Equine Innovators: Does How You Manage Your Horse Farm Make Sense?
Dr. Steve Higgins of the University of Kentucky optimizes daily barn tasks for efficiency, cost savings, and environmental soundness.
Dr. Steve Higgins of the University of Kentucky optimizes daily barn tasks for efficiency, cost savings, and environmental soundness.
Dr. Sarah Colmer shares management practices and preventive measures horse owners can implement to protect horses from EPM.
Disease control focuses on prevention through increased biosecurity protocols.
Implementing these practices will benefit you, your horse, your property, and your neighborhood.
Improve the aesthetics of your horse farm while contributing to the health and well-being of bees, butterflies, and other beneficial members of our planet.
Look for educational information about environmentally friendly horse care practices all week long, April 17-23.
Mud in horse turnouts can create topsoil erosion, increase soil compaction, and cause slip-and-fall injuries to horses. Here are options to reduce mud on your horse property.
An easy keeper began eating bedding after his owner started soaking his hay. A nutritionist describes possible reasons for this behavior and suggestions to solve it.
A green energy source might one day come from the big brown pile behind your barn.
Learn about the steps you can take to reduce the number of asthma-causing airborne particulates in your horse’s barn.
This portable and cost-effective barrier comes in handy when managing pastures, traveling with horses, and more.
Whether you run a large facility for many horses or provide a home for one or two, we’ve compiled information geared toward helping improve your day-to-day barn life and operations.
All horses need deep sleep overnight that requires lying down completely. Stall size, bedding, and stress can cause horses to get insufficient rest.
High-tech arena surfaces, or footing, create the field-of-play foundation for equine athletes at the Tokyo Olympics.
Alternating or commingling cows with horses on pastures appears to effectively reduce strongyle burdens in both species, according to two studies.
Horse owners are opening their minds, some even their stall doors, leaving behind traditional single-horse stabling in favor of more natural options such as group housing and track paddocks.
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