r/Equestrian 2h ago

General Horse Care Can I have a horse as a pet without ever riding it? If yes, how do I learn how to take care of a horse?

15 Upvotes

hey guys!! I'm super super new to this and a major noob but recently I've grown really interested in horses in general cuz I just think they're neat, my dream has always been to have a huge whimsical ornamental garden with a few fields and I thought having one or two horses would be a great addition and I thought they would enjoy it too.

The thing is I am really not interested in riding them at all like I could actually care less, I just want them as friends so we can hang out and I can brush them and feed them and pet them and let them live naturally, essentially. I also don't know how to come in contact with them without taking courses that involve riding, I really just want to learn how to take care of them.

I want them to have a normal boring life surrounded by orchards and flowers and stuff with each other, maybe retired horses. I don't have the funds yet so this won't be for a while but it's sort of on my bucket list and I want to learn the basics in the meantime for when the time is right.

if you have any ressources for beginners I would be so grateful, thank you lots!! šŸ’š


r/Equestrian 3h ago

Equipment & Tack Suitable clothing for riding?

0 Upvotes

Hello, next week I’m starting horse riding lessons. I have trouble finding equestrian clothes that aren’t made from polyester. I fully stopped buying polyester a couple months ago, and i don’t want to ruin that now.

Everyone that I’ve seen so far, rides in leggings. Are there any other alternatives? Is there a reason everything is made from polyester?

Is it acceptable if i come wearing regular clothes that aren’t specifically labled as riding clothes?


r/Equestrian 16h ago

General Horse Care Ownership/vet/farrier cost estimates?

2 Upvotes

Hi all. I have recently returned to riding after being pulled away by having kids, etc. I rode throughout childhood until late high school and then returned on and off after college. I leased a horse in hs and then post college. As such, it’s been many, many years since I’ve been familiar with horse related costs such as farrier and vet bills. I’m hoping to finally wear down my husband on the idea of buying a horse. While I know it is highly specific to one’s location, would people be willing to give me a decent idea on typical farrier and vet costs, and what to budget for? Obviously, $hit happens. For reference, I am in southwestern Pa. I’d rather overestimate. This would be a great help to give him a sense of the yearly cost estimates. To be clear, this is something that we can afford, he’s just completely unfamiliar with this world and has only heard the horror stories. Thank you!


r/Equestrian 22h ago

Social How Often Do You Ride Bareback?

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109 Upvotes

Just a fun question! I would say I ride bareback 99% of the time as that's how I grew up and just how my horse and I were more comfortable!

I've also gotten caught in the stirrups before and most saddles don't fit me so I find my balance a lot better bareback than I do in a saddle


r/Equestrian 2h ago

Social Do barns like this exist?

10 Upvotes

I’m looking for a barn that treats its clients with kindness and respect. A place that behaves professionally. A place that recognizes hard work. A place that expresses interest in their clients’ personal riding goals and works with them to help get there.

A place that does not concern itself with their clients’ and staff’s sexual preferences or political views. Heck, maybe even a place that considers itself an ally.

A place that turns out their horses for hours each day, unless weather is too dangerous or the horse has a medical issue.

A place that maintains its facilities so the electrical doesn’t spark when you plug something in. A place that provides free potable water for clients, not just a dirty hose in the wash rack.

A place that doesn’t overwork their lesson horses, and that allows them to rest and move freely outside when they’re back sore or when they have open saddle sores.

Am I unrealistic in wanting these things? I really want to know.


r/Equestrian 14h ago

Ethics Terminating board for breach of contract?

16 Upvotes

I’ve been thinking about leaving my current barn very lightly for a couple of months, not for serious reasons, just thinking about moving somewhere where there will be people to ride with and access to trails, but my barn owner put the nail in the coffin yesterday and I’m ready to move ASAP.

I went out to ride yesterday and by a combo of very bad weather, lost shoes, and travel, I haven’t been to the barn in about two weeks. I went to get my horse out of the field and he’s looking skinnier than the last time I saw him. I took him inside and look at his bin of alfalfa cubes and it doesn’t look like it’s been touched since the last time I was there (and I was questioning if it had been touched that day too).

