Great advice! Never quite thought about the blanketing stuff; I don't own a horse, but I have a pretty realistic toy horse that a Build a Bear can ride and a approx. 10 inch high walking horse toy.....so I pretend that both of those toy horses are real :) I'd put up a profile of both toy horses, but it wouldn't be right to do so since HC profiles are only for real life horses. But it is OK :)
My horse hates staying in the barn. I do blanket him but as a new horse owner I must confess I still worry about his welfare. I feed him equalizer and salt year round for another ailment. I have also started giving this as a warm mash in fall and winter: It is tootin' cold here. This will not harm his digestive system over time will it? Also, my horse has a tendency to gain weight easily but the hay they get were I board is to say the least crap. Shoul I supplement with something too? Any assistance would be greatly appreciated.
I've owned horses for 40 years and a horse breeder for around 16 yrs. This was a well written article, easy to understand and gives the horse owner both the ability to use their own common "horse sense" as well as tips they may not have thought of. It's in the single digits here and a wind chill of minus degrees and my four fillies are frolicking around their hay huts. They are fat and have enough fur to keep them safe. They will go in to their own stalls tonight and the "night shift" mares will go out. We don't blanket unless someone has a problem and then they usually adjust to the temp change after a few days/nights and than the blanket can come off. Excellent info on water also. Over all very nice article.
People start throwing more hay {more dry fodder} when there are cold snaps, and if water is not to their horses liking for myriads of reason, impactions become rampant after during/after cold snaps. Add some table salt to their feed or some other fashion to get them to the water bucket.