Rockin’ K Stables

Rockin’ K Stables Rockin’ K Stables is a small private boarding and lesson barn located in Hendersonville NC
(3)

ISO a solid low level dressage horse. I have a friend who want to get back into riding   She has not rode for several ye...
05/17/2024

ISO a solid low level dressage horse.
I have a friend who want to get back into riding She has not rode for several years so the horse would need be safe, sane, sensible and sound horse Preference given to 16h + and around 10 years of age. Price range low 5 figure
I do not have a dressage horse so the jumper has to do for the attention getter.

Hendersonville NC   Haul in lessons and training board available for those interested in western and english pleasure. L...
04/27/2024

Hendersonville NC Haul in lessons and training board available for those interested in western and english pleasure. Learning how to communicate how
effectively with your horse in a patient and effective manner is my specialty. For those who have a goal for completing in the pleasure classes I focus on showing and competing in equitation, horsemanship showmanship, trail.

I love spring
04/17/2024

I love spring

Great article.
03/11/2024

Great article.

🌿🌱 THE LOW DOWN ON SHORT VS LONG GRASS FOR HORSES🌱🌿

Equine nutrition has progressed in leaps and bounds these past few years. I am pleasantly surprised at how quickly things are moving in the right direction.

That said, I still hear people talk about how they want their horse to lose weight so they put it in a paddock with, ‘nothing in it’. The ‘nothing’ they refer to is usually very short, stressed grass of one or two species, with a decent spread of w**ds popping up for good measure.

Understanding the effects of grazing on short grass versus longer grass is crucial for any horse, but particularly for those with endocrine issues or a history of laminitis (usually caused by endocrine issues).

Somewhat ironically, these horses are often the ones who are purposely put on short, overgrazed grasses with the objective of keeping weight off.

🌱There are many reasons why short grasses cause issues:

⚫️ Short grass is constantly trying to grow. Therefore it will store its sugars and starches (Non-Structural Carbohydrates or NSCs) to prepare for improved growing conditions. Growing conditions won’t improve as your horse will continually keep eating it down, but the sugars will stay there.
⚫️ Because NCSs are predominantly at the base of the plant, each mouthful has a high NSC:fibre ratio. Typically the sugars are lower, and fibre higher, towards the top of the grasses, so the longer the grass, the less sugar and higher in fibre it is. A high fibre, low sugar diet is what a horse’s gastrointestinal system is designed to eat.
⚫️ The higher the grass’s fibre content, the lower the NSC intake will be.
⚫️ Eating longer grass means the horse has to chew more. This not only slows down their intake, but increases saliva production. Saliva helps to buffer stomach acid and helps to prevent ulcers and other gastrointestinal issues.
⚫️ A healthy (non-metabolic) horse eats until they have a specific amount of fibre in their stomach. Eating grass with a high-sugar and low fibre ratio means a horse consumes a lot of high-sugar grass before it feels satiated. This is why you might see horses with ad-lib hay standing around in the shade more than you will see horses with short grass doing the same. Horses with access to high-fibre hay can go and eat, then rest. Horses that need to eat all day to feel full will rest less.
⚫️ Because a horse’s front teeth (incisors) work so well, they can eat enough to stay fat on grasses that are 3cm - 4cm. Ponies can do the same on grasses that are even shorter (1cm - 2cm).
⚫️ Grasses grown specifically for lawns have their growth points very close to the ground so the plant can cope with being kept constantly short. These grasses have been selected specifically for this. Overgrazing results in only the 'lawn' type grasses surviving - so the result is a monoculture; just one or two species of grass. In addition, lawn type grasses are typically not ideal grasses for your horses to be eating a lot of.
⚫️ Horses are more likely to pick up sand while grazing short grass than they are on longer grass.

