I'm trying peat bedding, and chronicaling my adventure... for your reading pleasure

Periodically I have to throw out my unsoiled sawdust from the run-in shed. The horses come and go 24/7. With the wet/dry weather we’ve been having, they track in mud which eventually dries and becomes quite dusty. When I fluff the bedding and disappear in a cloud of dust, I know its time to change out the bedding.

The local Agway is my go-to for sawdust but they were out, and won’t be restocking for 2 weeks. Huge blocks of peat moss however, were on sale. With torrential rains looming, and the dust being as bad as it is, I needed to do something. I’ve long been curious about peat bedding so figured now was as good as time as any to try. If its a colossal failure, I can always spread it on the paddocks to help out the dry, sandy soil.

So I bed the shed deeply in peat this morning, about 6-8". I’m a semi-deep litterer - I pick poo daily and strip weekly.

Being accustomed to bright fragrant pine, peat was… interesting. Looks and smells like fresh compost - which I happen to love the smell of, but it was surreal to see it in the shed, looking for all the world like a big pile of dirt. Very small particles and crumbly.

It was moderately dusty. I watered it and fluffed it repeatedly.

It was heaven to walk on though, springy and soft.

My aged gelding makes lakes, so observing the absorbancy will be interesting. As well as any ammonia smell.

There is a bit of lore that its excellent for thrushy feet. My 34 yr old gets around in an unusual fashion, but it works for him and he still is as exuberant as the day I met him. He wears his feet oddly however, which makes for a never ending battle of mild thrush. I’ll be interested to note any improvements on that front.

Sooooooo… I know peat is unconventional bedding, but I also know from past thread searches that there are some users here. I would LOVE to hear any words of wisdom. Purdy please. With sugar on top. :smiley:

Jury is out whether I will love this, or hate it. Figured I’d blog my adventure here in case anyone else is curious.

I can’t wait to see how this goes!

That is what we used decades ago in Souther Pines, NC.

Worked fine, other than not being able to find what was horse apple pieces and what peat moss, it is the same color.

Once you get used to dark bedding not being old bedding that needs to go, you will like it.

The price is cheap because not many use it for bedding.
If more start, it will sky rocket.

I used peat for several seasons. If your horses are coming an going, expect it to track. It will keep packing as you add more but there seems to be a limitless amount of absorption. It never smelled of ‘pee’ but in the Spring it is hard work to dig it out to put it on the garden unless you have a tractor.
Some people hate it because it is dark in colour. New peat moss needs to be kept damp or it is very dusty… Not wet, dampish. It makes a lovely mattress, is quick to clean every day - just pick up the manure and any really soggy spots. Overall, it is an excellent bed…warm and soft.

I use Peat Moss Bedding for an ICE STALL for 'laminitic"'issues

They use Peat bedding across the pond ~ I believe ?!

I use bales of peat moss bedding for my ‘laminitic events’

to construct an ICE STALL for a sore horse or pony …

Stall should be matted … works better when cleaning this out after a few days

strip stall and add bales of Peat moss … six to eight whatever to make it comfortable …

Add bags [B]of ICE … many at first and mix into bedding … add additonal bags of ICE as needed ~

[/B]This is something that has really helped my Cushings mare when she has been hit with unexpected ‘laminitic’ episodes …

I have never used peat bedding in any other situation but * I will try it now after buck22 reports her results .

Thinking maybe for my run-in-shed ??? Worth a try !

I’ve used peat moss before as well. Never watered it though as it holds tons of water and the dust soon settles after it’s been used for a few days. Easy to clean with most horses and a great thing to use for horses that eat straw bedding and no ammonia smell.

You will have to be more careful about brushing though, especially in winter - it will cling to long coats.

have used it on and off for years. Its ugly, but the horses seem to find it comfortable and it does a great job of absorbing any ammonia smell. The bales will freeze solid in the winter though so you have to be careful where you store it.

I’m looking forward to your reports! I’ve considered trying peat for my mare who pees a lot.

I remember using it, and mixing it with vermiculite. it mad wonderful growing material when done. But wasn’t always easy to get, and at that time cost more than the sawdust that was available.

I’m not sure I’d want to use it as bedding. I lived for a while in a peat area and so the horses were living on peat land. It played heck with their feet. Even the smallest little holes would end up being huge cavities with the very fine peat dust working its way up into the hoof.
They also got filthy rolling in it.
Within 3 months of moving off the peat I saw an improvement in their feet. My farrier was very pleased that I moved!

