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WWW.JUSTHORSERIDERS.CO.UKUK Horse Livery Costs: The True Price Of DIY Vs Full10 min read Last updated: January 2026 Trying to decide between DIY and full livery without blowing your budget or your evenings on yard runs? Use our UKspecific breakdown to compare real costsincluding 2025 grass, 3040 DIY, 100150 fulland see how fuel and time can add 100+ per month, so you pick the setup that fits your routine, riding goals, and wallet. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Choose Livery Type What To Do: Match grass/DIY/full to your time, riding and your horses needs; use typical fees (2025, 3040, 100150 per week) as your baseline. Why It Matters: The right package avoids overspend and welfare compromises. Common Mistake: Picking the cheapest headline price without factoring daily care demands. Area: Calculate True Cost What To Do: Add yard fee to fuel and any paid help; estimate visits and multiply using your cars cost per mile (e.g., ~20.86/week for 10mile round trips twice daily). Why It Matters: DIY can cost more per month than serviced livery once travel and labour are included. Common Mistake: Ignoring travel, time and adhoc services when budgeting. Area: Plan Travel & Fuel What To Do: Track a week of yard mileage on your phone, project monthly fuel, and reduce trips with partlivery or batching tasks on busy days. Why It Matters: Commute frequency drives real costs and time pressure. Common Mistake: Underestimating winter detours and extra visits for vet, farrier or emergencies. Area: Check Essential Facilities What To Do: Prioritise floodlit/indoor arena, good drainage, secure storage and efficient muck removal; visit at dusk in wet weather to test them. Why It Matters: Facilities dictate yearround rideability, safety and efficiency. Common Mistake: Viewing on a sunny day and assuming winter performance will match. Area: Verify Yard Standards What To Do: Prefer BHSapproved yards; review welfare and safety measures, turnout policy, and confirm contract terms, notice periods and included services. Why It Matters: Independent checks and clear paperwork reduce risk and disputes. Common Mistake: Taking adverts at face value and skipping insurance or contract checks. Area: Plan Turnout & Stabling What To Do: Confirm herd management, winter turnout rules and stable sizes (1010 ft ponies, 1212 ft horses) to suit your horse. Why It Matters: Space and routine underpin health, behaviour and hoof condition. Common Mistake: Accepting unsuitable herds or cramped boxes for now. Area: Assess SoleUse Fields What To Do: Price rent plus muck removal, fencing, water, drainage and your time; ensure adequate shelter for winter. Why It Matters: Cheap rent can balloon once maintenance and labour are included. Common Mistake: Renting a field without budgeting for mud management and repairs. Area: Gear for UK Winters What To Do: Invest in waterproof boots and layers, head torch, hivis, and reliable turnout rugs; keep a grabandgo winter caddy by the stable. Why It Matters: The right kit saves time and keeps you safe in dark, wet conditions. Common Mistake: Skimping on footwear and lighting, slowing every visit and increasing risk. In This Guide What does livery really cost in the UK? DIY vs full livery: which is cheaper overall? Grass livery and soleuse fields: when do they make sense? Facilities to prioritise for UK weather and welfare How to choose a safe, reputable yard A realistic monthly budget example Time, travel and routine: what your day will look like on DIY Kit that makes yard life easier Livery is often the single biggest ongoing cost of horse ownership in the UK, and the choice you make will shape your daily routine, budget, and your horses lifestyle. Before you sign a contract, it pays to run the full numbers including fuel and time and match facilities to how you actually ride yearround.Key takeaway: Grass livery averages 2025 per week, DIY stabled livery 3040, and full livery 100150 but fuel and time can push DIY over a serviced package by 100+ per month in realistic UK scenarios.What does livery really cost in the UK?Typical UK prices are 2025 per week for grass livery, 3040 for DIY stabled livery, and 100150 for full livery, equating to roughly 1,0401,300, 1,5602,080, and 5,2007,800 per year respectively. These are base fees and exclude feed, bedding, vet bills, and insurance.These figures, drawn from Equine World UK, reflect broad UK norms; location, facilities, and packages will shift the price. At the budget end, community reports show occasional outliers for example, a DIY yard offering yearround grazing, stables in a barn, a sand school, jumps, storage, and a lockable tack room at 13 per week but these deals are rare and usually involve tradeoffs in travel or availability. At the premium end, serviced packages add labour (mucking out, turnout, bringing in, exercising) that DIY owners otherwise provide themselves.Grass livery is often the cheapest type of horse livery because its essentially a rented field and nothing else; use of a stable is unlikely and the owner bears most of the daytoday management. KBIS: The Complete Guide to Horse LiveryDIY vs full livery: which is cheaper overall?DIY isnt always cheaper overall; once you include fuel, time, and labour, the monthly spend can exceed a serviced package by over 100 in realistic examples. A 10mile round trip, twice daily for DIY care, can add about 20.86 per week (~90 per month) in fuel alone.Yard Owner Hub breaks down the hidden costs that regularly surprise owners:Fuel: Two daily trips (10mile round) 20.86/week; a serviced livery visitor going four times weekly 5.96/week.Time and labour: Mucking out, turning out/bringing in, rug changes, grooming, and exercising are all on you with DIY.Logistics: Transporting bedding and forage, and arranging holiday cover or emergency help, adds both cost and complexity.In other words, if your yard is not on your doorstep or your schedule is tight DIYs lower weekly fee can be offset quickly by commuting and the value of your time. Conversely, if you live next to a wellpriced DIY yard and enjoy the routine, it can still be the best fit.Quick tip: Track a week of yard visits with your phones mileage app before committing. Multiply the roundtrip fuel by your expected weekly visits, then add the yards weekly fee for a true cost per week.Grass livery and sole-use fields: when do they make sense?Choose grass livery or a soleuse field when your horse is comfortable living out and youre prepared to manage turnout, shelter, and winter routine yourself. Expect around 2025 per week for grass livery, or from roughly 10 per week for a basic rented field plus all maintenance responsibilities.Grass livery suits hardy types and owners who prefer maximum turnout and minimal stabling. As KBIS notes, youre essentially paying for the field; everything else (from fencing checks to daily monitoring) is your job. A soleuse field can look even cheaper upfront Equine World UK cites around 10 per week for a simple rented field but you must budget for muck removal, fencing repairs, water access, field maintenance and, in winter, significant mud management.Because UK winters are wet and daylight is short, plan your horses comfort and welfare realistically: adequate natural or manmade shelter, reliable drainage, and rugging suited to your horses coat and condition. If your horse lives out yearround, ensure you have appropriate weather protection ready many owners rely on robust, wellfitting winter turnout rugs for cold, wet spells, with popular technical options available from brands like WeatherBeeta.Facilities to prioritise for UK weather and welfarePrioritise floodlit or indoor arenas, reliable drainage, secure storage, and efficient muckremoval systems to cope with UK rain, mud, and dark evenings. For stabled horses, aim for UKrecommended stable sizes: at least 10 ft 10 ft for ponies and 12 ft 12 ft for horses.Facilities