🌿 Property owners who want to take care of their paddocks should also keep in mind that:

⚫️ Short grass plants have short root systems that cannot reach far down in the soil for nutrients. A short root system results in much less organic matter in the soil, causing soil compaction and poor drainage (not to mention less carbon sequestration).
⚫️ Short, sparsely grassed areas in a paddock quickly turn to mud in wet weather and become dusty very quickly in dry weather. Both lead to soil erosion.
Short grass plants are not as able to outcompete certain w**ds as longer grasses are.

🌱 How long is short?

Clients need to fill in a form to get a diet consultation and I ask for a description of their pasture as part of the process (both written and photographic). I was once astonished at the difference between what they tell me the grass is like, and what it is actually like.

A lot of owners describe grass that’s around 3cms long as, ‘heaps of really good grass’. Because of this misunderstanding of what good grass is, they then don’t offer any additional hay. I end up having a lot of discussions with clients about grass. Sometimes we chat more about pasture and hay than the diet itself which is understandable as grass is complicated!

Short grass is generally shorter than 5cm (2.5 inches). However you need to look at the average height across your pasture as you will (hopefully!) have several species of grass available to your horses. There may also be areas they use as toilets which they won’t eat unless they’re almost starving. While 5cms is pretty short, in reality, on many horse properties, the grasses are as short as 1 or 2 cm.

Many horse owners think a paddock full of grass that is 5 cm long would be regarded as too long. At 5 cm, the plant is just about reaching the stage where it has 2 to 3 leaves, and it can now start to make a rapid recovery, using its stored sugars/starches for growth; at less than 5 cm it becomes stressed.


🌿 Why is longer grass better for horses?

⚫️ Longer grasses are healthier and typically not stressed (so they have less NSCs).
Taller pasture plants have a higher fibre-to-sugar ratio than short grass. As mentioned above, this is ideal for a healthy gastrointestinal tract.
⚫️ Longer grass typically allows for more biodiversity (i.e. less monoculture).
⚫️ Longer grasses have a longer and thicker root system. This results in more healthy nutrients being brought up from deeper layers in the soil.
⚫️ Longer/thicker roots equal better soil protection which means less mud or dust. Obviously this is good for the ground and for your horse (less mud is better for a slew of reasons), but it also means plants may be able to be grazed in wetter conditions for a longer period of time.
⚫️ Longer grass shades out and outcompetes many w**d species.
⚫️ When the roots are longer the plant can ‘trades' some sugars for other nutrients such as amino acids. When the grass is short and stressed, it hangs onto excess sugars.
⚫️ The horse has to eat from the top; this means they need to eat the higher fibre, lower sugar part before it can get to the higher sugar part of the plant (at the bottom of the plant).
⚫️ The horse has to chew more, creating saliva to buffer stomach acid.
⚫️ Horses walk more when grazing longer, more diverse pastures as they seek out different plants.
⚫️ Longer grasses mean horses are essentially also browsing, not just grazing, this variety of eating postures is good for them biomechanically.
⚫️ Horses pick up their feet more if they live in paddocks with longer grasses, this is also good for them biomechanically.

🌿 Why is longer grass better for your property?

⚫️ Longer grasses shade the soil in hot, dry conditions. This keeps it cooler and reduces evaporation. This, plus the increase in soil organic matter, helps hold water in the soil for longer. This means your grass can keep growing even when it hasn’t rained in a while.
⚫️ Longer grasses provide a habitat for insects, small mammals/reptiles, and ground-nesting birds.
⚫️ With their longer/thicker root systems, taller grasses sequester more carbon than short grasses and even faster than trees! This is improved when the plants are repeatedly grazed and then allowed to regrow (as part of a rotational grazing system), as it effectively pumps carbon into the soil.
⚫️ Taller pasture plants keep the soil warmer in cold weather.


🌿 How long is long?

In a rotational grazing system of land management, the grass is regarded as tall enough to resume grazing when it is approximately 15cm, or just before it goes to seed. When the grass plants have been grazed down to an average height of 5 cm, horses should be removed and the grass given the chance to rest and recuperate.