So, three days into my experiment and I can’t say I’m unhappy. Still odd seeing brown dirt-like bedding, but so far thats the only real downside.

In terms of cost, its the same as sawdust bedding by me, so a lateral move in that department.

As far as dust, there is some, but its low lying and heavy, it settles very quickly and doesn’t puff up like dirt/dust. Even when I use my leaf blower to clean up, the blowing dust stays low to the ground and settles very quickly - doesn’t hang in the air or make a cloud. The run in shed is dark brown so I wouldn’t see it clinging to the walls even if it did.

Does a REMARKABLE job with urine. Horses stayed mainly shed-bound for 2 days with the heavy rain. I know my aged gelding peed in there, he always makes lakes, and with his advanced age and the high protein diet he is on the ammonia smell can be noxious in short order. With the peat, I simply cannot find or smell any sign of urine. Very neat.

As far as poop, my guys pooped outside this time, but most storms they do leave a few piles indoors. Even if churned up, I cannot imagine having a hard time picking apples, this stuff is easier to sift than sawdust.

As far as tracking, it seems to track less than sawdust - or I just notice it less because its dirt-colored :lol: At any rate, I’m not experiencing nearly the loss I anticipated.

As far as thrush, its too soon to tell anything, but a nose inspection of hooves this am turned up more peat-y smell than thrush-y smell, so I’m taking that as a good sign. Soles look surprisingly bright and creamy with a nice patina - like that packed-yesterday-in-Magic-cushion look - despite our mud. Another good sign.

Horses have not yet figured out they can lay down in this stuff though, haha. I may have to sprinkle shavings on top to convince them. Both horses love standing in it though.

I do have to be mindful where I sweep/blow out the barn however. The barn is in a low-lying spot and its almost constantly muddy. I am re-doing the entrance with gravel in a few days so I have to keep an eye on bedding being tracked onto my new gravel and making it soupy again.

I am excited to compost this stuff and spread it on the dry sandy spots of the paddocks. I think it will be a boon for the soil, and honestly, lack of compost-ability and accumulation of dust have been the two biggest gripes I have with sawdust.

I’m not ready to stock up yet for winter, but I am keeping an eye on sale prices and may get at least a few large bales before the sale ends.

Overall, not as unhappy as I worried I might be! Though, its early yet!

Oh and the run in is fully matted, I think that is surpremely helpful, otherwise it may just actually become dirt in time, haha.

We spent winters in Souther Pines only, but we didn’t have any hoof problems from the peat moss bedding.
We had turnout paddocks, but the horses only spent some hours out there during the day, so much of the time in their stalls.
Horses took naps in the peat moss just as they would with any other bedding.

We didn’t have a mud or flooding problem, most of the ground around was sandy.
Maybe in clay dirt the results may differ.

[QUOTE=phoebetrainer;7791770]
I’m not sure I’d want to use it as bedding. I lived for a while in a peat area and so the horses were living on peat land. It played heck with their feet. Even the smallest little holes would end up being huge cavities with the very fine peat dust working its way up into the hoof.
They also got filthy rolling in it.[/QUOTE]

I thnk that the spagnum peat moss as sold in the US is rather different from the “peat land” you are referrring to.

Some of the complains about peat arise from it being used inside barns - the sweeping/blowing raised the dust and it settles all lover the place and looks dark. That is why it needs to be kept a little damp, but I find that with the frequent additions, it gets walked into the older damp peat quickly enough.

It is very fine particulate and is not so good for them if dusty - same as sawdust.

For all the time you save in the winter, you make up for it in the spring when it has, eventually, to be cleaned out and put on the garden. I’d say you don’t want it tracked too far because of it getting soaked in rain and become gooey.

My horses are kept in/out and I just kept sweeping the stuff back into the stall.

I much prefer peat moss. I only switched to shavings because the price of peat moss went sky high. Are you saying that the price of peat moss has dropped?

Not environmentally friendly. From organicgardening.com:

Sphagnum moss grows so slowly that management for sustainable use is a significant challenge. At the average rate of 0.6 to 0.7 millimeter per year, Canadian peat bogs add 6 to 7 centimeters in depth (less than 3 inches) over the course of a century. It will require 3,000 years to amass the 2-meter depth needed to justify the costs of extraction. Under these conditions, a fully mined peat bog will not be able to support a second “harvest” for at least 3,000 years.

Can a resource that renews itself this slowly ever be considered sustainable? If we balk at cutting down 500-year-old trees in old-growth forests, should we accept the extraction of 3,000-year-old sphagnum moss from peat bogs?

