No. Horses need to move around to keep proper circulation in their legs. Being in a stall most of the day and all night is not healthy for them.
You should clean a horse's stall once a day if your horse is in at night and goes out during the day. If this is the case you should clean your horse's stall after he goes out in the morning or before he comes in, in the afternoon. If your horse is kept in a stall 24/7 (which I do not reccomend) then clean the horse's stall at least three times a day. Once in the morning, once at noon and again at night. when cleaning your stabled horse's stall move him into a spare stall while you work so he is not in your way.
Twice a day once in the morning and once at night if it is in the stall all day.
You don't need to put them in the same stall. The horse in the stall is pregnant, if it is not your horse in the stall, when the foal is born you will be offered to buy it.
I mucked out the horse's stall.
All stalls, even if a horse isn't always in it, should be cleaned as much as possible. If you are bored, pick out a stall. If your horse goes, clean the stall.
Well, it depends how much your horse is in the stall. If your horse is in there every day it should be cleaned every other day.
Keeping a horse stall clean and well-maintained is important for the health and well-being of the horse. This includes regular mucking out of waste, providing clean bedding, and ensuring good ventilation and lighting. It's also essential to regularly check for any safety hazards or repairs that may be needed.
In a stall
mucking out a stall is cleaning the stall, when you clean the stall your horse is less likely to get diseases. mucking out the stall means to get dirty but if you don't care about getting dirty than this is the job for you.
Much depends on the size of the stall the horse is in. The more often you clean the stall, the easier the job is to accomplish. Good horse maintenance includes at least daily stall cleaning. That keeps the horse healthy. The filth can ruin their feet and coats, and the odors are toxic and can permanently damage their lungs. Rule of thumb: If you're not willing to lay down and sleep in whatever is in the stall, don't expect your horse to either. This all depends on how often your horse is in the stall. If he comes in every night then it is best and more comfortable for the horse if you do it every day. How ever you can always just skip them out and deep litter them (put clean straw on top of dirty) but if you do this make sure you only go 3/4 days until you clean it out properly and start again.
It can be a stress factor in a small stall. Loose boxes are much more comfortable for them . A well-kept clean stall should not be noxious from ammonia vapors. If your horse's stall makes your eyes smart, then it's not clean enough for your horse, either. Good ventilation will eliminate any CO2 worries.
You have to clean your horse's stall every morning so the dung doesn't stay there to breed diseases