shape both your riding and your horses daily life. As Yard Owner Hub explains, most, but not all, DIY yards will have basic facilities; serviced yards are more likely to add extras like indoor schools, horse walkers, and wash bays. Equine World UK highlights that most yards share fields in small herds for natural interaction, though some offer individual turnout for horses that need it ask how turnout groups are managed and how grass is rested in winter.Essential checks for the UK climate:Arena with a surface that holds up in winter, ideally with floodlights for safe schooling after work.Yard drainage and hardstanding where you tack up, to reduce winter mud and thrush risks.Secure tack rooms, fire safety measures, and clear yard rules for turnout and routine.Hay, bedding, and storage access without dragging heavy bales across boggy ground.If youll be wading through winter mud to catch and bring in, reliable footwear is nonnegotiable; our customers swear by waterproof, grippy horse riding boots for daily yard chores. And whenever you ride at a busy yard, protect your head with a properly fitted, safetystandard riding helmet.Pro tip: Visit at dusk on a wet, windy weekday in winter. If the arena is still rideable, the lighting adequate, and the yard efficient, youve likely found a setup that works when conditions are at their worst.How to choose a safe, reputable yardOpt for yards inspected under the British Horse Society (BHS) Livery Yard Approval Scheme wherever possible; UK livery yards arent statutorily licensed, so BHS approval provides a meaningful safety and welfare benchmark. Approved yards carry publicliability insurance and undergo yearly inspections against healthandsafety and welfare standards.According to Equine World UK, BHS approval is a strong indicator of good practice, especially if children or novices use the yard. When you visit, use this checklist:Welfare: Clean, wellbedded stables; correct stable sizes (10 10 ft ponies, 12 12 ft horses); safe fencing; fresh water access.Safety: Fire procedures, firstaid kits, yard rules; supervised handling for novices.Turnout: Clear policy on winter turnout and field rotation; herd management that suits your horse.Facilities: Arena surface and lighting; secure tack storage; wash areas and tieup points.Paperwork: Contract terms, notice periods, services included; proof of insurance and approvals.Quick tip: Talk to existing liveries without the yard owner present. Ask about winter turnout, how quickly issues are resolved, and whether advertised services actually happen on time.A realistic monthly budget exampleOn DIY livery at 35/week with a 10mile round trip twice a day, expect roughly 242 per month for yard fee plus fuel alone (35 52 12 151.67, plus ~90 fuel). On full livery at 120/week, expect about 520 per month (120 52 12 520) before extras.These comparisons use midrange figures within the bands cited by Equine World UK and the fuel analysis from Yard Owner Hub. They exclude feed, bedding, farriery, vet/insurance and any paid services (like holiday cover). If you secure an ultrabudget DIY yard (e.g., 13/week), your base fee may be far lower but fuel and time remain the great levellers. Yard Owner Hubs worked examples show that when you factor realistic travel and adhoc services, DIY can finish more than 100 per month above a serviced package for some owners.Quick tip: Use cost per visit as a sanity check. Add your fuel per round trip to the portion of the weekly yard fee that day represents; then ask if doing that twice daily still beats a part or fulllivery package for your schedule and goals.Time, travel and routine: what your day will look like on DIYPlan for two daily visits if your horse is stabled: morning turnout and muck out, then evening bringin, hay, water, and rug changes. With grass livery, youll still need daily checks and extra time in winter for mud management and feeding.Typical DIY daily jobs include:Morning: Check health, turn out/bring in (season dependent), hay/water, muck out and bed down.Evening: Reverse turnout routine, top up forage and water, rug adjustments, quick groom and pick out feet.Weekly: Deep clean, poopicking if on individual turnout or soleuse, field checks and fencing repairs.Dark, wet evenings are a UK reality from late autumn to early spring. If youre hacking from a yard without floodlights, be visible and safe with highvisibility riding gear and a reliable head torch. At Just Horse Riders, we also recommend scheduling regular yard buddy checkins so someone always knows your expected return time on winter rides.Kit that makes yard life easierFor DIY and soleuse owners, smart kit saves time and keeps you safer and drier through winter. Prioritise waterproof layers, robust footwear, efficient grooming tools, and organised storage so you can work quickly in the dark and rain.Feet first: Invest in waterproof, supportive yard and riding boots with good grip for gateways and tracks.Rugs that work: Reliable, seamsealed turnout rugs keep horses comfortable through wet spells; brands like WeatherBeeta are popular for durability.Daily care: A wellstocked grooming kit speeds up mud removal, mane/tail care and hoof checks.Safety on every ride: Always wear a certified riding helmet; replace it after a fall or if its past manufacturer guidelines.Wellbeing support: Seasonal changes, increased workload, or stabling can justify targeted horse care supplements (e.g., electrolytes postwork, joint support for older horses) speak to your vet if unsure.Pro tip: Keep a grabandgo winter caddy by the stable door: waterproof gloves, head torch, hoof pick, quicktie leadrope, reflective bands, and spare rug straps. Five minutes saved at each visit adds up across a UK winter.FAQsHere are clear, uptodate answers to common UK livery questions based on current guidance and published price ranges.Is DIY livery always cheaper than full livery?No. While DIYs weekly fee (3040) is lower than full livery (100150), fuel for frequent visits, your time, and paid help can make DIY costlier overall; Yard Owner Hub shows DIY finishing over 100 per month above a serviced package in realistic scenarios.How much does grass livery cost?Grass livery is commonly 2025 per week (1,0401,300 per year), excluding feed, vet, and insurance costs, according to Equine World UK.What facilities should I expect at a typical UK livery yard?Most yards offer secure tack storage, feed storage, and turnout; many add an arena, jumps, and hacking access, and some provide premium extras (horse walkers, wash bays). See Equine World UK for a full overview.Is a soleuse field cheaper than shared livery?It can be from around 10 per week for a simple rented field, but you must budget for muck removal, fencing, drainage, and your labour; when these are included, the gap with livery narrows considerably (Equine World UK).Do I get a stable with grass livery?Usually not. As KBIS explains, grass livery is essentially rented grazing; you manage daytoday care and typically wont have a stable included.How big should a horses stable be in the UK?UK guidance recommends at least 10 ft 10 ft for ponies and 12 ft 12 ft for horses, influencing both yard choice and any soleuse arrangements (Equine World UK).How do I check a yards standards and safety?Favour yards in the British Horse Society Livery Yard Approval Scheme; livery yards arent legally licensed, so BHS approval provides annual inspections, welfare checks, and verified insurance (Equine World UK).At Just Horse Riders, we recommend you run the full commute + care calculation, visit your shortlist yards in peak winter conditions, and kit yourself out for dark, muddy evenings. With the right yard and the right gear youll enjoy more saddle time and fewer surprises on your bill. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. Shop Turnout RugsShop Riding BootsShop Riding HelmetsShop Hi-Vis GearShop WeatherBeeta0 Comments 0 Shares 7 ViewsPlease log in to like, share and comment!
