Pet Care Consultancy

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This is brilliant
01/02/2026

This is brilliant

AFFECTIONATE NEGLECT

Or: Why My Horses Stand in the Rain and I Let Them

My horses are, by some definitions, affectionately neglected.

That description only feels uncomfortable if care is understood as constant intervention.
They are not endlessly groomed, pruned, corrected, adjusted or entertained. They are not managed minute-to-minute to satisfy a human sense of order, optimisation or visible diligence. They are provided with food, water, shelter, social contact, space, and careful observation. After that, they are largely allowed to get on with being horses.

They have shelter. Proper shelter. Dry, wind-proof, unremarkable shelter.
And sometimes they choose not to use it.
They will stand out in sideways rain, in wind that rattles gates, while a perfectly adequate shelter sits empty behind them.
That is not neglect.
That is choice.

Horses are behaviourally complex grazing animals with a strong drive for environmental control. When given options, they do not always choose what looks sensible to us. They choose based on airflow, visibility, herd positioning, habit, thermoregulation, insects, footing, or simple preference. These decisions are not random. They are part of an intact regulatory system.

Affectionate neglect, in this context, means observing those choices rather than overriding them. It means tracking patterns over time rather than reacting to isolated moments. It means intervening when comfort, health, injury risk or environmental extremes genuinely require it – and stepping back when they do not.
This distinction matters.

THE SCIENCE OF CONTROL AND STRESS

The relationship between control and stress in animals is well established. Research into learned helplessness shows that passivity does not arise from laziness or temperament, but from the absence of control. What animals actually learn is agency. When control is present, neural responses differ markedly, particularly in regions involved in stress regulation. When it is absent, animals show behavioural inhibition, heightened anxiety, or shutdown.

In horses, this plays out in subtler ways. Chronic stress without control can lead to what is termed allostatic overload – a state where the systems responsible for regulation become exhausted. This does not always present as elevated cortisol. In compromised welfare states, horses often show blunted stress responses, reduced reactivity, and behavioural withdrawal. Quiet does not necessarily mean calm.

Environmental enrichment studies consistently show the opposite pattern. Horses with access to choice, movement, social contact and varied environments show reduced fearfulness, improved learning performance, lower tactile sensitivity, and greater behavioural flexibility. These effects persist over time. The animal's baseline changes.

WHAT OVERMANAGEMENT LOOKS LIKE

Constant low-level management removes decision-making from the horse. Over time, this reduces behavioural adaptability and increases baseline vigilance. The horse appears compliant, but is often internally braced, reactive, or quietly shut down. Comparative studies between stabled horses and those with turnout and social access show clear differences in posture, behaviour, rest patterns and stress indicators.

Horses allowed to make frequent, low-stakes decisions show a different profile entirely.
Mine are calm, not dulled.
Settled, not switched off.
Interested, not hypervigilant.
They notice new things.
They assess them.
They do not immediately escalate into fear responses.
Curiosity replaces startle.
Orientation replaces flight.

This is not temperament luck. It is a predictable outcome of an environment where autonomy is preserved wherever possible. Horses that spend their days making small decisions – where to stand, who to stand with, when to move, what to attend to – tend to cope better when larger challenges arise.

WHY IT MATTERS

The mechanism is simple. Horses evolved to move, graze, and make continuous low-level decisions for most of the day. Domestication has not removed that requirement. When those opportunities disappear, frustration and dysregulation appear instead, often expressed as stereotypies or heightened reactivity. These are not behavioural flaws. They are signals.

Affectionate neglect is not absence of care.
It is care that knows when to be still.
It is observation that tracks welfare over weeks, not worry that responds to weather.
It is trust that a horse making choices all day does not need to be managed into calmness.
So yes. Mine are affectionately neglected.
They are loved.
They are safe.
They are observed carefully and interfered with sparingly.

And they are trusted to decide, sometimes, that standing in the rain is exactly where they want to be.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

– Horses have a strong drive for environmental control – their choices aren't random, they're part of intact regulation

– Learned helplessness develops from absence of control, not from temperament or laziness

– Chronic stress without control can lead to shutdown, not just arousal – quiet doesn't always mean calm

– Environmental enrichment (choice, movement, social access) produces measurable improvements in fearfulness, learning, and behavioural flexibility

– Constant low-level management reduces decision-making opportunities and can increase baseline vigilance

– Horses allowed frequent low-stakes decisions show better stress resilience and adaptability

– Affectionate neglect means observing patterns over time and intervening only when welfare genuinely requires it

05/11/2025

Walking is just one part of my business but it is something I love, whatever the weather!