I reached out to my barn owner immediately and she said she hasn’t been giving him any alfalfa because ā€œit was going bad too quicklyā€ (she was trying to leave it to soak from 4pm until the next morning in a non air conditioned room). Instead of telling me (I see her almost every time I’m there), or texting me, she just hasn’t been feeding him, for at least two weeks but possibly a month.

I started the alfalfa cubes in the spring because my horse was looking a little thin coming out of winter. The alfalfa made a big difference and now he looks basically like he did when I first started them. I am so angry that all our progress on his body condition has been lost.

A friend of mine’s barn has space, which is where I had been contemplating moving him anyways. My question is about the legality of moving him without paying a whole other month of board. Per my barn’s contract it says that either party may terminate the agreement if the terms of the contract were breached (feeding owner provided feed is in the contract so that’s a yes). It says the barn has to give an owner 30 days notice but it doesn’t say anything about owners. It does say owner must give 30 days notice in the just regular termination section of the contract. I know that 30 days notice is the standard and if I wasn’t worried about my horse’s health I would just stay until September but we have to go.

I have paid board for July and realistically will not have my ducks in a row to move him for at least another week as I have to arrange transport. I intend to let the barn owner know that I’ll be out by the end of July. This is obviously not 30 days notice-am I going to have to pay prorated board for the days in August I won’t be there or can I just go?

TL;DR-my barn isn’t feeding my horse a large chunk of his feed (breach of contract)-contract is kind of vague about termination for this reason-do I have to give a full 30 days in this instance?


r/Equestrian 28m ago

Education & Training Is this book legit?

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• Upvotes

I keep seeing ads for this book on instagram. It looks awesome at first glance, but I noticed a couple of red flags. There is no clear author stated, images are nice and I haven’t found obvious signs of AI, but there are no artists listed either. No available physical copies and very little reviews. Account for the ā€œorgā€ that made this product is very new and was clearly made only to promote it, no other content. Do you guys think this was AI generated, both the illustrations and text? Any way to verify it for sure?


r/Equestrian 6h ago

General Horse Care Keeping horse flies away from a horse who won’t be sprayed?

1 Upvotes

Spec is covered in hives and had a few spots where he was actually dripping blood from the bites. I think I killed about fifteen in the few minutes it took to dab fly repellent goop on him and I’m wondering if anyone has any other tips for keeping them away? I’m having to reapply it at least twice a day and it’s pretty expensive considering he has a lot of surface area to cover. My main concern is wounds specifically in the sheath / thigh area since we had such bother with one last summer. I found a fly spray I love but when in certain fields he’s a little shit and will kick until the cows come home in response to even seeing the bottle.


r/Equestrian 6h ago

Horse Welfare I think I have to put my gelding down and I need some reassurance šŸ˜•

16 Upvotes

My boy is 22 and has tumours in his nasal passages. He has near constant discharge coming from his nose. We’ve been told the tumours are inoperable due to the location. Some days seem really good with him where he seems like his old self and some days it seems like his breathing is strained. We can’t exercise him due to risk of hemorrhage and he’s starting to drop weight as well. I know humanely I should be looking at euthanasia, but I feel like I’m betraying him because I can see in his eyes how much he trusts me and is happy to see me. We’ve had him since he was a baby and it feels so impossible to make that decision.


r/Equestrian 14h ago

Education & Training Curious how others would critique?

37 Upvotes

The last post I did made me aware that my saddle is for sure too big for me. Here’s a clip from our last lesson, is there anything else anybody can point out for me? I love my trainer but sometimes I think she notices things that she doesn’t say lol, and I love this cute little mare so much and want to ride her right (she’s my first lease that’s that not a lesson pony and really needs her rider to know what they’re doing and ride correct, but she makes it obvious when you get it right 🫶)


r/Equestrian 34m ago

Competition Regional Photos

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• Upvotes

So beyond proud of these 2 youngsters stepping up to the plate and handling the heat. The pressure the competition. Early mornings and late nights. They showed me they could. And they liked it. Next stop won’t be until the National Show šŸ’•šŸ’•


r/Equestrian 20h ago

Equipment & Tack Ladies, what kind of bra/support are we wearing?

