
Native plants and animals can serve both utilitarian and delightful functions on horse
properties. Woods’ roses, which smell wonderful and are an important food source for certain
animals, grow in many parts of the United States.
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Did you know that there are a great many wonderful ways that
plants and animals can actually work for you on a horse property? Douglas fir
trees, willows, and dogwoods can sop up a wet area. Violet green swallows can do
bug patrol, eating several thousand flies, moths, mosquitoes, and other bugs
each day—more than any bug-zapper! Bats will conduct nightly bug raids, racking
up thousands of more bug deaths. Native roses in a hedgerow along your driveway
can welcome visitors with their sweet smell.
Native plants and animals can serve both utilitarian and
delightful aesthetic functions on horse properties—all the while saving you time
and money, and reducing your impact on the environment.
Why Go Native? Native plants are the ones that grow in your area naturally.
They have lots of advantages over their non-native cousins when it comes to
landscaping. They’re better adapted to local climate and soil conditions and are
more insect- and disease-
resistant than non-natives—a bonus for you because
you’re less likely to need pesticides or fertilizers to help them along.
We don’t have to look hard to see that exposure to pesticides
is being linked daily to such frightening disorders as nerve damage in adults
and cancer in children. Chemicals used outdoors often end up in our surface
waters, where they can harm fish and other aquatic wildlife or become a human
health issue. The bottom line is simple: any way we can reduce chemical use in
our lives and around our horses is a good thing for everyone and everything.
After the first few years of a little extra watering, native
plants are ready to go "on their own," requiring only a minimal amount of care
and no special watering, except perhaps under unusual circumstances like
drought. Going native is an important water conservation technique—and a time
and money saver for you! Native plants generally cost less to buy than
non-native landscaping plants and are equally attractive.
| Bountiful Benefits |
| Eliminate boggy areas with strategic
planting.Create dust, wind, and visual screens using
hardy natives.Shade barns and paddocks with deciduous
trees that let the sun shine through in winter.Provide habitat for beneficial insect- and
rodent-eating birds and animals.Control soil erosion and prevent
run-off. |
Habitat—Home-Sweet-Home All living things need a place to live, find food, and
reproduce. When we take away natural vegetation for our own use, we take away
those areas for other living creatures. Native plants offer food and shelter,
called "habitat," to a variety of native animals.
Habitat loss is the greatest threat to wildlife and we are
losing wildlife habitat at an alarming rate. According to the Biodiversity
Project in Madison, Wisconsin, one million acres of open space is being lost to
urban sprawl each year. The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Office of Migratory
Bird Management reports that in the contiguous United States, 99% of the
original eastern United States forests have been cut, 95% of tall grass prairies
have been permanently destroyed, and more than 50% of all wetlands have been
drained or filled.
So what can horse owners do about loss of wildlife habitat?
Every little bit helps. By using native plants, the ones that
animals are adapted to living in and getting food from, we give some habitat
back to animals. At the same time, we can put some of those critters to work for
us—chasing bugs and rodents, or providing us with entertainment and
enjoyment.
Let’s examine some things horse owners can do to put both
plants and animals to work, and how we can help each other.

Water-loving plants, such as willow, dogwood, cottonwood or aspen, can be used in vegetated swales that channel away surface water, such as the one to the right of this horse paddock.
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Minimize Mud Native plants and trees can help dry up an annoying wet area or
be the first line of defense in intercepting run-off from the hillside behind
your property. Many trees use quite a lot of water each day. For example, a
mature Douglas fir can use from 125 to 150 gallons a day. Other types of
water-loving plants include willow, dogwood, cottonwood, aspen, and cedar. Check
with one of the sources for native plants listed with this article for specific
recommendations on plants suitable for your area and soils.
Other ideas for using water-loving natives include vegetated
swales that channel away surface water or, if placed down slope from your horse
paddock, they can pick up excess water and nutrient run-off.
Dust Barriers, Screens & Buffers If you want to be a good neighbor, use native plants to help
cut down on blowing dust from your arena polluting your neighbor’s property.
Check with one of the agencies listed with this article for recommendations on
species of plants to use for your buffer. Those same agencies can also help you
with your buffer design. To help cut down on blowing dust, generally a buffer of
at least 20 feet deep is recommended. It should include evergreens, deciduous
trees, and shrubs.
A row of evergreens also makes a nice privacy screen between
you and your neighbor, who may not enjoy viewing your horse paddocks as much as
you do.

