Health & Education
We all want the best care possible for our horses. The Heath & Education section covers both Learning Institutions, Organizations as well as many sources for equine assistance including Veterinarians and Farriers.
For those who want a to formally study horses, the Education section includes College Riding, Equine Studies, and Veterinary Schools. Learn about the wide variety of horses in the Horse Breeds section. Supplements and Treatments Therapy are also included in the section.
Everyone can learn from Fine Art and there are some specialty Museums that might surprise you.
Horses as a therapy partner enrich the lives of the disabled. These facilities are listed in our Therapeutic Riding section. To help children and young adults build confidence and grow emotionally, please see the resources available on the Youth Outreach page.
Looking for a place to keep your horse? You can find it in the Horse Boarding section. Traveling? Find a Shipping company or Horse Sitting service if your horse is staying home!
Want to stay up to date with the latest training clinics or professional conferences? Take a look at our Calendar of Events for Health & Education for the dates and locations of upcoming events.
Do we need to add more? Please use the useful feedback link and let us know!
by Nikki Alvin-Smith
The bountiful benefits of the sun’s rays bring joy to the hearts of horses and humans, especially for the winter weary residents of colder climes.
But the sun is not good for everyone. Staying sheltered out of the heat and burning beams can be especially important for creatures great and small, especially the young, the elderly, the fair-skinned and the cancer prone. Here are some shade ideas that offer an economic method to address the issue of too much sun.
Give A Horse A Choice
The shade of the spreading chestnut tree may work in poetry for Longfellow (actually it was rather appropriately a horse chestnut tree that shaded the smithy), but it’s not so brilliant as a shelter for horses in an large open field. Even if we forget the risk of lightning strike during a storm, the presence of large trees within a pasture that are neither harmful to horses due to possible ingestion of their toxic fruit, seeds, leaves, or bark are few and far between.
A hedge provides almost no benefit at all in regard to avoidance of the sun’s rays, save for a limited time of possible shade provision early morning or at sunset, neither time being particularly helpful as these times are certainly not the hottest part of the day.
The sun climbs high in the sky during summer months, and avoiding its harsh focus is impossible without a roof under which to hunker down.
For the horse, walking freely out of the paddock directly into a cool horse stall through a Dutch door is heaven indeed. Not only does the sun disappear from view, the incessant buzzing and biting insects usually halt at the doorway and ‘buzz off.’ A double win.
Read more: Here Comes The Sun ~ But It’s Not Good For Everyone
This week’s episode focuses on the new strain of rotavirus that has been uncovered by the UK Gluck Center. Dr. Emma Adam goes into depth about the discovery, research and current treatments for this possible life-threatening type of foal diarrhea.
- Any Horse in Regular Work is a Performance Horse
- Lose Your Fear of Selenium
- UC Davis-led Study Investigates Distribution of the Warmblood Fragile Foal Syndrome Allele in Multiple Breeds
- Veterinarians are Considering Lecithin for Treating and Preventing Ulcers
- Tetanus: Your Horse’s Risk May Be Greater Than You Think
- Pitfalls of Fecal Checks for Parasites
- Cavallo Q&A: Horse Time for Healing
- The Last Half of Pregnancy
- Equestrian Diversity Project Spotlight: Ebony Horsewomen
- Equine Guelph at the University of Guelph in Canada presents "Journey of the Digestive Tract"
- Tennessee Walking Horse Protection - Effort to End Abusive Practice of ‘Soring’
- Air Quality in the Barn - That Cozy Barn May Not Be Best for Lung Health
- Practice Preparedness and Prevention - Resources on Barn Fire Prevention
- Fecal Transplants for Animals
- I Have the Wrong Horse: Now What?
- Gratitude & Horses: Healing the Cracked Places
- From the Research Farm to Your Feed Room: Applying Study Results to Improve KER EO-3
- Neuromuscular Support Nutrients
- The Roadmap to PTSD in Horses
- Is Your Horse Happy and Comfortable? Find Out with This Simple Body Exploration




