My large animal veterinary medicine professor told us a story of a visit to a dairy barn in the middle of winter filled with milking cows, all with pneumonia.The farmer was perplexed, but my professor knew the answer.He took a hammer and broke open every closed window.Ventilation, the best way to keep the lungs healthy, was the moral of his story.I have always believed this.
There are some barns I go into in the winter where I can hardly breathe, and my eyes tear.I understand this is a sign of overfeeding carbohydrates, and the horse is destroying their proteins and excreting the resulting ammonia.But it also means that there was no ventilation in the barn.
There is poor barn ventilation if moisture accumulates on any surface in a closed barn in winter. Moisture in the barn air is because the horses are rebreathing their exhaled air, which is unhealthy. But it is worse when horses mix with other horses from different barns (an incoming new boarder or at a show). In addition, airborne diseases, such as strangles and influenza, travel between horses in the stagnant and moisture-laden air.
Let’s not forget the warm summer months.Keeping horses inside where no air circulation adds to rebreathing and disease. It also adds to overheating and the stress from this.Though rare because people don’t like to work in hot air with poor ventilation, these conditions occur in barns closed up for any reason in the summer. The horses are trapped and stressed like a dog left in a parked car with no open windows.Stress can lead to other problems.
Ventilation is important for ALL animals.If you are uncomfortable, then so are your horses.Ventilation is that simple.
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Slatted sides adds ventilation in this converted VA tobacco barn. Storage for equipment and bedding. Horses are below.Fans installed inside an outdoor shedLarge volume output ceiling fans created a gentle breeze in this barn keeping the horses cool and flies away. The roof line was also vented to allow for heated air to escape.A custom made cupola and opening skylights provide functional ventilation in this barn.These rods on the roof will melt the snow so it falls off as water, not chunks of sliding snow. Also note the large vent that draws out interior air.This is a floor fan that has been placed in the rafters of this Florida stall. It offers a large volume of airflow directly down on the horse along with fans mounted on the front wall.Rotating twin oscillating fans and a fire detector.Above the stall: CTV camera, Sprinkler head, ventilation fans, and abundant ambiant lighting and air flow.Beautiful design, fire sprinkler system, fire sensors, electrical conduit, ventilation fans beneath cupolas, skylights, decorative lighting and emergency lightingExterior stall doors, chains for eves trough downspouts, functional cupolas for ventilation, fire alarm systemSteel grating covers the windows near the ceiling.Every stall in this barn had this large fan in front of the stall raised on anything that would do the job.Stall wall with a sandwich board and the upper boards separated for ventilation. Carriage bolt heads do not need recessingConduit. The lighting is recessed and high but still in the center of the stall. Ceiling fans are common in Florida.Metal conduit and a robust fan attachmentVentilation headers in a south FL barn – angled so the hot sun rays cannot get in.This plastic window covering runs the length of the barn and can be raised during good weather. This is the mechanism to raise it.This plastic window covering runs the length of the barn and can be raised during good weather. The stalls are to the left and are surrounded by a jog ring inside the barn.This plastic window covering runs the length of the barn and can be raised during good weather.This plastic window covering runs the length of the barn and can be raised during good weather.2 insect spray heads extending from the wall, hardwood ceiling with 1 of several exhaust fans.Cut stone facade, outer walkway, rubber floor, screened outer wall, blowers fans set on corner-less stands.Solid barn wall, top vent, fans in every window.Stall interior in Wellington, FL. The ceiling fan oscillates distributing the flow of air evenly over the stall. The ceiling window adds light but not direct hot sun rays during summer. It is interesting that dirt accumulates along the edge of the ceiling.Overhead tube force air ventilatuin system in Alpharetta, GA – it is collapsed because the fan was not on.Overhead tube force air ventilatuin system in Alpharetta, GA – it is collapsed because the fan was not on. This is the fan box that draws air through a roof vent then directs the flow along the roof through the tube.Overhead tube force air ventilatuin system in Alpharetta, GA – it is collapsed because the fan was not on.Overhead tube force air ventilatuin system in Alpharetta, GACeiling fanMisting famStall fan mounted with bungie cords. Ceiling fan in backgroundRoof vents in an arenaHand made box to cover the plastic of this box famHand made box to cover the plastic of this box famHoles in a cinder block wall for ventilationThe rafters protect the light, fan and bug spray system from damage by a horse. May be harder to clean or maintain.Misting fan3 of these very large ceiling fans cool the covered arena at this Florida assisted riding arena.Ceiling mounted high velocity fanOverhead tube force air ventilatuin systemOverhead tube force air ventilatuin systemMisting fanMisting fan – portable with its own water reservoirMisting fan – portable with its own water reservoir
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