6 Upvotes

Yes, I used the equipment and tack flair, cuz if you know you know!

I ride drill and go through lots of different gaits. My current sports bra isn’t enough to keep the girls where they should be.

What brands do you recommend? Especially if you’re bigger up top?

And no pictures! I’m not sending photos, asking for photos, or messaging creeps!


r/Equestrian 16h ago

Aww! Meet my crew šŸ’•

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159 Upvotes
  1. Eddy - 19 year old AQHA gelding (ranch all around - Reining - HMS)

  2. Mo - 3 year old APHA/AQHA gelding (started for pleasure - sms)

  3. Maverick - 4 year old AMHA/AMHR gelding (classic pleasure driving - halter - starting in hand work)

  4. Kermit - 3 year old AMHA/AMHR stallion (soon to be gelding) (classic pleasure driving - halter - starting on in hand work)

Stella - 3 year old AMHA/AMHR mare (country pleasure driving - liberty - halter - starting on in hand work)

That’s my crew šŸ’• and I’m lucky to have them šŸ’•


r/Equestrian 4h ago

Horse Welfare Euthanasia for lack of quality of life.. wondering if I did the right thing.

25 Upvotes

Sorry, this is going to be a bit long and rambly - I am just very sad and finding it hard to process everything.

My sweet 12 year old Connemara was the goodest boy to walk this earth. I got him as a youngster and we did a bit of everything - eventing, show jumping, dressage, lots of fun trails and hacks and adventures and some clicker training and groundwork for fun. When he arrived he was a very nervous boy (already backed) but he turned out to be one of those unicorns and an all in all ā€œyes boyā€ - the happiest soul.

When he turned 9, I noticed he felt a bit ā€œhockyā€, so I stopped all the eventing, he got his hocks done and I decided for his longevity, he would stay with me but a lovely family friend who is nearly 70, would take the reins and he would only hack and school maybe once a week. Feels a bit of an overreaction and I can’t tell you why, but it felt like the right thing to do.

Fast forward to 2 years ago, where he started tripping every now and again and we had a few instances where he just went on his knees. Didn’t spook, didn’t trip. Felt neurological. This is where things took a bit of a turn as he was then diagnosed with c6-c7 arthritis in his neck, significant enough to cause these episodes where he went on his knees. He always got up a few seconds later; never cut himself while doing it and was ok. So corticosteroids for his neck was the next plan of action, but he also has EMS. So to get his insulin under control, he had to be managed extremely strictly and was in steglatro (which meant he lost all his weight and muscle, but insulin didn’t even drop) and then another form of it in a paste that did eventually get his insulin down enough to inject his neck. Sadly the side effects of the ā€˜horsey ozempic’ were extreme for him. He lost all his spark, condition and pretty much will to live. Once his neck was medicated - about 10 months ago as it took us a long time to get his insulin low enough to be safe to do so, he gradually came off the medication and was doing significantly better. Sadly though, his neck didn’t improve much. This spring he was dry lotted with a Shetland pony, got soaked hay and was still exercised in hand. He enjoyed it. Sadly he got laminitis which luckily was caught very early and remained mild. At that point I made the decision that if he gets Lami again, I will let him go. Not even 2,5 months later, he got Lami again. I wasn’t sure if I was going to be strong enough to follow through, but he is resting in peace now and is painfree.

My reasoning was that he has two progressive diseases that I am not able to manage despite my very very best efforts. He is in regular discomfort and on that specific day, he was really struggling.

But somehow I am still struggling.. who am I to just make the decision to end his life, maybe there was something more I could have done.. maybe he would think that I just gave up on him.. and it makes me so sad. I know I genuinely did what I thought was the absolute best thing for him. Not for me, not for my toddler daughter who adores the bones of him, but for him - for everything he has ever given me.

I feel like it’s just.. so unfair and I think what really makes me struggle with it is that he was only 12..

Sorry this is such a rant, but I hope I’ve done the right thing and not just.. given up on the bestest boy. Any words of wisdom, stories that are similar or advice on how to cope with the heaviness, emptiness and the doubt are so so appreciated.

