I'm afraid I can't offer you a direct answer to your question, but from my own experience, I can say this: the answer will vary depending on your grass. Here's how. We just got a horse and put her on one acre of what was formerly our front yard. While it didn't help that we had one of the worst droughts on record last year, so our grass was at the lowest possible point, it wasn't great grass to begin with. What's good for a yard is not necessarily good for a pasture. This was obvious when our horse tore up about a third or a little more of the pasture and turned it into a mud pit. Mind you, it didn't help that we got all of our summer rain in the winter, plus our winter rain as well, but comparing what our pasture looked like to what neighbors had made me realize we had a grass problem as much as a rain problem. My husband has said that it's important to have a thick matting of grass--almost like a sod--to support the wear and tear of a horse. We just recently fenced in a second acre on the back of our property and you can't imagine how fast that rough field got tore up with just one horse on it. It's nearly as bad as the front yard and she's only been on it two weeks--and it's not rained as much! That's because we didn't have the right grass back there. We did overseed it with a horse pasture mix of seed, but it still wasn't enough. I am coming to find out that making a pasture takes more than one bag of grass seed. We have just reseeded the front pasture with Kentucky fescue (recommended by the TN agriculture extension office for our climate), but we may need to try and reseed it once again this summer, not to mention overseeding with a fall grass at the end of summer. We're getting ready to open up a bit more of our yard and the grass in part of it is even worse (and part of it is the best grass we have--right over the field lines!). For that we have bought some weed killer so we can kill off most of what's back there and reseed in fescue. At the moment, despite great grass-growing weather, two acres is not quite supporting our one horse. However, I have heard that you can sometimes do an acre per horse. But certainly you can't do that unless you have good grass. A thick mat of grass is essential to keep the horse from simply trampling it into the mud (where it won't grow back). Also, grass your horse will eat is important. We apparently have two different kinds of grass in our best part of the yard. Our horse will mow one kind of grass down to a nub, and leave these odd islands of grass tall and untouched. To us it looks like exactly the same kind of grass, but she says no, it's not. Needless to say, if you have a pasture full of grass your horse won't eat, how many acres you have of it won't matter! Also, you notice we have two separate pastures. That's essential because you have to put the horse on one while reseeding and/or letting the other one grow up. If you let your horse mow the grass too low, it will struggle to grow again and may die all together. When grass dies, it leaves holes in the grass matting and those turn into mud holes pretty quick--and have a tendency to grow beyond the original size. So you have to rest a small pasture pretty often. Although you can relieve some of the problem if you have a barn where you can stable your horse. Our horse is turned out all of the time, so she's on the grass 24 hours a day. Even if she eats the exact same amount of grass as a horse that may only be turned out 12 hours a day, the extra hours of just walking on the grass causes damage. You might could keep an acre of grass going for longer before rotating off of it if you stable your horse at night. Personally, I'd say no less than two acres for a single horse--divided equally into two separate pastures. I don't know that having more pasturage will help reduce your hay bills any because it's so cold where you live, I imagine when winter hits, the grass is worth nothing. Here, even in the winter, horses can graze grass if it's still available; it doesn't die to the point of being completely worthless. The only benefit in the winter to having more acreage is that the horse is less likely to tear it up. If it's very wet where you live, then more acreage helps this problem. An acre is a bare minimum for keeping a horse turned out; don't make a pasture smaller than that unless it's only going to be used for a day or two before rotating the horse off. Otherwise you get a mudhole REAL quick. each horse usally needs two acres a piece.for example if had ten horses then you would need to have twenty acres.
How many acres do you need to own a horse in Raisinville Township, Monroe Michigan
255 acres as of 2007
Where I lived in Maryland it was required to have about an acre per horse, we had 2.5 acres and 2 horses lived comfortably on it, but it would be better if you could obtain about 2 acres just for the grass advantage. Hope this helps!
Alpena's area is 5,907.2 acres.
how many acres is needed to bluid a horse track?
they say: 2 acres per horse 1 and a 1/2 acres per pony 3/4's of an acre per minature
Approximately 1600.
You will need more acres per horse in the southern part of Alberta than the north. Average is around 4 acres per horse, and up to 1.5 acre per horse in the northern parts. Though that's on excellent quality pasture: stocking rates may be a bit less on less-quality pasture. Not to mention that horses need room to run, unlike cattle, so you will need to add on a couple extra acres in addition to the amount that they will graze.
You usually want at least 4 acres of land for the horse to be able to roam around.
HorsesHello,I do not know the specifik answer to that question but normally the rule is you must have at least 2 acres per horse. I suggest you ask someone who lives in your town.
I own a boat on Lake Michigan, and am certainly a "numbers guy." Lake Michigan and lakes of this size are so huge that they are measured not in acres, but typically in square miles. The Lake is 22,400 square miles which translates to 14,336,000 acreas of surface area. 5th largest lake in the world.
a coulple