Won’t free access to long grass make my horse fat/ter?

This answer to this question requires a whole other very long article and is dependent on many other factors. However, provided you do it sensibly, then in my experience, no.

Of course you can’t just let your horse have free access to endless lush, early spring grass, especially if you have high sugar grass species such as rye. If however, you have grasses that are lower in sugars such as fog, and/or you wait until it’s a little drier then your horse is less likely to gain weight, AND it’s a whole lot better for your horse’s gut AND also for the pasture itself.

If your horse has had their grazing restricted to overgrazed, short grasses for a long time (particularly if they also haven’t had access to hay) then you need to make a slow transition to longer grasses. If you suddenly give them access to long, lush grass then they are very likely to gorge and then they will gain weight.

🌱 What about horses on agistment?

Having a horse on agistment makes things more difficult, but not impossible. Ask your agistment owner if you can rig up some temporary fencing (i.e. pigtails and tape) within your paddock to rest part of it, or set up a track system so you can have longer grasses. Setting up a track next to your existing permanent fencing also encourages more incidental movement and means you can restrict grazing at the height of spring and then allow your horse onto the longer grasses when it’s safe to do so. I suggest approaching them from a ‘paddock/pasture preservation’ point of view and use all the above reasons as to why it will be better for their land, as well as for your horse.

*credit to the Equiculture website which was used as a resource for this article

Meet the latest addition to the Rockin’K   Introducing Lula. The new horse show dog
01/23/2024

Meet the latest addition to the Rockin’K Introducing Lula. The new horse show dog

Comparison between self care and full board based on Rockin’ K costs only   This is just a generalization Rockin K cost ...
01/18/2024

Comparison between self care and full board based on Rockin’ K costs only This is just a generalization
Rockin K cost
Hay: quality orchard/alfalfa hay
Currently $280 a month per horse.
Sawdust $30 per horse
Vitamins and salt $25 per horse
Insurance $20 per horse
Gas for mowing spreading manure etc $10
Electricity $15
Total 380.
Board $750 That means the horse owner is paying me 370 a month or about $13 a day to feed 3x daily clean and care for their horse.

Compare to self care.
Board 300
Hay $280
Gas to and from 2 x a day(@2.50 a trip) month $150
Total $680

For your time you are saving $80 a month or about 2.70 a day

This is a good article.  Horses are masters at body language and they are always watching. So you need to be very aware ...
12/19/2023

This is a good article. Horses are masters at body language and they are always watching. So you need to be very aware of what you are communicating at all times 📸 Look at this post on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/share/hmXZqUvK8xtN9zqp/?mibextid=WC7FNe

Often, when we move to Positive Reinforcement training, the approach and thinking is at odds or even the complete opposite of what most other horse trainers are doing and saying.

A horse thinking, problem solving and anticipating, is frowned upon in the traditional pressure/punishment based training world.

When training a horse, whether it's with Positive or Negative Reinforcement, there's a reinforcement history that tells the horse there's value in doing that behaviour. Whether that's to avoid an aversive or gain an appetitive, the horse will most likely do the behavior again in the same situation/context.

With Negative Reinforcement, (I literally watched a big name horse trainer do this on fb), a trainer twirls his rope to send the horse to the left and does that a couple of times, guaranteed when the trainer picks up that rope again, the horse is going to offer to go left again. We call that avoidance behaviour where the horse is trying to avoid the aversive aka rope twirling. The sad thing is that this is where the difference in mindset lies between us. A pressure/force based trainer will probably punish the horse, maybe jiggle or yank on the rope, to tell the horse that they cannot anticipate or offer behaviour, they must wait like a good servant, for the trainer to give the cue.

Whereas with Positive Reinforcement training, if I've prompted or shaped or cued my horse to step up and then back off a platform and reinforced them with food a number of times, guaranteed that if they're standing in front of the platform and I give no other cue, the horse is going to step up on that platform. Some trainers call that the "hot" behaviour. If the horse did step up and I didn't want them to, the onus is on me for not cueing the behaviour I actually did want, because the horse is just doing what makes sense to them in that moment.