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WWW.HORSESPORTIRELAND.IEDAFM Studbook Series leg 3: Millstreet Welcome TourThe rescheduled Millstreet Welcome tour took place last week from the 28th of April to the 1st of May where the DAFM studbook series classes took centre stage in the main arena on the Thursday and Friday of the show. This series is funded under National Breeding Services by the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine with a total prize fund of 90,000.The rain tried its best to dampen spirits on the Thursday morning however this didnt stop over thirty five-year-old horse and rider combinations jumping a double clear to qualify for the final. Seventeen of these horses then jumped a second double clear in the final to split the prize find of 2,500. One of these double clears was Max Foley riding HHS Pasadena (ISH),DAFM Studbook Series 5 Year Old Final HHS Pasadena (Max Foley). Photo: BitMediaForty-seven six-year-old horses jumped the qualifier on the Thursday with twenty-one of these jumping a double clear with fourteen of these jumping a second double clear to divide the 2,500 final prize fund on offer. One of these double clears was young rider, Katie Nallon riding Bouncers Hero (ISH).DAFM Studbook Series 6 Year Old Final Bouncers Hero (Katie Nallon). Photo: BitMediaMax Foley has been dominating the seven-year-old series, this time winning the qualifier with the Marion Hughes bred HHS Verone (ISH). The pair were fastest of the eleven double clears to take the win on the qualifier day. Max continued his winning streak to take the spoils in the final, this time on board the winner of the Tipperary leg; HHS Lexington (ISH). Second place in the final was the consistent Parc Violeta (ISH) ridden by young rider Coen Williams, with third place being filled by Linda Moloney riding Calise Talent Z (ZANG).DAFMStudbook Series 7 Year Old Final HHS Lexington (Max Foley). Photo: BitMediaLeague tables for the series are available through the links below:Five-Year-Old LeagueSix-Year-Old LeagueSeven-Year-Old LeagueBreeding:HHS Pasadena (ISH), 2021 mare by Aganix Du Seigneur Z (sBs), out of Echo Pleasure (ISH), by For Pleasure (HANN). Bred by Brendan McSorley, County Tyrone.Bouncers Hero (ISH), 2020 colt by Ganesh Hero Z (ZANG), out of Rollers Bouncer (ISH), by Diamond Roller (ISH). Bred by John Kearney, County Louth.HHS Lexington (ISH): 2019 gelding by Luidam (KWPN), out of HHS Chantilly Lace (ISH), by Cavalier Royale (HOLST). Bred by Anne Hughes, county Kilkenny.Parc Violeta (ISH): 2019 mare by Kannan (KWPN), out of Ulanda D (KWPN), by Emilion (KWPN). Bred by Paula Williams, county Clare.Calise Talent Z (ZANG) 2019 mare by Casall (HOlST), out of On Verra Vant Merelsnest (BWP), by Kannan (KWPN)The post DAFM Studbook Series leg 3: Millstreet Welcome Tour appeared first on .0 Comments 0 Shares 54 Views
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WWW.JUSTHORSERIDERS.CO.UKEncysted Redworm: When To Worm UK Horses This Winter10 min read Last updated: January 2026 Winter worming isnt about the first frost anymoretime it right to keep your horse safe from encysted redworm and cut resistance. Youll learn exactly when to dose (DecemberFebruary, ideally late December/early January after several days below 6C) and which product to use, so one well-timed treatment does the job. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Winter treatment window What To Do: Treat for encysted redworm once between December and February; aim for late December or early January after several days with daytime highs under 6C. Why It Matters: Targets larvae when encysted and reduces reinfection over winter. Common Mistake: Dosing in November or early December and needing a spring repeat. Area: Temperature, not frost What To Do: Ignore the first frost; wait until daytime temperatures stay below 6C for several consecutive days before dosing. Why It Matters: Encysting is driven by sustained cold and short days, not a single frosty night. Common Mistake: Worming immediately after the first frost and missing part of the encysting population. Area: Use the right wormer What To Do: Give a single dose of moxidectin, or moxidectin + praziquantel if tapeworm also needs treating; discuss a fiveday fenbendazole course for young horses. Why It Matters: Only these options kill encysted larvae effectively and support resistance management. Common Mistake: Using ivermectin or pyrantel in winter for encysted stages. Area: Tapeworm and bots What To Do: Test for tapeworm (saliva or blood) and, if positive, use moxidectin + praziquantel in the same winter window; rely on moxidectin to clear bots. Why It Matters: Combines treatments efficiently and avoids unnecessary dosing. Common Mistake: Treating tapeworm without testing first. Area: FWECs miss larvae What To Do: Treat all horses once each winter regardless of FWEC results; keep FWECs for MarchOctober to monitor adult burdens. Why It Matters: Encysted larvae dont show on standard faecal egg counts. Common Mistake: Skipping winter treatment because FWECs are low or negative. Area: Grazingseason plan What To Do: From March to October, run FWECs every 1012 weeks; treat only at 400 EPG, then confirm with a reduction test two weeks later and maintain pasture hygiene. Why It Matters: Targets treatment, slows resistance, and keeps adult burdens in check. Common Mistake: Treating routinely without testing or skipping the reduction test after high counts. Area: Youngstock protocol What To Do: For yearlings and twoyearolds, speak to your vet about the fiveday fenbendazole option and monitor more closely. Why It Matters: Younger horses are more vulnerable to heavy burdens and complications. Common Mistake: Treating young horses exactly like adults without vet input. Area: Weigh, dose, organise What To Do: Weightape before dosing, record the plan in the tack room, and pair worming with a rug review in the last week of December. Why It Matters: Accurate dosing and routine checks improve efficacy and winter condition. Common Mistake: Guessing weight and forgetting to adjust rugs during cold snaps. In This Guide When should you worm for encysted redworm in the UK? Does frost matter, or is temperature the real trigger? Which wormers work for encysted redworm? Why faecal egg counts miss encysted redworm How to time winter worming with UK weather What to do for the rest of the year (March to October) Practical winter yard checklist to support worming Common mistakes to avoid Timing winter worming isnt about the first frost any more. If you want to protect your horse from encysted redworm and avoid resistance, you need to watch the thermometer and plan for a DecemberFebruary treatment window.Key takeaway: Treat encysted redworm in DecemberFebruary, ideally late December or early January, once daytime temperatures have stayed below 6C for several days; use moxidectin (or a fiveday fenbendazole course for youngstock).When should you worm for encysted redworm in the UK?For UK horses, the optimum window is December to February, with late December or early January ideal when daytime temperatures sit below 6C for several days. This timing targets redworms once theyve largely inhibited (encysted) and reduces the risk of reinfection over winter.Multiple UK sources now recommend shifting autumn worming later. As the University of Edinburgh explains, In most cases, we recommend treatment in December to reduce the risk of encysted redworm, and/or tapeworm, during the winter period. Equine worm control specialists EFECS put it even more plainly:The optimum time to worm for IESR [inhibited encysted small redworm] and Bots is December or January. At Christmas time is ideal because the shortest day is the 21st of December. And then we're pretty much guaranteed cold weather in January. EFECS LtdWhy this matters: small redworm larvae encyst in the gut wall as days shorten and temperatures fall. Treating too early (November/early December) risks missing part of the population as larvae continue to encyst into January, meaning you may need to treat again in spring.Quick tip: Pencil in worming for the week between Christmas and New Year, then adjust by a week or two if the weather turns unexpectedly mild or cold.Does frost matter, or is temperature the real trigger?No. A single frost doesnt mean your horse has encysted redworm; sustained daytime temperatures below 6C are the real cue. Frost kills bot flies, but encysting is driven by prolonged cold and short daylight, not one frosty night.Traditional worm after the first frost advice is now outdated in the UK. Warmer autumns mean we often get early frosts followed by weeks of mild weather. Agria notes, Treatment for encysted redworm was traditionally done in the autumn, but climate change is adjusting our advice around this. Daytime temperatures now persist into plus figures through November and December in many parts of the UK.Actionable rule of thumb: wait for several consecutive days when daytime highs stay under 6C. Thats your green light to treat once, confidently, without having to repeat in spring.Which wormers work for encysted redworm?Use a single dose of moxidectin (Equest) or moxidectin with praziquantel (Equest Pramox if youre also targeting tapeworm). A fiveday course of fenbendazole is an alternative for young horses. Ivermectin and pyrantel do not kill encysted larvae.Moxidectin is the UK standard for encysted redworm because its effective in a single dose and offers persistent activity. Equest Pramox adds praziquantel for tapeworms, allowing you to combine treatments during the same winter window if a saliva or blood test shows tapeworm exposure. If youre managing yearlings or two-year-olds, discuss the fiveday fenbendazole