Many conservation districts hold yearly tree sales, offering hardy natives at a low cost to
encourage planting. These agencies should be able to provide information and assistance
with buffer designs, erosion control techniques, and stream bank restorations.
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Summer Shade & Winter Sun Well-placed deciduous trees and shrubs around your barn and
paddocks can provide cooling shade in the summer, while the bare branches in the
winter allow the warming rays from the sun to reach through to your horses.
Control Erosion & Run-off Trees and shrubs perform an important function of holding
valuable topsoil in place, keeping it from getting washed away by rain or wind
and potentially causing a surface or ground water problem. If you are raising
pasture grass, protecting valuable topsoil is paramount. Plants need soil and
nutrients to be healthy, so put those native plants to work as a filter strip to
catch nutrients and hold topsoil in place. In addition, maintaining a healthy
pasture is a great erosion control and nutrient management tool.
Native plants have an important and useful role around streams,
ponds, wetlands, and other water bodies. Trees and undergrowth are nature’s
system for filtering run-off contaminants, such as nutrients from manure and
sediment from mud.
Another crucial function vegetation serves is to help prevent
soil erosion and to supply food and shelter for fish and other aquatic life. The
overhead canopy trees keep water cool. When these natural elements are
destroyed, a toxic environment is created for fish and other stream life since
cool water is able to carry more oxygen than warm water, which benefits fish.

Protect trees by planting them outside of confinement areas and pastures, keeping them away from teeth and hooves. Trees inside these areas should be protected to the end of their “drip zone,” the tips of their branches. This can be done in a number of creative ways, from fencing to physical barriers of large rocks or logs.
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Banish Bugs & RodentsAs horse owners, we often wrongly believe we are destined to
put up with flies and insects. Encouraging insect-eating birds to move into your
yard and barn area by providing habitat is an excellent means for reducing the
flying insect population. Swallows, for example, can be a tremendous asset to
horse places—one swallow consumes thousands of insects per day. During the
spring and summer, violet green, cliff, and barn swallows can be seen and heard
diving, darting, and chirping on horse properties throughout much of the United
States. These happy birds will use horse and dog hair set out in tufts for
making their nests. Nesting boxes specific to the type of swallows in your area
can be built or purchased and placed according to recommendations. Consult the
source list for bird nest boxes in this article for more information. Other
types of insect-eating birds include many other types of swallows, bluebirds,
and purple martins.
Reduce the nocturnal insect population by encouraging bats to
take up residence nearby. Bats play an important part in every healthy
environment and will eat the nocturnal flying insects that plague our horses
(and us) at night, such as mosquitoes. One bat can eat hundreds of mosquitoes in
an hour. They also eat other agricultural pests, such as corn borers, cutworm
moths, potato beetles, and grasshoppers.
In Europe, bats are highly valued for their insect control
capabilities and are reported to have been protected for more than 60 years.
Europeans build and display bat houses much the way we build purple martin
houses in the Midwest.
Bat houses can be placed on a barn, pole, tree, or the side of
a house. The best habitat for bats is within a half-mile of a stream, lake, or
wetland. Bat houses need to be placed by early April and it can take up to two
years for a bat colony to find your house. Contrary to popular belief, most bats
do not carry rabies. You have a better chance of winning your state lottery than
getting bitten by a bat with rabies, according to the Organization for Bat
Conservation website, www.batconservation.org.
Encourage larger birds, such as owls, hawks, and falcons, which
prey on problem rodents, by protecting large trees and snags that provide
housing for these predators. Some of these birds will also do well in nest
boxes, which again are easy to buy or build—check the resource lists in this
article for specifics. The primary method for protecting trees is to plant
outside of confinement areas and pastures to keep trees away from livestock
teeth and hooves. Trees inside these areas should be protected to the end of
their "drip zone," or the tips of their branches. Protection around trees can be
constructed in several creative ways, including fencing and physical barriers of
large rocks or logs.
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| Some plants, including natives, can be toxic to horses. Here
are a few resources on this important subject.
• Weeds of
the West by Tom D. Whitson • Horse
Owner’s Field Guide to Toxic Plants by Sandra Burger • Cornell University maintains an excellent website that lists
toxic plants: http:// www.ansci.cornell.edu/plants/horselist.html • Most counties have a noxious weed control department. These
departments can usually identify toxic and non-native plants, as well as
recommend control techniques. Also try contacting your local conservation
district or cooperative extension service office. |
Go Native for Beauty & FunNative plants can provide attractive landscaping while
sheltering and providing food for wildlife that serenade and entertain us.
Watching wildlife in action can be fun and relaxing for everyone. Your habitat
may attract beautiful songbirds, butterflies, frogs, and other interesting
wildlife for viewing—right outside your barn door. The addition of a simple
watering point, such as a stock tank with "steps," will further encourage birds
and wildlife.
All this just might increase your property value, too. The U.S.
Fish & Wildlife Service Office of Migratory Bird Management reports that
homes in neighborhoods with large trees for birds are worth more than similar
homes in neighborhoods without trees.
So make a plan to "go native" and see how native plants and animals can
become beneficial workers on your horse property today!
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