The best bet would be in a small paddock where the horse can lay down freely, and graze grass and hay. Keeping him in a stall 24/7 might make it anxious, nervous, or have to much energy. So, if the horse is not being exercised daily, he should not be fed fatty, rich foods that it would normally need. So, by giving him hay and grass, it will keep his digestive system in balance. You can stall him for periods of time though, be he will need a break.
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.
if you go to your 'stable' on the top of the screen then your horse should be there or go to the 'paddock' if your horse is there then click 'put my horse in the stable' if the horse is not there then he/she is in the stable.
You should blanket your horse in the winter months if you are located in a cold area. You can also blanket your horse on nights before a show in the winter but its mostly recommended you put the horse in an available stall.
If a horse is in a stall all day then they need hay and water. Also you could put in a salt block.
If a horse has hurt his/her leg the horse will be called lame till the leg has healed . If the horses leg is very badly hurt it may have to be put down (die) . But if it is just a minor injury you should keep the horse in his/her stable he/she stops limping.
On the horse's page, click on the little icon with zzz on it, then choose whether to put him/her in the stall or in the pasture (but you can only put him/her to bed if he/she is in an equestrian center)
Try a deep bed! you bed the horse down with LOTS of bedding and everyday just pick out the wet bits and poo and put fresh on top. once a week or month (depending on how clean your horse is) take the whole bed out and disinfect it all. this is good if you want to save time! But a horses stall should be cleaned out everyday!! :)
Horses are measured in HH or hands high. Put the measuring tape at the top of his withers (top of sholder) about where the hair of the mane stops naturally. The ceiling for a stall should be about 20ft. high, more is you can do it.
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.
stall pacing, swaying from side to side, somrtimes cribbing, constantly pawing the ground. you can put new toys in a stall to keep him occupied.
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.
Well... At my stables every morning when I get there I clean out the stalls. Ususally there is a lot of poop in there and If I was a horse I wouldn't want to live in a dirty stall. So I would say every morning or every day. I also put shavings in too.