Just as the Negative Reinforcement trainer picks up his rope in a similar way every time, it becomes the cue to send the horse around, the horse trained with Positive Reinforcement sees the platform in front of them as the cue to step up on it.

So should I punish the horse for doing what makes sense to them? What we call reinforcement history? Or should I become a better trainer and learn to put behaviours on cue, proof and generalise them so that the behaviour is not performed unless cued. Should I also be prompt in cueing behaviours I do want to see?

When I see a trainer punish a horse for doing what I can predict the horse is going to do based on past reinforcement history, either negative or positive, I know they don't understand behaviour and how it works or the very reinforcement they are using to train behaviours.

It's also pretty sad for the horse and confusing I'd imagine. They do what makes sense to them, what they think the human wants and get punished for it. Makes them want to give up offering or doing anything except stand there, because they're not allowed to actually think.

But then that's what a lot of trainers actually want, isn't it?

I saw this meme and I 'fixed' it ;-)

12/17/2023
Happy Horse day from the wonderful horses at Rockin’ K Stables
12/13/2023

Happy Horse day from the wonderful horses at Rockin’ K Stables

Time is running out get your special on haul-in lessons before Chistmass
12/10/2023

Time is running out get your special on haul-in lessons before Chistmass

Christmas Special!!!!! Rockin’ K Stables is offering a lesson package of 3 lessons and the 4th is free. Kelley is an accomplished horse women and has taught youth through adult to communicate more effectively with their horse and help you achieve your riding goals. Specializes in all around pleasure classes if showing is one of your goals.
Lessons are for haul in only
Must be completed by March 1
Cost for the package is $180

Horses are fed and in their stalls.   Time to to take a moment and enjoy the farm
11/24/2023

Horses are fed and in their stalls. Time to to take a moment and enjoy the farm

11/22/2023

Seems reasonable to me right meow

I just took his blanket off. It is not even mud season but Banjo wanted to paint his white brown asap and he found a spo...
11/22/2023

I just took his blanket off. It is not even mud season but Banjo wanted to paint his white brown asap and he found a spot to do it Gwynn Roberts

Christmas Special!!!!! Rockin’ K Stables is offering a lesson package of 3 lessons and the 4th is free. Kelley is an acc...
11/19/2023

Christmas Special!!!!! Rockin’ K Stables is offering a lesson package of 3 lessons and the 4th is free. Kelley is an accomplished horse women and has taught youth through adult to communicate more effectively with their horse and help you achieve your riding goals. Specializes in all around pleasure classes if showing is one of your goals.
Lessons are for haul in only
Must be completed by March 1
Cost for the package is $180

The moon this morning. Halloween spooooooky
10/28/2023

The moon this morning. Halloween spooooooky

I will have one spot open December 1. Located in Hendersonville 3 miles from the Bat Cave Exit.  Come for a visit!
10/24/2023

I will have one spot open December 1. Located in Hendersonville 3 miles from the Bat Cave Exit. Come for a visit!

Rockin’K Stables offer you and your horse a quality experience. A 6 horse capacity ensures that both horse and owner enjoy a low key family type of atmosphere. We cater to the light stock breed horse.

Nutrition: Research shows that a feeding continuous hay/grass is the best option for prevention of ulcers. In addition, riding on an empty stomach is detrimental to our horses.
We feed each horse 30 to 40 pounds (depending on size and weight needs) of quality grass hay in 3 feedings a day. They have 2 hours a day on fertilized, limed, mowed and w**d free pastures from spring thru fall. They are then moved to a dry lot with a track to spend the rest of the day with hay. Horses are out during the day in the winter and visa versa for the summer. Each horse is given mega cell- a vitamin designed for the horse on a hay/grass diet, as well as any supplements, feed, and meds that the owner provides.