protocol with your vet.Important: To limit resistance, reserve moxidectin for the winter encysted redworm treatment. During the grazing season, treat selectively (only when counts are high) with alternatives such as ivermectin or pyrantel that target adult worms but not encysted stages.Pro tip: Dose accurately to your horses weight. If you need a weigh-tape, add it to your yard kit and re-check before dosing. Pair this with good winter management like well-fitted turnout rugs or cosy stable rugs so clipped or older horses maintain condition through the colder months.Why faecal egg counts miss encysted redwormStandard faecal egg counts dont detect encysted larvae; horses can carry millions yet show low or negative results. Thats why most UK vets advise a routine winter treatment for every horse.Pilgrims Vets summarise it clearly: Encysted small redworm won't show up in a faecal worm egg count: Horses can harbour several million larvae yet show negative or low faecal egg counts. Treat every horse for encysted small redworm once a year. Encysted larvae can line the intestine in their tens of thousands and persist for up to three years, quietly impairing nutrient absorption. The real danger comes in late winter or spring when they emerge en masse, causing severe gut inflammation (larval cyathostominosis), weight loss and colic.So, keep faecal worm egg counts (FWECs) for the grazing season when youre targeting adult redworms on pasture. Winter is different: treat proactively for the larval stage that testing cant see.How to time winter worming with UK weatherWait for a sustained cold spell with daytime highs below 6C, and treat in late December or early January. If the winter stays mild, do not delay beyond the end of February.Heres a simple UK-focused plan:Watch your local forecast and, ideally, note pasture temperatures. Below 6C for several days signals its time.Avoid worming right after the first frost if temperatures bounce back; that increases reinfection risk and can force a spring repeat.Mild winter? Treat anyway before the end of February so larvae dont emerge unchecked as days lengthen.If you also need to address tapeworm, consider Equest Pramox in the same window, guided by an Equisal saliva or blood test.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend pairing winter worming with broader winter-care checks: condition scoring, adjusting rugs, and reviewing diet. Our customers often combine their worming date with a yard winter MOT and ensure essentials like grooming brushes and weigh-tapes are to hand.What to do for the rest of the year (March to October)From March to October, test every 1012 weeks and treat only if FWECs exceed 400 eggs per gram. Always follow up high counts with a reduction test two weeks after treating.The University of Edinburgh now advises a higher treatment threshold of 400 EPG (up from 250 EPG) to help curb resistance while still protecting horse health. During the grazing season:Submit a FWEC about every 1012 weeks (aim for at least three tests through springautumn).Treat only if the result is 400 EPG or higher, typically using ivermectin or pyrantel for adult worms.Run a faecal worm egg count reduction test (FWECRT) two weeks later to confirm the wormer worked. This is essential for very high counts (over 1,000 EPG) and recommended annually for all yards.Continue pasture hygiene: poo-pick at least twice a week and avoid overgrazing mixed-age groups.Quick tip: Keep a simple yard log of FWEC results, treatments, and dates. It makes pattern-spotting and vet conversations much easier, and helps you avoid overusing key molecules like moxidectin.Practical winter yard checklist to support wormingWinter worming works best alongside good horse and rider management. Use this mini checklist to make the season safer and simpler:Condition and weight: Body condition score monthly and weigh-tape before dosing. Keep a notebook in your grooming kit. Find essentials in our grooming collection.Rugs: Adjust weights promptly as cold snaps hit. Explore reliable winter turnout rugs and warm stable rugs, including trusted brands like WeatherBeeta.Short daylight safety: If youre hacking in low light, upgrade your visibility. Our hi-vis range for riders helps you stay seen on winter roads.Helmet check: Winter is a great time to assess your hats fit and age. See our selection of certified riding helmets.Digestive support: Discuss targeted supplements with your vet if your horse struggles with weight or stresses easily around winter changes. Browse thoughtful options in our supplements collection.Seasonal treats and motivation: Keep handling positive on dark evenings with healthy rewards from our treats selection. And if youre gifting at the yard, take a look at our Christmas gift ideas.Pro tip: Set a recurring reminder for Worming + Rug Review in the last week of December. Knock both jobs out in one yard visit so nothing slips.Common mistakes to avoidAvoiding these pitfalls will save you money and reduce resistance while protecting your horse:Treating after the first frost: Frost encysting. Wait for sustained days under 6C.Using the wrong product: Ivermectin and pyrantel dont kill encysted larvae. Use moxidectin (or fiveday fenbendazole for youngstock) in winter.Dosing too early: November or early December may be premature. You could face reinfection and need a spring repeat.Skipping tapeworm testing: If you need to combine treatments, use a saliva or blood test first, then consider Equest Pramox in the same winter window.Ignoring youngsters: Young horses are more vulnerable; discuss the fiveday fenbendazole option and tighter monitoring with your vet.Forgetting FWECRT in summer: Always verify that wormers still work on your yard after treating high FWECs.As a reminder, climate change is pushing UK worming timing later. Monitor your local temperatures, not just the calendar, and youll get the timing right without over-treating.What about bots and tapeworm?You can address bots and, if needed, tapeworm during the same winter window as encysted redworm. Bot fly activity tails off once daytime temperatures sit below roughly 10C, and moxidectin-based products will clear bots alongside redworm.If tapeworm is on your to-do list, test first with an Equisal saliva kit or a blood test and, if positive, opt for a combination product (moxidectin + praziquantel). This maximises efficiency and avoids unnecessary dosing.Quick tip: Keep a simple winter parasite plan pinned in the tack room: the product to use, your horses weight, the date to dose (late Dec/early Jan), and a note to reassess rugs the same week. If you also need any yard upgrades, browse our dependable winter ranges, from turnout rugs for wet weather to durable WeatherBeeta layers.What happens if you dont treat?Untreated encysted larvae can emerge together in late winter/spring, triggering larval cyathostominosis a serious inflammatory condition that can cause diarrhoea, colic, rapid weight loss and even be life-threatening. Given that faecal counts cant see this stage and larvae can persist for up to three years, a single, well-timed winter treatment is a simple, evidence-led safeguard.Signs to watch for include dull coat, dropping condition despite adequate feed, loose droppings, and colicky behaviour. If you suspect a heavy burden or your horse becomes unwell, speak to your vet immediately.FAQsDoes a frost mean my horse has encysted redworm, and should I worm immediately?No. A single frost doesnt equal encysting. Wait for sustained daytime temperatures below 6C over several days, then treat in DecemberJanuary. This reduces reinfection and avoids needing a second spring dose.Can I test for encysted redworm before treating?Standard faecal egg counts cant detect encysted larvae. A blood test may indicate exposure risk but isnt definitive. Most UK vets advise treating all horses once each winter specifically for encysted redworm.Which product should I use for encysted redworm?Use moxidectin (Equest) as a single dose, or moxidectin with praziquantel (Equest Pramox) if a tapeworm test suggests treatment is needed. For young horses, discuss the fiveday fenbendazole alternative with your vet.What if winter stays mild with no hard frosts?Treat before the end of February regardless. If temperatures never dip under 6C, larvae may not fully inhibit; delaying risks higher burdens as days lengthen.How often should I worm for encysted redworm?Once a year in winter (DecemberFebruary). If you dose too early (November/early December), you may need a second dose in spring because larvae continue to encyst into January.What should I do from March to October?Run faecal egg counts every 1012 weeks and treat only if results exceed 400 EPG. After treating high counts, submit a reduction test two weeks later to confirm efficacy.Any yard tips to make winter worming easier?Weigh-tape before dosing, write the plan on the tack-room wall, and pair it with a rug review the same week. For winter essentials, explore our stable rugs, visibility gear in hivis, and reliable riding helmets for safer short-day hacks. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. Shop Grooming KitShop Turnout RugsShop Stable RugsShop Hi-Vis GearShop Supplements0 Comments 0 Shares 78 Views
