Relocating with a horse means rebuilding an entire care team in an unfamiliar place. The stall is the easy part.
Two to three months of lead time is not excessive. Good barns have waiting lists, and the barns with immediate availability sometimes have it for a reason.
Ask the barn who their vet and farrier are, and whether those practices are taking new clients. In some areas good farriers are booked solid. Establishing with a vet before you arrive is worth the phone call.
Expect a settling period. Keep the feed consistent through the move, watch water intake closely, and introduce the horse to its new herd gradually. Transport stress and a change of environment are a common prelude to minor illness — give it a fortnight of close attention.
Start two to three months out if you can. Good barns have waiting lists, and rushing the decision is how people end up somewhere unsuitable.
Partly. Video tours and calls help, but ask someone local to visit if you cannot. The things that matter are hard to see on a screen.
Who their vet and farrier are, and whether those professionals take new clients. Relocating means rebuilding a whole care team, not just finding a stall.
After, if you can. Settle yourself first so you can give the horse attention during its own adjustment.
Start two to three months out if you can. Good barns have waiting lists, and rushing the decision is how people end up somewhere unsuitable.
Partly. Video tours and calls help, but ask someone local to visit if you cannot. The things that matter are hard to see on a screen.
Who their vet and farrier are, and whether those professionals take new clients. Relocating means rebuilding a whole care team, not just finding a stall.
After, if you can. Settle yourself first so you can give the horse attention during its own adjustment.