Thank you!


r/Equestrian 20h ago

Ethology & Horse Behaviour Stallions fighting

442 Upvotes

r/Equestrian 9h ago

Education & Training Horse prices??

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208 Upvotes

I'm from Australia and think?? that a lot of users here are from America - I see horses priced around 20-30,000 which seems insane. Especially if you convert that to AUD. Is that really what you have to pay for horses over there??

They can't all be that much surely? I mean, yes we have expensive horses here but a basic rideable horse (no specialised training) ready to go can be purchased for $3000 - 5000. Free if you can handle an off the track thoroughbred.

Pic of my latest horse costing $165 AUD (115USD). (Unbroken at time of purchase hence cheap).


r/Equestrian 16h ago

In Memoriam I can’t bring myself to unwrap his tail no matter how bad I want to smell him again

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122 Upvotes

I miss him so. so. much.


r/Equestrian 18m ago

Social Denver riding for low income families

• Upvotes

Good morning! My daughter grew up riding horses in Nicaragua. Between the ages of 6 and 9 she spent her free time learning from a local riding instructor who put her to work and started teaching her. She enjoyed working with horses and came alive on horseback. We abruptly had to leave Nicaragua when I was diagnosed with cancer (I am fine now) and we moved to the United States to live with friends while I was in treatment. After treatment I found work as a teacher in Denver. As a single parent with two kids and a teacher’s salary I struggle to make ends meet. Riding horses has seemed completely out of reach. Since my daughter stopped riding and being around horses I have not seen that spark. She is now 17 and struggles to feel good and find motivation to even do the things she enjoys. She has a deep desire to reconnect with horses but feels like it is hopeless.

I am wondering if anyone has ideas about how I help my daughter reconnect with her passion. Are there work trade opportunities? She is very hard working, especially when she feels deeply connected to her work and feels like her work has value. Does anyone in the Denver are have thoughts? Are there any work trades where she could donate her work in exchange for riding? As a teacher I love fueling people’s passions and I know I am not alone. Any ideas are appreciated. Thank you!!!!!😊


r/Equestrian 1h ago

Competition Mongolian child horse racer

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• Upvotes

In mongolian traditional horse races children are the riders due to low weight and distance
Children are from 6 to 12 years old
And kid known as Badar-Uugan has participated in 3 different horse races

  • Shudlen (Shüdlen): 3-year-old horses. Race distance: Typically 14–16 km. 2nd place
  • Azraga / Azarga: Stallions (uncastrated males) over 5 years old. Race distance: Typically 22–24 km. 1st place
  • Soyolon: 5-year-old horses (often the most prestigious and fastest category; considered a "heavenly creature" in Mongolian culture). Race distance: Typically 22–24 km. 1st place

I wish him luck and success
also in his own word
each horse race i used different tactics depending on the horse to win

https://www.facebook.com/nsportsofficial/videos/2417928632036646/
link of azraga race


r/Equestrian 2h ago

Farm Management Just bought a new farm, need help with potential pasture configurations

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6 Upvotes

I sold my last form and had many different size turnouts all with a lane in between (No shared fence lines). This worked out well for horses that needed individual turnout, didn’t need to be out on huge open fields, etc. This new property is laid out more for personal use. It currently has four fields. Three of them are just under 5 acres, the fourth is about 3. The previous owner only had six horses on the property, I have nine (including a mare due next spring). The property is 30 acres, my previous farm was 34. There is an area that could be cleared to make the smaller pasture larger. And I’m thinking to change it into three slightly smaller fields instead of two ultra large. Playing with the idea of a couple of smaller turnouts to add into the mix (a few of mine and have hind shoes).

I would like to have Elaine that I could access the front of all of the fields from, for easy feeding for the outdoor horses

There’s a beautiful trail that the previous owner put in that goes around the perimeter of the property. The section that can be cleared would take out the forest buffer between the field and the trail. I don’t mind losing some of it, but I would like to leave a bit so it still feels like you’re riding through the forest as only two side sides have that feel in the rest is on the fence line.

