Well.. I have never had a horse. But if you want to know where the best place to keep the horse is, Just remeber, In the feild, The Fencing must be proper, there must be no poisonous weeds around, there must be shelter and water. In the stable, Remeber that This is not the horses natural envirment, so its harder to get used to. there should be comfortable bedding and food and water.
Keep your horse and get an old car. :)
You can put a heavy blanket on a horse in the winter to help keep the horse warm and keep dirt and mud off. Also you can keep a very lightweight blanket on the horse in the summer to keep dirt,dust,and mostly flies off your horse.
You can keep a horse in a livery yard,a back garden may not be big enough.
you keep on feeding it and keep on adding it's horse points
to keep a horse out of harsh weather conditions
You can `t keep a horse in a lighthouse, it isn `t a home for old Ned. a horse `s place is on dry land, he `ll never keep healthy on sea foam and sand. Oh you can `t let him graze in the garage, if you give him his meals on a tray. But you can `t keep a horse in a lighthose, Neigh, Neigh, Neigh.
No.
A horse blanket...? :/♥
You can put a heavy blanket on a horse in the winter to help keep the horse warm and keep dirt and mud off. Also you can keep a very lightweight blanket on the horse in the summer to keep dirt,dust,and mostly flies off of him.
The easiest way would be to keep the horse away from where the leaches live. Otherwise they will just keep reattaching themselves to the horse.
When you keep you horse in full board ( or full livery) you keep it at a stables and they do everything for your horse, like grooming, feeding, riding, turning out and mucking out. This is often a good way to keep your horse if you work full time. It can often be expensive though.
You can keep a horse clean by doing mainly two things which would be grooming them and blanketing (only recommended in winter). Or of course you could keep your horse in a stall to keep it from rolling but make sure to turn it out to the pasture every once in a while.