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- Newsgroups: rec.equestrian
- Path: sparky!uunet!scifi!watson!cairo.watson.ibm.com!mary
- From: mary@cairo.watson.ibm.com (Mary McHugh)
- Subject: Re: Horseless Rider Needs Directions(s)
- Sender: @watson.ibm.com
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.181124.39084@watson.ibm.com>
- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 92 18:11:24 GMT
- Reply-To: mchugh@watson.ibm.com (Mary McHugh)
- References: <1992Nov11.023109.29730@cmhcsys.cmhcsys.com> <1992Nov12.093359.20473@yang.earlham.edu> <1992Nov13.161147.39619@watson.ibm.com> <1992Nov13.150930.20495@yang.earlham.edu>
- Organization: IBM TJ Watson Home for Tired Hackers
- Lines: 61
-
- In article <1992Nov13.150930.20495@yang.earlham.edu>,
- alanmoore@yang.earlham.edu writes:
- |> In article <1992Nov13.161147.39619@watson.ibm.com>,
- mary@cairo.watson.ibm.com (Mary McHugh) writes:
- |> > Well, maybe $150, but what ARE you feeding, and how many horses????!!!!!
- |>
- |> Several people have questioned this; none have said "You're lying,
- Alan." and I
- |> appreciate that. Anyway, I have a lot of pasture, 10-20 acres of
- good grass,
- |> and I rotate my horses a lot. I feed around 60 bales of decent grass hay a
- |> winter, along with some grain (about 1.5 lbs a day) more or less all
- year. I
- |> have two horses. My horses have a barn they can go in, but they
- rarely use it
- |> unless there is oats in there or something.
-
- Actually, I had guessed you had plenty of pasture ... but how much is
- grain where
- you are?? I pay about $12-$15 / 100lb for Blue Seal sweet feed, and
- $3.25/bag (*OUCH*) for bedding, $2.65/bale for grass hay. You can bet
- that my horses are out most of the time in their 3 acre field (and they
- can go in the barn anytime, too). In years past, I have always left my
- two out (even Wilbur my jumper) 24 hrs. all year except during thunder
- storms and bitter cold /sleeting conditions. With Bub's heaves and
- reluctance to eat, tho, I have been forced to stall them each night (so
- Wilbur won't chow down on Bub's grub) hence the bedding costs.
-
- |>
- |> There were also some (e-mail) comments about the "if you aren't going
- to take
- |> care of your horse, you should have one" comment I made. This was
- too strong
- |> on my part.
-
- To board or to take care of your own is a personal decision. I prefer
- to take care of my own because I can tell right away when something is
- amiss (you'd be amazed about how much you can tell about their health
- just from the poops ;^) and because I just plain enjoy it. It's not for
- everybody.
-
- Joy's comments about this subject reminded me about what happened to my
- sister-in-law. She had two colts (1 & 2 yr) from the same mare and she
- began to coddle them excessively. One time, in the middle of a hot
- summer day, a severe thunderstorm came up (hail & all that) and she
- couldn't get home so the two got soaked in the field. They both came
- down with horrible colds while the rest of the horses who were used to
- being out came thru the storm just fine. Once they recovered, she
- decided that she was wrong, and they went back to being "regular" horses
- and were much healthier & happier.
-
- Of course, there are exceptions to every rule -- I know some horses that
- are better off inside!
-
- Mary McHugh (and Bubba who is wishing he could live with Alan & his 20
- acres and
- Wilbur who is happy anywhere as long as Bub is in sight )
-
- P.S. I figured that @$12/100 lb & 1.5 lb/horse/day you spend $135 on
- grain a year, so I guess $200 is not unreasonable, assuming about
- $1/bale for hay. Do you bale your own hay?
-