Comfort and facilities: Stalls are cleaned daily and each stall has a fan (they love their fans!). Water buckets are emptied daily to ensure your horse has fresh cool water. We bring the horses in during the day and turn them out at night. Visa Versa for the winter. Sheets fly mask and blankets will be put on daily at owners request.
Our stalls have stall skin flooring that drains wonderfully, and we add fresh sawdust. Fly predators have been used for multiple years and do an amazing job

Large riding arena and round pen are available. We have a track system dry lots and paddock shelter for your horses outside time.

Lessons are available from beginner to advanced in horsemanship to all around pleasure competitors

WNC has the most amazing skies
10/20/2023

WNC has the most amazing skies

Interesting article with excellent links
09/25/2023

Interesting article with excellent links

Rockin’K Stables offer you and your horse a quality experience.  A 6 horse capacity ensures that both horse and owner en...
09/06/2023

Rockin’K Stables offer you and your horse a quality experience. A 6 horse capacity ensures that both horse and owner enjoy a low key family type of atmosphere. We cater to the light stock breed horse.

Nutrition: Research shows that a feeding continuous hay/grass is the best option for prevention of ulcers. In addition, riding on an empty stomach is detrimental to our horses.
We feed each horse 30 to 40 pounds (depending on size and weight needs) of quality grass hay in 3 feedings a day. They have 2 hours a day on fertilized, limed, mowed and w**d free pastures from spring thru fall. They are then moved to a dry lot with a track to spend the rest of the day with hay. Horses are out during the day in the winter and visa versa for the summer. Each horse is given mega cell- a vitamin designed for the horse on a hay/grass diet, as well as any supplements, feed, and meds that the owner provides.

Comfort and facilities: Stalls are cleaned daily and each stall has a fan (they love their fans!). Water buckets are emptied daily to ensure your horse has fresh cool water. We bring the horses in during the day and turn them out at night. Visa Versa for the winter. Sheets fly mask and blankets will be put on daily at owners request.
Our stalls have stall skin flooring that drains wonderfully, and we add fresh sawdust. Fly predators have been used for multiple years and do an amazing job

Large riding arena and round pen are available. We have a track system dry lots and paddock shelter for your horses outside time.

Lessons are available from beginner to advanced in horsemanship to all around pleasure competitors

I like this page.  Owner knowledge about feet is important.  Do not just depend on your farrier for everything. Educate ...
08/25/2023

I like this page. Owner knowledge about feet is important. Do not just depend on your farrier for everything. Educate yourself and then ask your farrier a million questions

08/23/2023
08/04/2023

Little Action Annie was born in 1998. Yes, that is correct she is 25 years old. She was bred by Eileen Smith. I had the good fortune to meet Annie when she was just a few weeks old. My mother-in-law bought Annie for my daughter (Jennifer) when she was a 3 year old and we have had her ever since. Annie and Jenny won several belt buckles at the Van Buren Fair in Michigan, and they also were top award winners at the State 4-H show for many years. Let me tell you about Annie. She is a no-nonsense type of mare. She could not take a joke very well and would put Jennifer on the ground when she did not approve of the manner in which she was being ridden. Jennifer to this day can ride a buck better than anyone I know. You can’t say that she is the friendliest horse that you have ever met, but it seems that everyone who meets her loves her. Annie has moved with me up and down the United States. Living in Schoolcraft Michigan, Bristol Florida, Winnsboro LA, Rose City MI and now Hendersonville NC. She has helped me raise my children, stay sane through a tough divorce, and allowed me to always meet new friends as I moved around. She is slowing down but still likes to work. Sooooo she gives walk trot lessons and to this day will ignore the rider if the cue is not correct. We go on short trail rides at Biltmore with friends and most importantly we still enjoy each other’s company. She is truly one of a kind.

Address

168 Edwards Mountain Drive
Hendersonville, NC
28792

Telephone

+19893903151

Website

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