Foxmead

Foxmead A family hobby farm. Horses, chickens, sheep and ducks. We love the outdoors and the quiet, laid back country life. Stephen Life Coaching ( a long time ago.)

Over 35 years as a Riding Instructor &
Home to K. I have been teaching children and adults since I was 14 years old. I have taught at summer camp, at a college summer riding program, at Wellspring Farm in Delaware, Fair Winds Stables in Rising Sun and at my own farm here in Oxford. I enjoy new riders, back again riders, and horse lovers. We do not show. We are not fancy. I do believe in a correct

and balanced seat and light hands. I believe proper position and commands equal a safe and therefore a happy ride. I will teach you to ride so that you can show if that is your wish. I will also just keep you riding for fun! We are a small family hobby farm and operate as such. It's a great place to chill, experience the interesting bends of hobby farm life, and learn to ride. Come and see us!

04/06/2026

If you want to close your exercise rings in 15 minutes, herd sheep

Truth! I wouldn’t trade it…BUT!
02/01/2026

Truth! I wouldn’t trade it…BUT!

Before you get into horses or decide you want to keep them at home instead of boarding, especially in winter, take these things into consideration:

Winter is not cozy barn vibes and hot cocoa. Winter is survival mode

• Water freezes. Constantly. Buckets, troughs, hoses, automatic waterers. You will be breaking ice multiple times a day or running heaters that can fail, short out, or spike your electric bill.

• You are hauling water. In the dark. In the cold. Sometimes multiple times a day. Snow, ice, mud, all of it.

• Mud season is real. And it is relentless. Everything is wet, slick, heavy, and filthy. Your boots, your clothes, your horses.

• Hay usage skyrockets. Horses eat more to stay warm. That means higher feed costs and more frequent hay deliveries, which can be delayed by weather.

• Your pasture is basically unusable. You are feeding hay full time, managing sacrifice areas, and trying not to destroy your land.

• Blanketing is not optional for many horses. That means on, off, change weights, fix straps, deal with ripped blankets, soaked blankets, and frozen buckles.

• Ice is dangerous. For you and your horses. One bad slip can mean a hospital visit or months of rehab for a horse.

• Vet and farrier access can be limited. Weather delays happen. Emergencies do not care about forecasts.

• You still have to go out there. Every day. Sick, tired, holidays, snowstorms, freezing rain. There is no calling out. In fact, even if you hire people, they will probly call out, leaving it to you anyway in bad weather.

• Your equipment suffers. Frozen gates, snapped hoses, dead batteries, tractors that will not start, heaters that quit at 2 am.

• Your time commitment doubles. What takes 20 minutes in summer can take over an hour in winter.

• Your costs increase while your enjoyment often decreases. Less riding, more maintenance, more stress.

None of this is to scare you. It’s to make sure you are informed.

Horses at home can be amazing. They can also be exhausting, expensive, and unforgiving in winter if you are not prepared.

If you are thinking about it, plan for worst-case scenarios, not best-case Pinterest versions.

Winter does not care how much you love horses.

This is shared with respect for the work, not frustration with it.
Jaks Stables

01/26/2026

Boyz on Monday after being locked up since Saturday night.

Farm Happenings: The January thaw means a few days off from blankets! And after a two month hiatus, a gift of the first ...
01/07/2026

Farm Happenings: The January thaw means a few days off from blankets! And after a two month hiatus, a gift of the first egg of 2026!

12/27/2025

Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!

12/16/2025
12/16/2025
12/16/2025

12/16/2025

I’m often asked about horse blankets by non-horse people. I love this!
12/12/2025

I’m often asked about horse blankets by non-horse people. I love this!

𝐖𝐢𝐥𝐝 𝐡𝐨𝐫𝐬𝐞𝐬 𝐝𝐨𝐧’𝐭 𝐧𝐞𝐞𝐝 𝐛𝐥𝐚𝐧𝐤𝐞𝐭𝐬, 𝐬𝐨 𝐲𝐨𝐮𝐫𝐬 𝐝𝐨𝐞𝐬𝐧’𝐭 𝐞𝐢𝐭𝐡𝐞𝐫. . .

If I had a dollar for every time someone pulled out this tired argument, I could finally build that new barn I have been dreaming about.

So I am here to set the record straight. Comparing domestic horses to wild horses is not the slam-dunk some people think it is. Rather, it falls apart once you get past the surface because it was never solid logic to begin with.

Yes, ‘wild’ horses, moose, elk, antelope, and whatever other critters people like to use in this argument don’t wear blankets. But here’s the part that is conveniently left out: they survive by paying a price. There is no safety net. Nature is not kind. And when a wild horse isn’t thriving, nature removes it. And it can be a painful and drawn out process.

Thankfully, domestic horses don’t live this way. But the trade off is that they are required to live within the constraints of human expectations.

They live in limited space, depend entirely on what we provide, and do not have the ability to roam miles to find shelter, better forage, or protection from the elements. Some drop weight dramatically in winter. Some have metabolic disorders, clipped coats, low body conditions, or age-related problems. We groom them, ride them, and many have been bred for refinement and traits that excel in the show pen, not rugged survival.

And here’s the biggest difference: our responsibility to domestic horses is not to simply allow them to survive but rather we have a responsibility to help them thrive.

I am a huge advocate for letting a horse be a horse. But it is not always that simple. Humans domesticated them so it has become our duty to manage them.

Blanketing is not about pampering. It’s not about fashion. It’s not about treating horses like fragile glass figurines. It’s about understanding the individual needs of the animal in front of you. Some horses will be perfectly fine naked all winter. Others will burn calories they don’t have, shiver for hours, lose weight, or struggle quietly.

Will they survive without a blanket?
Most likely.

But will they thrive?
That depends on the horse. And as their caretakers, it’s our job to know the difference.

So stop using that lazy “wild horses don’t need blankets” line.

We’re in the 21st century. We have knowledge, tools, and compassion. Use them. Do what’s best for your horse, not what a wild animal has no choice but to endure solely based on principle.

And I want to be clear. I think MANY horses do just fine without blankets, just not ALL horses. And that is the distinction I am trying to make here.

Cheers,
Dr. DeBoer

I am also super grateful for Untamed Souls Photography (link to their page in the comments!) for letting me use their picture in this post. While I pride myself in creating my own visuals, I didn’t have anything I loved for this post and her picture captured my vision perfectly!

https://www.facebook.com/share/1Cmm3YCV3q/?mibextid=wwXIfr

10/19/2025

Welcome to our Name Change. Hawkshire was a thought I had and worked for. Life changed. Foxmead is a dream being realized with a true partner. Life 2.0.
So while outwardly we are the same small family farm - we are transformed from the inside out! Welcome to Foxmead!

Address

Alice Lane
Oxford, PA
19363

Telephone

+13022933616

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