Perhaps true of certain types of peat moss, but I have a hard time believing the peat moss I’m purchasing took 3000 years to establish. Seriously, if it was that precious and took that long to renew, it wouldn’t be cheaper than pine waste.

Janet, I don’t know if the price has come down, but I do know its no more expensive than pine sawdust by me, appx $6 per bag for shavings, or $12 per huge brick of peat. I forget the cf conversion, but I did do the math on the spot and end price per cf was near identical.

Here is what I found on peat

Environmental concerns

There are some people who are misinformed about the harvesting of peat moss. The CSPMA is committed to providing accurate information to the public on harvesting and environmental issues.

One common misconceived notion is that peat is “over harvested.” Statements like this are incorrect. Peat moss is not being over-harvested. Here are some important facts to set the record straight:

Harvest Issues

There are more than 270,000,000 acres, 25% of the world’s supply, of which our industry harvests on less than 40,000 acres, or one acre in 6,000.

Peat is renewable and in terms of its accumulation, peat in Canada is growing more than 70 times as fast as it is being harvested. [According to an issue paper entitled “Canadian Peat Harvesting and the Environment,” published by the North American Wetlands Conservation Council (Canada)]

As well, we know that under the right circumstances, sphagnum moss will re-establish itself on a harvested bog. Soon thereafter, from this collection of mosses, peat will accumulate, re-establishing a layer of peat that will continue to grow.

Because a single bog can be harvested for between 15 and 50 years before they are left for restoration, harvesting has been completed on less than 3,000 acres. There are good examples of harvested bogs in Canada where more than one foot of sphagnum moss has re-grown, unaided, during the 10 to 15 years since harvesting has ceased. These bogs look like and provide the functions of virgin bogs.

Even though Canada does not have peat supply concerns, the industry is looking for ways to accelerate peat bog regeneration. Until recently, peat bogs have been left to regenerate, a process that can take up to 20 years. New research in ways to restore bogs quickly, indicates that time can be shortened to five to eight years.

The research projects, in which the industry has invested over $4 million, include transplanting live sphagnum plants, seeding spores of sphagnum taken from live plants, and covering the harvested bog with the top spit from a living bog. This research is complete now and the results are excellent. From the techniques developed through the research, the research team, in cooperation with our Association, has produced a restoration instruction manual entitled Peatland Restoration Guide.

It will take hundreds of years to replace all the peat that was removed, but even while it’s growing we will have a peatland that resumes the most important functions of a bog:

filtering water,
acting as a water collection basin,
accumulating carbon, and
providing habitat for flora and fauna.

The one function we cannot replace is a virgin bog that stores geo-paleantological history. For that reason, it is important to identify bogs for conservation in all areas of Canada.

Peatlands will regenerate themselves and it is the policy of the Canadian peat industry, and supported by government, to ensure peat is a sustainable resource. The Canadian peat producers have adopted a strict Preservation and Reclamation Policy that calls for, among other things:

identifying bogs for preservation through environmental assessment;
using careful harvesting techniques so that restoration can be readily achieved;
leaving at least three feet of peat at the bottom of the bog; and
returning of harvested bogs to functioning wetlands.

There should be no concern with continuing to use peat moss as the base of growing media in North America. The resource is huge, the amount of extraction small by comparison and the industry and government are committed to sustainable development.

Price

With respect to pricing issues, the industry is very competitive and good supply is readily available. The current price gives the customer excellent value for the money.

http://www.peatmoss.com/blog/using-peat-moss/concerns/environmental-concerns/

I’m glad to read that buck, because I’ve always been under the impression that peat was a “nono” if you’re concerned about sustainability, even for use in gardens. Most of my gardening books (I have a ton) tell you how you can use peat, but that you shouldn’t.

Very interesting. Looking forward to your continued updates.

One time long ago I had a stud colt in my backyard about 3 miles from downtown Charlotte, NC (Chantilly neighborhood). After much thought and research I decided to use peat moss for bedding.

The stall did not stink, my neighbor asked me to PLEASE throw all of my used bedding over our fence onto his compost pile, and I did not have hordes of extra flies. Peat moss bedding helped me keep my colt inside a major city with no complaints. (Charlotte NC was sort of weird, you could keep a horse in the backyard so long you got a horse license tag, no other farm animals though.)

From my research the major drawback seemed to be that peat moss bedding can dull the shine on the horse’s coat, so I do not know if it would be suitable for horses that need that super gleaming coat for horse shows.