to it's neighbors, start with only one horse at a time, preferably in a smaller paddock or pasture. After the two horses have a chance to get to know each other for a few days, then you can turn them both out together with the larger herd. There may be some squealing, kicking, and biting at first, until the herd re-establishes its pecking order. One other hint for you as well- make sure you remember to keep like with like, especially at first. This means that if your horse is a gelding, he shouldn't be put into a field full of mares, and vice versa. (Stallions, or ungelded males, are ALWAYS TURNED OUT ALONE, for both your safety and theirs- unless the newly turned out horse is a mare that you intend to breed. Stallions CAN, and usually WILL, KILL ANY OTHER horse that they are turned out with, unless they were raised with that horse and know it. Stallions also have special fencing requirements in terms of height and materials used. ) Hope this helps.
2007-02-23 07:46:28
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answer #3
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answered by Starlight 1 7
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MAKE SURE THE HORSES ON EITHER SIDE ARE FRIENDLY.
I moved my horse into a new stall, because his was flooding horribly. Turns out, the stall I moved him too had been empty for years becasue the horse next to it had a bad habit of biting and kicking. Ended up costing me hundreds of dollars in vet bills, because the horse next door bit my colt every time he went to eat.
So, I would say thats the main thing.
2007-02-22 16:00:23
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answer #4
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answered by Ally 1
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the glaring answer is to get your mare to the place she is going to be fed exact. The stall factor is a non-concern while it is composed of the pony's undemanding want of nutrients just to maintain weight. Being stalled at night could desire to be for his or her very own protection, reckoning on the area. i've got raised many many horses and infrequently stalled them as I want 24/7 turnout, yet, back, i might rather my horses had nutrients then hardship approximately stalling. sure, she would be ready to get used to it. She could %. or call yet over the years they gets used to it. i might additionally inspect the size and concern of the stall and make specific there is not any longer something that could injure the pony like broken boards or products of lumber or nails/nailheads jutting out to rip skin. i might additionally make specific that there is not any cobwebs, and so on., as they could inflicting respiratory themes interior the long-time era. If there is padding on the floor, is there manure caught below the padding? that's maximum suitable to have a sturdy padding on the floor by way of fact concrete flooring could be problematical on a horse's ft. Has the stall been disinfected from the previous horse that used it? Is the stall sufficiently vast to acccommodate a horse mendacity down and turning around? Is there sufficient get entry to to hay and water? i might additionally make specific that the pony is getting the prove time it desires as nicely.
2016-09-29 11:55:31
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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MAKE SURE THE HORSES ON EITHER SIDE ARE FRIENDLY
2007-02-26 09:16:41
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answer #6
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answered by jerry 7
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