Typically no. Most stalls are only 12 feet by 12 feet and this is only enough space for one adult horse.
You have to clean your horse's stall every morning so the dung doesn't stay there to breed diseases
keep him in there for a few days and to keep him from kicking or rearing buy some of those chains to put on the horse's hooves.
Answer 1:you need a stall if you get really bad weather. If you don't, than your horse can stay in the pasture or paddockAnswer 2:Actually, you do not need to stall the horse. Stalls aren't very good, because the ammonia from their waste and carbon dioxide gets in the lungs, and horse's get stressed in small places, because they are very clostrophobic.However, they should have a run-in facing away from the most common direction of the wind.
i had the same problem. i found that its the carbuetor because when i sprayed starting fluid on the choke and got it to warm up and stay running it ran fine
Depending on the size of your horse and how much it eats, that is how you determine how often you clean the stall. If the horse "goes" alot, then you will have to clean the stall at least every two days. If it goes only a little and the waste is not big, then three time a week is fine. Do not let the waste stay in the stall for more than four days; the smell will be atrocious and you might as well wair rubber boots to clean with because of all the muck. ---- The cleaner the stall, the happier the horse. I clean my horses stall every day and she stays healthy and happier:)
wait, delay, stall, stop, stay, pause, remain, lodge, dawdle, abide
Pause, delay, interval, rest, stay, abide, stall, hang out, linger, tarry...
A horse moves around constantly, finding more grass and playing with herd mates. This is why many horses develop stall vices-they cannot move around as they have evolved to do 24/7 so they get bored and stressed.
Horses are smart resourceful animals and have learned what kinds of weather they need to stay away from. Typically during a thunder storm they will group together and turn their butts to the wind and rain. If it is snowing they will huddle together for warmth. In severe heat they will roll in water or mud. It is hard for them to stay safe where lightning is concerned because they are tall animals and have trouble getting into areas that would be safe from the lightning strikes.
in a stall
Walk on the left side of the horse with a halter and a leadrope on it. Put you right hand on the leadrope about a foot from its face and hold the end with you left hand so the horse doesn't trip. Walk at a steady pace and stay up by its head. If the horse pulls or spooks, stop it, talk to it, and then continue walking. Answer Lunge your horse at a walk in a small circle through the gate, then have the horse turn his hindquarters and wait for you to come through the gate after him. Then after closing the opening lead the horse away from the pasture.
in a stable