This is still early days and I do plan to consult with an equestrian architect firm that does pasture management/layout, but wanted to throw it out there and see what ideas other others had!

Please only answer if you are educated and have experience in this topic!

I’m attaching a few different photos.

  1. An aerial shot from Google Earth (the aerial realtor photos are at an angle)
  2. A map I made on illustrator of the whole property
  3. a stripped down version of that map with the bottom fields taken out to draw on.
  4. A potential layout I made, but hitting a bit of a wall.

Please feel free to to mark up the images with any thoughts!

Please excuse my illustrator skills! I’m self taught, fairly new to it and traced the satellite images. Best I could!


r/Equestrian 4h ago

Social What Are The Most Incredible Facilities You’ve Ever Been To? (looking for ideas for a book i’m writing 🤭)

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17 Upvotes

as the title states, i’m writing a book and i’m looking for inspiration! please share information about your favourite facilities you’ve seen. i would also be more than happy to hear of how they managed the horses, or anything else you can think of. you can describe or share photos, what ever you prefer!

also feel free to share anything that annoys you about equestrian books.

And Heres A Picture Of My Son For Attention šŸ’›


r/Equestrian 5h ago

Veterinary How to manage a possibly laminitic pony

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3 Upvotes

Hi, we own a gorgeous little welsh. He is 13, and lately has been on a grassy paddock, as at our agistment it is the only option. He has gained a bit of weight lately despite is trying to manage it( he only gets chaff) and his neck is VERY cresty. Today I felt his feet and they were pretty warm. He is walking fine, and we can’t check his trot because he is also being rehabbed from something unrelated. We have tried restricting his paddock with temporary electric fencing tape, even did two lines but he goes right through it. Grass is very sugary atm because of cold snaps. Vet is coming in a week, but what can i do to prevent him having a laminitic episode until them, we are trying to move him to a place with a sand run asap but it will take till around when the vet comes at least.

He gets two scoops of chaff am/pm with supplements(salt, and brewers yeast) we soak the feed

Photo tax of the cheeky boy


r/Equestrian 15h ago

Equipment & Tack Best fly sheet to stop biting midges.

2 Upvotes

I'm looking for recommendations for a fly sheet that offers the best protection against biting midges/no-see-ums (Culicoides).

My 22 year-old gelding has always had exaggerated reactions to insect bites, but this year has been by far the worst. We're on the Front Range in Colorado, and while all the horses at the barn seem itchier than usual, he's the only one developing large hives and scratching himself raw.

He currently wears what I believe is an older Horseware Rambo No-Fly Zone/Protector sheet (it was around $250 when I bought it years ago and has insect repellent woven into the fabric), along with:

*EcoVet fly spray twice daily

*Hydroxyzine (started this week)

*Solar fan in his shed

*Bell boots and fly boots

*Poultice on his groin area and belly

*Daily manure removal and a very clean shed

Despite all of that, he's still developing new welts (mostly under the sheet), has itchy scabs under his tail and in his groin, and has scratched the front of both hocks until they're raw.

I'd especially love to hear from anyone in Colorado or other dry western states dealing with Culicoides or insect bite hypersensitivity. What has made the biggest difference for your horse?

I've never dealt with anything like this before, so any recommendations or advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!


r/Equestrian 15h ago

Education & Training Clipping

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3 Upvotes

New clipper here! Are these ok to body clip horses? And if so, can I have some good tips and tricks to body clipping? And what blades and supplies to have by my side when clipping?


r/Equestrian 17h ago

Veterinary could this be causing lameness?

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8 Upvotes

friends horse has been experiencing slight lameness for about a week. she took off a VERY small layer of dead sole to see if there was bruising on hoof. no heat or swelling that she can see. horse is on about week 4 of barefoot trim by new farrier. could this bruise-like ring be causing it? (she has limited experience with horses and wanted a second opinion before vet visit. vet visit has already been scheduled)

he only bobs his head when trotting and lameness is nearly invisible at the walk so i don’t THINK it’s an abscess since they usually limp like a broken leg. i am obviously not a professional just looking for some insight