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WWW.JUSTHORSERIDERS.CO.UKLeather-Lined Wellies For UK Yard Work: Grip And Durability11 min read Last updated: January 2026 Slogging through UK clay, ankle-deep mud and slick concrete from first feed to late checks? Use this guide to choose leather-lined wellies that last, with deep-tread grip, a secure heel and a lining rated -10C to 10C, so you stay sure-footed and comfortable all winter. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Leather-Lined Wellies What To Do: Choose tall, leather-lined wellingtons with deep, self-cleaning tread, a defined in+ heel and an all-season lining rated -10C to 10C. Prioritise a secure heel hold. Why It Matters: You get durable waterproof comfort and reliable grip for daily UK yard work. Common Mistake: Buying basic rubber or fabric-lined boots that collapse and chafe quickly. Area: Dial In Fit What To Do: Try boots late in the day with your usual socks; walk inclines, squat and check for minimal heel lift and natural forefoot flex. Ensure toes have wiggle room and calves arent pinched. Why It Matters: A locked-in heel and correct flex prevent rubbing and fatigue. Common Mistake: Sizing up for socks, which loosens heel hold and causes blisters. Area: Manage Warmth What To Do: Rely on the leather lining for most days; add neoprene or thermal socks in a freeze without upsizing. Keep the fit snug at the heel. Why It Matters: Maintains warmth and comfort across -10C to 10C without compromising fit. Common Mistake: Bulking up socks so the boot rubs and slips. Area: Prioritise Safety What To Do: Pick a stable through-sole with a small heel and a grippy, mud-ready tread. Test stability on wet concrete and rutted ground. Why It Matters: Better footing reduces slips when pushing barrows or moving fast. Common Mistake: Choosing flat, shallow-tread soles that skid on mud and slick surfaces. Area: Pick Shaft Height What To Do: Use tall wellies for deep mud, long wet grass and brambles; keep short styles for quick, tidy jobs only. Why It Matters: Tall shafts stop water, slurry and stings reaching your calves. Common Mistake: Wearing ankle boots for turnout and ending up soaked and muddy. Area: Buy for Durability What To Do: Invest in quality leather-lined models from reputable makers; expect them to hold structure and underfoot support for seasons. Why It Matters: Spending once avoids mid-winter failures and sore feet. Common Mistake: Grabbing cheap unlined wellies that feel like standing on concrete within weeks. Area: Care & Drying What To Do: Rinse off clay after shifts, air-dry at room temperature, lightly condition the lining if advised, and store upright with ventilation. Why It Matters: Proper care preserves leather, adhesives and shape for longer life. Common Mistake: Drying by radiators or fires, causing cracking and delamination. Area: Complete Yard Kit What To Do: Pair wellies with tough jodhpurs, a waterproof and a hi-vis layer; keep a second clean pair of yard boots for driving or schooling. Why It Matters: The right kit boosts safety, comfort and convenience in all weather. Common Mistake: Skipping hi-vis or wearing slippy legwear that rides up inside tall boots. In This Guide Why leather-lined wellies are the best choice for UK yard work Comfort and warmth: what leather linings actually do Safety and fit: BHS-backed boot features to insist on Tall vs short wellies: choose by task and terrain What to look for when buying: tread, materials, and lining ratings Real-world durability: why cheap wellies fail and how to avoid it Fit, break-in, and care: make them last season after season Yard-ready kit to pair with your wellies Wet clay, ankle-deep mud and long, drenched grass are a British winter staple on most livery yards. If youre on your feet from first feed to late-night checks, your boots must be waterproof, supportive and built to last.Key takeaway: For daily UK yard work, choose leather-lined wellingtons with a deep-tread sole, a secure heel and year-round leather lining (-10C to 10C) for the best blend of durability, grip and long-term comfort.Why leather-lined wellies are the best choice for UK yard workLeather-lined wellingtons are the most durable, comfortable option for daily UK yard work in wet, muddy conditions. A full leather lining moulds to your feet, resists abrasion and performs reliably across -10C to 10C for year-round wear.Across the UK, persistent rain and clay-heavy soils create boggy gateways and standing water from autumn to spring. Tall, waterproof wellies are essential for turnout, skipping out and pushing barrows through rutted trackstasks that quickly expose flimsy footwear. Leather linings, often sourced from premium Italian and French tanneries, elevate wellies beyond basic rubber: they contour to your foot over time, stabilise the fit and stand up to daily scuffing and flexing without breaking down.Ahume Outfitters summarise it well:"Renowned for quality and durability, leather lined boots are extremely hard wearing... luxuriously lined completely in leather... provides a superior comfort, for long term wear as it moulds to the wearers foot. Excellent abrasion properties makes a leather lining hard-wearing."Source: Ahume Welly Boot Buying GuideFor UK horse owners, this means fewer blisters on long winter days, more sure-footed walking on slick concrete or sodden straw, and boots that withstand months of mud without collapsing at the heel or splitting at stress points. When your calendar is ruled by turnout times and rug changes, that comfort and consistency pay you back every single day.Comfort and warmth: what leather linings actually doA full leather lining reduces rubbing, improves foot stability and creates a cushioned feel that gets better the more you wear the boot. Unlike thin fabric or bare rubber, leather offers superior abrasion resistance and moulds to the foot for long-term comfort.In practice, that glove-like fit means fewer hot spots across the heel and ankle where many unlined wellies crease and chafe during mucking out or when youre on and off the tractor. Leathers natural breathability also helps manage moisture, so your socks and skin stay more comfortable through long shiftsespecially useful when youre clocking 10,000 steps before lunch.Leather-lined wellies are also suitable for all-season yard use from -10C to 10C, as outlined by Ahumes guide. Thats ideal for the UKs damp autumns, cold snaps and muddy springs. If you feel the chill during static jobs (e.g. clipping, watching a vet procedure), add insulation rather than sizing up the boot.Pro tip: On prolonged freezing days, pair your leather-lined wellies with neoprene or thermal socks for extra insulation. Keep fit snug; dont upsize the bootbulky socks that compromise heel hold will cause rubbing.Riders on the ground echo this advantage. Yard users often report that cheap wellies feel like standing on concrete after a few weeks, while leather-lined versions keep the footbed feeling supportive month after month. See the discussion on the Horse & Hound forum for real-world experiences.Safety and fit: BHS-backed boot features to insist onChoose a boot with a small heel of at least in and a secure, through-sole to improve safety on the yard, as advised by the British Horse Society. A heel-holding fit further prevents rubbing and slippage on slopes or slick surfaces.The BHS guidance, reported by Horse & Hound, is clear:"Boots should preferably have a smooth, through sole and a small heel (no less than in high)."Source: Horse & Hound Long or short riding boots: the pros and consOn the yard, that small heel helps your foot plant securely when youre wheeling a heavy barrow or moving quickly on wet concrete. While many yard-focused wellies feature deeper treads for mud, you still want a stable, continuous sole underfoot and a defined heel for confidence on mixed surfaces. A heel-holding fit is equally importantif your heel lifts when you stride or climb, youll rub and fatigue quickly.At Just Horse Riders, we also point yard users who split time between paddocks and stable corridors to supportive, everyday yard footwear in our horse riding boots collection. Yard boots are praised by Horse & Hound experts as durable, less stiff than leather riding boots and a great option around stables.Quick tip: Try boots at the end of the day when your feet are slightly swollen. Walk up and down an incline, check for heel lift and make sure the boot flexes where your foot flexesparticularly important if you crouch to pick out feet or kneel to scrub buckets.Tall vs short wellies: choose by task and terrainGo tall for deep mud, winter clay, long wet grass, brambles and nettles; short wellies only suit quick, light jobs in relatively tidy conditions. Taller shafts protect your lower legs and keep water and mud out during heavy yard work.UK gardens and yards with clay soils and persistent rainfall are notorious for sucking boots down in gateways and soaking trouser legs in minutes. Tall wellies keep slurry, wet grass and nettle stings off your calves, and theyre the sensible choice for turnout when fields are at their worst. Short or ankle-height wellies are only a convenience playfine for fetching a headcollar from the tack room or nipping to the school in summerbut they leave shins unprotected and water ingress is likely in long grass or churned tracks.As Cherry Tree Country Clothing notes, the ideal boots for muddy, wet conditions combine a deep tread sole, a heel-holding fit and seasonal linings appropriate for the weather. For most UK yards in winter, thats a tall, leather-lined welly with a proper grip pattern. Source: Cherry Tree Country Clothing Gardening boots vs welliesWhat to look for when buying: tread, materials, and lining ratingsPick deep-tread soles for grip in mud, a heel-hugging fit to prevent rubs, and a leather lining rated for -10C to 10C to cover most UK seasons. Prioritise high-quality linings from reputable tanneries for longevity and comfort.Use this quick checklist when comparing models:Grip: Choose deep, self-cleaning lugs for clay and wet grass. Look for a defined heel to stabilise your foot on slopes and when lifting.Lining: Full leather linings from quality tanneries improve