Species Appropriate Horse Keeping & Why Track Systems Work
Podcast #44
Track systems (perimeter grazing systems) can look deceptively simple… but when they’re designed well, they deliver something horses are wired for: friends, freedom, and forage… with movement built in.
In this episode, Dr Nerida is joined by the wonderful Dr Katherine Goldberg (DVM, LCSW), a veterinarian and clinical social worker, to unpack what “species-appropriate husbandry” actually means in the real world, and why track systems aren’t just a “weight loss tool” for good doers, but a way we can help horses to live in a way that truly honours their needs.
We talk about the concept of horses being behaviourally starving even when obese, the two welfare rules Katherine won’t budge on (forage available at all times and no solo horses), and how meeting these basics changes behaviour, safety, gut health, and the horse–human relationship.
You’ll also get practical, immediately usable setup guidance on track width (including the “twice the length of the longest horse” rule), why varying widths can create natural movement patterns, and how separating resources (water, hay, shelter) encourages that nomadic, forage-and-walk lifestyle horses evolved for.
Dr Katherine is the most beautiful human, driven by the desire to help us all create better, happier, more species-appropriate lives for our equine friends in which our horse-human relationships and horse goals, whatever they may be, can flourish!
If you’d like to get in contact with Dr Katherine, you can find her at horsesfirststewardship@gmail.com
And if you would like more information on what we do here at MyHappy.Horse you can find us over at https://www.myhappy.horse
Thanks so much for being here 💖💛