🍁 This morning I took out these four angels and we had a lovely time sloshing in the water and mud and autumn leaves 🍁

Monday to Friday is now fully booked, but message me to join the waiting list - or contact me for WEEKEND availability

Boasting post!✍️Thrilled to say I was short listed and then made runner up in the National Association of Writers and Gr...
06/09/2025

Boasting post!
✍️
Thrilled to say I was short listed and then made runner up in the National Association of Writers and Groups competition for my entry!
✍️
It is a comedy piece called “How to survive a Pony Club rally in ten easy steps”
It is very much tongue in cheek and was lots of fun to write.
Now back to writing the book, hopefully out later this month.
✍️

Did you know I am a cat lover too? Drop me a message if you are planning a holiday and I can visit your cats daily or tw...
05/09/2025

Did you know I am a cat lover too?
Drop me a message if you are planning a holiday and I can visit your cats daily or twice daily.
✔️ fuss
✔️ feeding
✔️ litter tray
Fair pricing and reliable service
DBS checked and competent
(Alrewas and surrounding villages only)

New horse owner consultationsFriendly and practical advice on:🐴 horse care and safety 🐴 time and money commitments🐴 jarg...
04/09/2025

New horse owner consultations

Friendly and practical advice on:
🐴 horse care and safety
🐴 time and money commitments
🐴 jargon and ‘rules’ explained

For those new to horse ownership and those about to take the leap

Confidential and caring advice with on-going support, in person or over the telephone.
Message me for details

🫵 New (and newish) horse owners! I need your help 🙏 👩‍💻 I’m writing a book for non-horsey people thinking about buying a...
10/08/2025

🫵 New (and newish) horse owners! I need your help 🙏

👩‍💻 I’m writing a book for non-horsey people thinking about buying a horse or pony for the first time, either for their children or themselves. Thinking back, if you’d read a similar book before you bought your first pony, what would you want to read in it?

When I come across people thinking of buying a horse, the first things they ask are:
🐴 How much of my time will it take up?
🐴 What is it going to cost me?

I address this in my book (with no holds barred honesty) and I’ve set out a bit of a how-to in terms of feeding, rugging, routines, worming, first aid and livery yard politics. I’ve covered vet / dentist / farrier / physio visits and preparation. (I’ve pointed out that actual hands-on experience is a must too).
This is a book for novice horse owners who don’t want a children’s book, or a handbook written by a cavalry officer in 1980 (which is all that WH Smith’s seem to stock).

👩‍💻 What would be real gems of information that you would have loved to know before embarking on horse ownership?
Please help me out and let me know - direct message me or comment below 🙏

I also need a title.
This is coming out as an ebook in September 2025. Would you have been more likely to read an ebook or a paperback?

Now taking dog walking bookings for September. Regular slots available on certain days for private and semi-private walk...
02/08/2025

Now taking dog walking bookings for September.
Regular slots available on certain days for private and semi-private walks of 30 and 60 minutes.
Some weekend and evening availability.
🐕 Message me with any queries 🐕

Alison Hallett is a pet care consultant specialising in horses and dogs, with BA(Hons) Equine Studies and MSc Animal Health & Welfare.
Fully insured and DBS checked.

Have you tried recording your dog walks in a journal? 🐶 capture memories🐶 track health and behaviour🐶 stay motivated to ...
12/07/2025

Have you tried recording your dog walks in a journal?
🐶 capture memories
🐶 track health and behaviour
🐶 stay motivated to walk more!
🐶 identify triggers on routes
🐶 help dog walkers/ sitters/ vets with exercise record

I’ve made a lovely journal which is available on Amazon now for £6.99 🙏

Every walk is a chance to connect, explore, and create lasting memories with your four-legged best friend. is a heartwarming journal designed to help you capture those special moments—whether it's a new route discovered, a silly squirrel chase, or just the quiet joy of walking side by side. ...

23/06/2025

Here is Jed enjoying the flowers from the top of thistles.
Have you noticed your horse or pony chomping away at these spiky plants?
Why? Thistles are really good for equine liver and kidney health. They also aid digestion and support the immune system!
Just beware of yellow thistle flowers, as these can be toxic.

Address

49 Wellfield Road, Alrewas
Burton Upon Trent
DE137EZ

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