abrasion resistance and mould to your foot. Look for all-season suitability (-10C to 10C) to get value across autumn, winter and spring.Fit: Your heel should sit firm with minimal lift; toes need wiggle room. Calf fit should allow for socks and jods without cutting circulation.Shaft height: Opt for tall in winter mud, long grass and bramble-prone hedges; reserve short styles for light, quick tasks.Flex: The boot should bend where your foot bends to prevent chafing during kneeling, grooming and filling haynets.Insole: A supportive footbed reduces fatigue during long days. Leather-lined models maintain that underfoot feel better over time.Pro tip: If youre regularly wading through saturated gateways while turning out in winter turnout rugs, prioritise a more aggressive tread and a tall shaft. Youll thank yourself after the third barrow through the bog.Real-world durability: why cheap wellies fail and how to avoid itBudget, unlined wellies tend to collapse at the heel and feel harsh underfoot within weeks of daily yard work, while leather-lined versions hold their structure and comfort for far longer. Spending more initially often saves money across a UK winter.Daily yard life is punishing: constant flexing under load, slurry that degrades materials, and hours of friction around the ankle. Forum users frequently report that cheap wellies wear out quickly with this usage profile, with footbeds going flat (the dreaded standing on concrete feeling) and uppers cracking at stress points. In contrast, leather-lined wellies maintain internal structure and underfoot comfort far better, thanks to the linings abrasion resistance and its ability to mould to you. See the discussion on the Horse & Hound forum for first-hand comparisons.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend treating wellies like any other piece of core yard kit: buy once, buy right. For most UK horse owners who work outside daily from October to April, a leather-lined, tall welly is the most cost-effective choice over a season or two.Fit, break-in, and care: make them last season after seasonSize for a snug heel with toe wiggle room, break in gradually over a few shorter wears, and rinse and air-dry after muddy shifts to protect the leather lining and outer. Avoid direct heat to prevent cracking and shrinkage.Follow these steps to maximise comfort and lifespan:Measure and try late in the day: Feet swell, so fit when theyre at their largest. Wear your usual yard socks.Heel check: Your heel should lock down with minimal lift when striding or climbing. Too much lift = blisters.Flex test: Squat, kneel and step up onto a mounting block. The boot should flex without pinching the instep.Break-in: Start with a few 12 hour wears before committing to a full day. Leather linings mould quickly, but give them time.Aftercare: Rinse off mud, especially clay, and let boots air-dry at room temperature. Never place by radiators or fires.Lining care: If recommended by the manufacturer, use a light leather conditioner inside occasionally to keep the lining supple. Avoid oils that can weaken adhesives.Storage: Keep upright and ventilated. Boot trees or rolled newspaper help maintain shape and absorb moisture.Sock strategy: In winter cold snaps, add neoprene or thermal socks; in milder months, choose moisture-wicking fibres to reduce friction.Quick tip: Keep a doorstep boot brush and a bucket by the tack room. A 30second scrub saves hours of dried-on clay that shortens boot life.Yard-ready kit to pair with your welliesMatch your wellies with durable jodhpurs, hi-vis layers and a protective helmet to stay comfortable and safe from dawn to dusk. Build an outfit that handles mud, rain and low light without fuss.Heres a simple, proven yard set-up:Legwear that stands up to mud and movement: Choose hard-wearing womens jodhpurs and breeches that wont slip inside tall wellies and offer stretch for squatting and lifting.Kit for young helpers: Keep children dry and visible in robust childrens jodhpurs and breeches that tuck neatly into short or tall boots.Stay seen on dark mornings: Add a vest or jacket from our hi-vis collection for safe yard-to-field walks at dawn and dusk.Daily horse care essentials: A well-stocked grooming kit makes quick work of muddy legs and dried sweat after turnout.Prep for the season: When fields turn to soup, have the right turnout rugs ready so your horse stays warm while you stay dry in your wellies.Footwear rotation: For office runs or schooling, keep a clean pair of yard boots from our riding boots range to switch into quicklyyour car mats will thank you.Horse & Hounds experts note that yard boots are durable and comfortable for everyday stable wear, being less stiff than formal riding bootshandy if you swap between mucking out and light schooling. Source: Horse & HoundFAQsAre leather-lined wellies better than standard rubber ones for daily yard chores?Yes. Leather-lined wellingtons deliver superior durability, abrasion resistance and moulded comfort for long wear, particularly in wet UK conditions and clay-heavy mud. See guidance from Ahume Outfitters.Do I need tall or short wellies for mucking out at a livery yard?Tall. They protect lower legs from long wet grass, brambles and slurry, and keep water out in deep mud. Short wellies suit quick, light jobs in tidy conditions only. Reference: Cherry Tree Country Clothing.Can wellies cause rubbing during extended yard work?Poor fit does. Choose a secure heel hold and a flexible, full leather lining to reduce rubbing when youre walking, kneeling and lifting. Leather linings mould to your foot for better long-term comfort.Are leather-lined wellies warm enough for UK winter yard duties?Yes for most conditions: theyre suitable from -10C to 10C. Add neoprene or thermal socks for prolonged freezing spells or if youre standing still for long periods. Source: Ahume.What sole design is safest for yard use?The British Horse Society advises a smooth, through sole with a small heel (no less than in) for safe everyday use around stables. For muddy fields and tracks, opt for a deeper tread pattern that still offers a stable, continuous platform. Source: Horse & Hound.How do I stop my wellies feeling like standing on concrete by Christmas?Start with leather-lined wellies for better underfoot comfort and structural integrity, and consider a supportive insole if needed. Rinse and air-dry after shifts to preserve the lining and midsole. Forum users frequently report far better longevity and comfort from leather-lined models compared to cheap, unlined versions: Horse & Hound forum.What else should I wear with wellies for dark, wet UK mornings?Pair tall wellies with durable yard jodhpurs, a warm waterproof, and a hi-vis layer for low light. For practical options, see our womens jodhpurs and hi-vis collection.Final word: If your day lives in mud and drizzle, leather-lined wellingtons are the yard workhorsegrippy, protective and comfortable enough to carry you from the first feed to the last rug change. Choose deep tread, a secure heel and a tall shaft, and youll stride through winter like its just another hack across good ground. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. Shop Riding BootsShop Jodhpurs & BreechesShop Hi-Vis GearShop Turnout RugsShop Grooming Kit0 Comments 0 Shares 81 Views
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WWW.JUSTHORSERIDERS.CO.UKLoss Of Use: Proving Horse Value Without A Receipt10 min read Last updated: January 2026 Lost the purchase receipt but need to prove your horse's value for a loss-of-use claim? This guide shows you exactly how to build a persuasive, policy-aligned valuation file, using 7 forms of alternative proof and a 5-step dispute plan, so you can secure a fair payout, even if today's value exceeds what you paid. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Confirm LossofUse Cover What To Do: Read your policy and endorsements to confirm the insured activity, evidence required, and any postpayout conditions. Ask your vet for a written prognosis stating permanent incapacity for that activity. Why It Matters: Ensures your claim meets the exact criteria your insurer will apply. Common Mistake: Assuming general unsoundness qualifies without activityspecific, permanent incapacity. Area: Check Valuation Basis What To Do: Check if your schedule is market value, agreed value, or hybrid; note any market value at time of loss wording and the sum insured cap. Why It Matters: Determines how your payout is calculated and what proof you need. Common Mistake: Believing the named sum insured is automatically paid. Area: Replace Missing Receipt What To Do: Assemble alternative proof: bank statements/withdrawals, bill of sale, passport transfer, vetting report, advert screenshots, transport/yard invoices, and seller/coach statements. Crossreference dates and prices, and include a brief seller confirmation if possible. Why It Matters: Builds a credible ownership and price trail without a receipt. Common Mistake: Submitting a single weak document or mismatched dates. Area: Evidence Higher Value What To Do: Compile official results, training invoices/letters, recent comparable sales, independent valuations, and clear videos/photos; explain each comps relevance. Update your sum insured at renewal to match progression. Why It Matters: Supports a value above purchase price and avoids underinsurance. Common Mistake: Claiming a large uplift without objective, current evidence. Area: Structure Valuation Dossier What To Do: Create a onepage cover note, then append results, training records, 46 comps, pro valuations, and media; index everything. Use neutral, factual language and link to governingbody pages. Why It Matters: A tidy, auditable file is faster