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Make Appropriate Adjustments to Provide Shelter for Your Horse from the Winter Cold

Last Updated: November 18, 2011

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Released November 18, 2011

EAST LANSING, Mich. – Now is a good time for horse owners to address housing options for their horses if they plan to keep them outside during the winter.

Tom Guthrie, Michigan State University (MSU) Extension educator, says that portable, open-front sheds are the most common shelter options for horses kept outside during the winter months. The MidWest Plan Service Horse Facilities Handbook recommends providing 150 square feet of roofed area for each mature horse.

Choose a shed location that allows for convenience in handling your horses. When selecting a location, consider the shed’s proximity to other buildings. Factor in traffic lanes and feeding areas. Will you have the ability to observe the horses from the location? Will manure clean out be easy? Will wet areas be a problem? Will there be a place to stack up snow in the winter?

The open side of the shelter should face either south or east, in most cases, to protect horses from prevailing winds. Use a windbreak to provide some relief from wind and blowing snow. Various windbreaks include shelter belts, snow fences, stacked round bales, earthen mounds, solid v-shaped fences and constructed porous windbreak barriers.

Find out about the benefits and drawbacks of windbreaks and other winter shelter options for horses at the MSU Extension website. Horse owners should visit MSU Extension News for more information about shelter and windbreak options for horses this winter. This online resource features helpful articles about various topics submitted by MSU Extension experts throughout the state. Find MSU Extension News at news.msue.msu.edu.

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Michigan State University, http://anrcom.msu.edu/anrcom/news/item/make_appropriate_adjustments_to_p...

Contact: Beth Stuever, 517-432-1555, ext. 105

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