The diagnostic machines have been moved aside. The vet, trainer and owner are gathered around the horse, all eyes focused on the offending limb. The verdict has been decreed – two months stall rest. Anyone who has owned horses has undoubtedly witnessed or experienced this depressing scenario. In this article, I will outline the psychological impact for horses on stall rest, what can be done to ameliorate their psychological distress, and discuss positive reinforcement training to turn the stall rest sentence into something bearable, and even beneficial.

The Psychological Toll of Confinement

Horses have been evolutionarily designed to move, foraging in herds over vast and sparse grazing territories to gain their nutritional requirements. Our modern day management practices already challenge this drive for movement. So, when an injured horse is confined to stall rest, we run the risk of exhausting our horse’s ability to cope with human-centred management practices.

Horses are even less suited to solitary confinement, which is also contrary to typical management practices. A horse’s need for affiliation is woven into its genetic fabric, having evolved to form life-long social bonds with herd mates. Horses that are separated from other horses can often manage with human interaction as a second-best. Stall-bound horses are habitually cut off from equine contact, which is compounded by the subsequent diminishment of human contact.

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