to assess and harder to dismiss. Common Mistake: Sending unindexed screenshots and long emails with no structure. Area: Resolve Valuation Disputes What To Do: Ask the insurer to cite the exact clause and valuation method, and what evidence would change their figure. Submit your indexed pack, offer expert calls, then escalate via the formal complaints route if needed. Why It Matters: Keeps debate evidenceled and preserves your rights. Common Mistake: Arguing by phone without a dated paper trail. Area: Maintain Evidence File What To Do: Digitise and back up purchase proof, passport/microchip, vet records, training invoices, results, valuations, media, and your policy schedule. Set reminders to update value after key milestones and capture dated media routinely. Why It Matters: Speeds up claims and renewals and protects against lost paperwork. Common Mistake: Letting documents sit on phones or paper with no backups. Area: Plan PostPayout Management What To Do: Get the insurers written consent before changing the horses role and read settlement restrictions; align a welfare plan with your vet. Adjust workload, turnout and rugging, and use supportive kit for comfort and safety. Why It Matters: Prevents breach of conditions and safeguards welfare. Common Mistake: Reselling or returning to ridden work without written approval. In This Guide What does loss of use actually cover in the UK? Does your insurer pay the purchase price or the current market value? What if your horses valuation is higher than what you paid? Can you claim without a purchase receipt? How do you evidence a higher market value credibly? What happens to the horse after a lossofuse payout? Stepbystep: How to handle a valuation dispute with your insurer Practical prep: Paperwork to keep on file for future claims Your horse is your pride and joy and often one of your biggest investments. When injury ends a career and youre facing a loss-of-use claim, the last thing you need is a valuation dispute made worse by a missing purchase receipt.Key takeaway: Even if your horses current valuation is higher than what you paid and you cant find the receipt you can still make a strong lossofuse claim by proving ownership and market value with alternative evidence and by aligning everything to your policys wording.What does loss of use actually cover in the UK?Loss of use generally pays out when your horse is permanently unable to perform the specific insured activity, as confirmed by veterinary evidence and accepted by your insurer. The payout is based on your policy terms, usually a percentage of the sum insured and subject to conditions about the horses future use.In practice, an equine lossofuse claim turns on two things: convincing, contemporaneous veterinary evidence that the horse can no longer meet the insured purpose (for example, affiliated eventing, show jumping at a defined height, or advanced dressage), and proof of the horses fair market value at the time of loss. Expect your insurer to scrutinise the clinical history, diagnostic reports, and the prognosis from your vet. UK vets familiar with performance horses (including members of BEVA) often provide the detailed assessments insurers look for.Insurers may also impose postpayout conditions to prevent financial gain from future resale. These can include taking possession, applying a permanent identifier, or setting written restrictions on ridden or breeding use. Always read your policys lossofuse conditions alongside any endorsements.Does your insurer pay the purchase price or the current market value?Most UK equine policies aim to indemnify you up to the sum insured but not more than the horses fair market value at the time of loss. Whether youre paid the purchase price, the current value, or a preagreed figure depends on your policy wording.Three common models exist: Market value policies: Youre covered up to the sum insured, but the payout cannot exceed fair market value at the time of loss. Agreed value policies: The insurer has agreed a value in advance (usually supported by robust evidence); the payout follows that agreement, subject to the policys lossofuse terms. Hybrid/endorsed wording: The policy names a sum insured but still references market value tests for lossofuse claims.Quick tip: Review your schedule and endorsements now. If your paperwork mentions market value at the time of loss anywhere within the lossofuse section, assume youll need to prove that value, regardless of what you originally paid.What if your horses valuation is higher than what you paid?A higher current valuation doesnt guarantee a higher payout; insurers typically cap payments at the lower of the sum insured and fair market value at the time of loss. Large jumps in value over the original price will be queried and must be supported with strong, objective evidence.Plenty of horses appreciate in value after purchase due to training, competition results, and proven rideability. If your insured sum reflects that journey and you can evidence it a higher valuation can be upheld. Focus your file on: Competition record: Official results with dates, levels, and placings (British Dressage, British Showjumping, British Eventing, Riding Club Championships, showing results). Training and production: Invoices and letters from recognised professionals detailing progression, schooling, and mileage. Comparable sales: Recent adverts or sale prices of genuinely comparable horses (age, breeding, height, record, temperament). Professional valuation: A written valuation from a respected producer, dealer, or coach who routinely sells at that level. Media and provenance: Videos, professional photos, and any press that substantiate the horses standard of work and temperament.Pro tip: Update your sum insured annually to reflect progression. A calm, wellproduced amateur horse with mileage and results often commands more than a green youngster but your policy schedule needs to keep pace with that reality.Can you claim without a purchase receipt?Yes. A missing receipt can slow things down but doesnt automatically block a claim; insurers will accept alternative proof of purchase, ownership, and value if its credible and consistent.Build a paper trail that triangulates the who, when, and how much: Bank evidence: Statements showing the transfer to the seller, or cash withdrawal near the date plus corroborating messages. Bill of sale or contract: If you have one, even a simple written note signed by the seller helps. Passport and ownership records: Passport transfer/overstamp and microchip registration updates. Prepurchase vetting: Reports, Xrays, and invoices listing the horses details and date. Advertising trail: Screenshots or PDFs of the original advert, messages with the seller, and viewing or transport bookings. Thirdparty corroboration: Statements or invoices from transporters, yards, coaches, or vets who saw the horse arrive. Insurance history: Your original proposal, inception date, and any midterm value increases you requested and documented.If you paid in cash and cant evidence a bank transfer, aim for multiple, consistent documents and a brief, dated statement from the seller or intermediary confirming the price and date. The more pieces that align, the stronger your position.How do you evidence a higher market value credibly?You evidence a higher value by compiling objective proof of performance, training, and comparables, supported by professional opinions and clear media. Think like an auditor: present clean, crossreferenced exhibits.Structure your dossier: Cover note: Onepage summary of the horse (name, age, height, breeding, insured use) and a bullet list of your value drivers (e.g., BD Medium scores, BS double clears to 1.20m, BE Novice form, county showing wins, exemplary temperament). Performance appendix: Official results printouts with dates and levels; include links or QR codes to governing body pages where possible. Training appendix: Invoices and letters from your coach/producer setting out progression and rideability. Comparable sales: 46 wellmatched adverts with prices and salient features circled; explain why each is a genuine comp. Professional valuation: One or two independent written valuations explaining the methodology. Media: Recent videos that show exactly the standard and way of going your paperwork claims.Quick tip: Keep language neutral and factual. Terms like quiet to hack alone and in company, snaffle mouth at shows, or uncomplicated amateur ride are valueadd descriptors when you can back them with footage and thirdparty comments.What happens to the horse after a lossofuse payout?After a payout, insurers can impose conditions such as taking possession, placing restrictions on future use, or applying identifiers to prevent resale for profit. The exact outcome depends on your policy wording and the agreement reached at settlement.Some policies provide that the insurer may take ownership of the horse on settlement; others allow the owner to keep the horse on a nonridden or restricteduse basis. In all cases, the intent is to prevent double recovery (a payout and later sale proceeds). Expect your horses passport and your settlement letter to set out any restrictions in plain terms. Talk to your vet about a realistic longterm management plan that protects welfare BEVAaligned practice guidance emphasises matching work to soundness and comfort.Management changes often follow. If your horse moves to lighter work or retirement, consider comfort, turnout routine, and weight management. In colder or wet UK spells, appropriate rugs help maintain condition; browse wellfitting winter turnout rugs and cosy stable rugs from trusted brands such as WeatherBeeta to keep your horse comfortable while