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365 Days in Horse Country – Natural Living

August 21st, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – Natural Living The trend toward living naturally is well established in humans, and it’s starting to take hold in the horse world, too. With horses, this trend is not just about natural supplements and organic food.  It’s all about daily lifestyle. Researchers have studied wild horses to learn how nature designed horses to live.  They discovered that wild ...

365 Days in Horse Country – Applying Eye Drops

August 20th, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – Applying Eye Drops  It’s not unusual for horses to suffer injuries to the eye.  They can have run-ins with stable doors and fence posts or receive a kick from another horse.  Grass seeds or thorns can scrape or puncture the surface of the eye as well.  Infection or disease can also affect the eye.  For all situations, eye drops may be required for treatmen ...

365 Days in Horse Country – Mares and Foals

August 19th, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – Mares and Foals   Horses make some of the best mothers in the world.  Watch a mare with her foal, and you can learn lessons about love and parenting that you could never learn from reading a book. From the moment a foal is born, the mare begins cleaning it.  This is the beginning of the bonding ritual, securing baby to mother in a tight bond that only death ...

365 Days in Horse Country – The Unicorn

August 18th, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – The Unicorn    The unicorn is one of the most common fantastical equine images.  Little girls seem to love unicorns, and the animals have made their way into popular culture in the form of dolls, fantasy paintings, and even movies. The image of the unicorn as a horse with a single horn in the middle of its forehead is a modern one.  The unicorn of ancient C ...

365 Days in Horse Country – The Akhal-Teke

August 17th, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – The Akhal-Teke   The national horse of Turkmenistan, the Akhal-Teke, is an ancient breed that developed from the horses used for raiding.  The breed hasn’t changed much since the eighteenth century, and it is the purest living descendent of the ancient Scythian horse.  Some experts believe the breed is even older than the Arabian, which is usually consid ...

365 Days in Horse Country – Equine Influenza

August 16th, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – Equine Influenza    Humans aren’t the only ones who get the flue.  Horses come down with it, too.  Called equine influenza, it has many of the same symptoms as the human version.  Horses develop lethargy, a high fever, and a thick nasal discharge.  Some horses come down with a cough as well and secondary infections can develop as well, including pneumonia. ...

365 Days in Horse Country – Feeding Grain

August 15th, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – Feeding Grain  Every horse loves oats, but should every horse have grain?  This is a question that equine nutritionists have asked for years. The question you should ask yourself is whether or not your horse should have grain.  While grain is a necessity for horses performing regularly at very demanding activities, such as racing and three-day eventing, i ...

365 Days in Horse Country – Finding a Trainer

August 14th, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – Finding a Trainer  In an ideal world, horse owners would be able to train their own horses.  After all, most people manage to train their own dogs.  But horse training is different in several ways, two of the most important being, quite simply, that horses are a lot bigger than dogs, and you ride them. If you have a young horse who needs to learn the ways ...

365 Days in Horse Country – Botulism

August 13th, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – Botulism  Most people know botulism as something you get from eating contaminated canned food.  Horses can get botulism, too, although not in the same way most humans get it. Botulism is a deadly toxin produced by a bacterium called clostridium botulinum.  The metabolic process of this bacterium produces neurotoxins, which affect the horse’s nervous syste ...

365 Days in Horse Country – Trigger

August 12th, 2013
365 Days in Horse Country – Trigger One of the most famous horses to ever emerge from Hollywood was a part Thoroughbred palomino stallion named Trigger.  During his career, Trigger stared in eighty-two movies.  The trusty mount of singing cowboy star Roy Rogers, Trigger was named Golden Cloud before he became Roy Rogers’ horse.  Trigger made his first appearance with Rogers in a film ...

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