activity reduces.Stepbystep: How to handle a valuation dispute with your insurerStart by asking your insurer, in writing, to cite the exact clause and valuation methodology theyre applying, then respond with a structured evidence pack that addresses those points. If you still disagree, use the insurers formal complaints process and seek independent advice.Follow this approach: Get the wording: Ask for the precise policy clause(s) governing loss of use and valuation; clarify whether market value or agreed value applies. Request their rationale: Ask how they derived their figure and what evidence would change their position. Submit your dossier: Provide your performance results, training invoices, professional valuations, and comparables, clearly indexed. Invite dialogue: Offer a call with your vet, trainer, or valuer to answer technical questions promptly. Escalate formally: If no agreement, follow the insurers complaints procedure and consider specialist advice from an equinesavvy broker, solicitor, or professional body such as the BHS helpline for signposting.Pro tip: Keep a calm paper trail. Date every submission, save emails as PDFs, and summarise phone calls in followup emails. A tidy file is persuasive.Practical prep: Paperwork to keep on file for future claimsKeep a simple, uptodate file containing proof of purchase, passport and microchip information, vet records, training invoices, competition results, professional valuations, highquality media, and your current policy schedule. Digitise everything and back it up.Set reminders to: Review the sum insured annually and after significant milestones (e.g., first BD Medium scores, BS Foxhunter clears, BE Novice completions, major showing wins). Capture media routinely short schooling clips and competition rounds dated and labelled. Retain all vet diagnostics and reports, even for issues that resolved; full clinical history matters. Save adverts and prices of comparable horses you view, even if you dont buy.Quick tip: A onepage value timeline that shows purchase, key results, and material training investments makes renewal and any future claim far smoother.Useful kit when your horse transitions to reduced work or retirementTransitioning to reduced work demands comfort, careful weight control, and safe exercise; consider supportive boots, the right rugging, and jointfriendly supplements alongside a measured workload. Rugging: As workload drops, thermoregulation changes. Choose breathable, wellfitting turnout rugs for wet UK days and snug stable rugs for cooler nights, with options from WeatherBeeta and Shires. Support and protection: For inhand exercise or light hacking, use wellfitting horse boots and bandages to support older joints and protect from knocks. Nutrition and comfort: Targeted supplements can support joints, digestion, and overall comfort during routine changes. Condition checks: Regular grooming helps you monitor weight, skin, and any pressure points from tack or rugs. Visibility and safety: If youre handwalking on verges or quiet lanes, add hivis for you and reflective accessories for the horse; match that with a wellfitting riding helmet for your own safety.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend introducing any changes gradually and keeping your vet in the loop so management aligns with the clinical picture behind your lossofuse decision.FAQsCan I insure my horse for more than I paid?Yes, if the current fair market value is higher and you can evidence it; update your sum insured at renewal (or midterm if permitted) with results, training records, and a professional valuation to match.What if my horse improves after a lossofuse payout?Your settlement letter and policy conditions will govern future use; many insurers impose restrictions to prevent resale for profit. Always seek your insurers written consent before changing the horses role.Do I need a fivestage vetting to make a lossofuse claim?You dont need a past vetting to claim, but comprehensive veterinary evidence of current permanent incapacity is essential. A previous vetting, if you have one, can help establish baseline history and value.How long does a lossofuse claim take?Timeframes vary with the complexity of the medical workup and the evidence provided. Clear diagnostics, a definitive prognosis, and an organised valuation dossier help resolve claims faster.Can I claim loss of use for behavioural issues?Policies usually require a veterinarydiagnosed physical cause and permanent incapacity for the insured activity. Purely behavioural problems without an underlying clinical diagnosis are often excluded check your wording.What if I bought my horse in cash and have no paperwork?Assemble alternative proof: bank withdrawals, messages with the seller, passport transfer, transport invoices, yard records, and signed statements from the seller or professionals who witnessed the sale and arrival.Will a lossofuse claim affect my future insurance?It can influence future terms and premiums; disclose accurately when you next insure, and be ready to share the settlement letter and any restrictions recorded on the horses passport or file.If youre facing a claim right now, organise your evidence first, then talk to your insurer clearly and early. And if your horse is stepping down from work, explore comfortfocused essentials from turnout rugs to supplements to make the transition as smooth and safe as possible. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. 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THEHORSE.COMPreventing Colic in HorsesPreventing colic comes down to consistent, thoughtful management that supports normal digestive function. Ensuring steady forage intake, clean water access, and avoiding sudden changes in diet or routine, in combination with regular turnout, dental care, and parasite control can help maintain gut health and reduce your horses colic risk. In this Ask TheHorse Live excerpt, Bianca Ruspi, DVM, equine surgery resident at Rood & Riddle Equine Hospital in Lexington, Kentucky, explains the best ways to reduce your horses risk of colic.ThispodcastisanexcerptfromourAskTheHorseLiveQ&A.Listentothefullrecordinghere.About the Expert: Bianca Ruspi, DVMBianca Ruspi, DVM, is a third-year resident in equine surgery at Rood & Riddle Equine Hospital in Lexington, Kentucky. She attended the University of Kentucky (UK), in Lexington, for her undergraduate degree and Cornell University, in Ithaca, New York, for veterinary school. She is interested in orthopedic surgery and joint disease and is pursuing a PhD at UK's Gluck Equine Research Center following her residency.0 Comments 0 Shares 176 Views
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THEHORSE.COMWill Soaking My Horses Hay Remove Nutrients?Soaking your horses hay can also remove other nutrients. | Alexandra BeckstettQ:I soak my horses hay to reduce sugar levels because he has equine metabolic syndrome (EMS). Does soaking also remove important nutrients I need to replace?A:Soaking hay can be a great management tactic for horses with EMS by removing some water-soluble carbohydrates (WSC). However, soaking also leaches other nutrients, making it important to evaluate the overall diet. Soaking EMS Horses HayFor EMS horses, soak hay 30 minutes in warm water or one hour in cold water for best results. Longer soaking increases nutrient loss and, in warm weather, can raise the risk of microbial contamination such as mold.Fully submerge the hay, keep it out of direct sunlight, drain it thoroughly, and feed it to the horse immediately.Filling Nutritional Gaps in Your EMS Horses DietHay alone rarely meets a horses vitamin and mineral requirements, whether its soaked or not. Depending on hay quality, your horse might also need additional protein.A hay analysis can help determine next steps. Most adult horses do well on hay containing 10-12% crude protein (CP). If you have a growing horse, or a horse in heavy work, he will need more CP. If your hay provides adequate protein for your horse, you can rely on a vitamin/mineral supplement to fill the nutritional gaps in the hay for your metabolic horse.Safely Feeding a Ration BalancerIf your EMS horse needs a protein-fortified ration balancer to meet his nutritional requirements in combination with the hay, be sure each meal does not exceed 0.1 g nonstructural carbohydrates (NSC) per kilogram body weight (BW).Here is an example calculation:NSC content of the ration balancer is 13% on a dry matter (DM) basisMultiply the NSC content by the feeding rate:(0.13 NSC) x (454 g) = 59.02 g NSCDivide NSC in grams by the horses body weight:59.02 g NSC/500 kg BW = 0.12 g NSC/kg BWThe amount exceeds 0.1 g NSC/kg BW, which means youd divide the ration balancer amount this EMS horse needs into two meals. The result, a NSC content of 0.06 g NSC/kg BW/meal, is within the recommended safe guidelines.Take-Home MessageHay alone will not meet a horses nutrient requirements, and soaking hay to reduce sugars does leach additional nutrients. To ensure your horse does not develop nutritional deficiencies, test your hay to determine the nutritional content and choose either a vitamin/mineral premix or protein-fortified ration balancer to meet his nutritional needs. Claim your promo code for products in Equithrive's Easy Keeper collection: MetaCare, Metabarol, Vitamin E or Hoof. Name(Required) First Last Email(Required) By clicking submit I consent to Equine NetworksPrivacy Policy and Terms of Serviceand I represent that I am over 16 years old.0 Comments 0 Shares 172 Views
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Who remembers John Whitaker & Milton?Two legends in one video.0 Comments 0 Shares 182 Views
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