Koco Ranch - Equine Facility

Koco Ranch - Equine Facility Koco Ranch is a relaxing & peaceful equine boarding facility all under one roof.

Amenities incl: 26 stalls, 8 paddocks, 2 indoor arenas, 3 wash areas, lounge w/bath, outdoor RP, outdoor arena, trail & obstacle course, bridle path & trailer parking.

04/04/2026

Please enjoy time with your family and friends during this Easter Weekend. Christ has risen.

Please have patience with your new horse.https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1BAgwPEAfR/
03/09/2026

Please have patience with your new horse.

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When a horse moves to a new home, people often ask, “How long does it take for them to settle in?”

The honest answer is that there is no single timeline. It depends on the individual horse, their past experiences, their temperament, their health, the environment they have arrived in, and the herd and humans around them.

But one thing is certain.
It is a significant transition for them.

In most cases, the process actually begins before they even arrive. Transport itself is demanding for a horse. Hours of balancing in a moving vehicle, unfamiliar noises, confinement, changes in temperature, and often limited access to water or forage all place strain on the body and nervous system. By the time a horse steps off the trailer, they may already be physically tired and mentally alert.

And then they arrive somewhere completely new.

The landscape is unfamiliar. The smells are different. The sounds are new. They do not yet know where the water is, where the safe resting places are, or where the boundaries of the land lie.

For horses, this is not simply about becoming comfortable. Their nervous system is constantly assessing safety and threat. Every sound, movement, smell, and interaction is information. They are mapping the land, noticing resources, observing the behaviour of other horses, and working out how this new environment functions.

At the same time, they are navigating the social world they have just entered.

For a horse joining an established herd, this can be one of the most challenging parts of the transition. Herds have existing relationships and patterns of interaction. When a newcomer arrives, those patterns shift as horses begin negotiating their relationships with one another and working out how to share space, resources, and proximity.

This can involve tension, posturing, chasing, and sometimes aggression, which is why introductions often need to be managed carefully and gradually. It protects the newcomer, but it also protects the existing herd members whose own sense of stability is being disrupted by the arrival of someone new.

While all of this is happening socially and emotionally, the body is also adjusting physically.

A new home often means different forage, different pasture composition, different hay, and sometimes different water. Those changes alone can influence the digestive system. Stress can also reduce appetite and slow gut motility, which is why the first days and weeks after a move are a time when owners need to observe their horses closely.

Simple things tell you a great deal.

Are they eating normally?
Are they drinking well?
Are they passing manure regularly?
Are gut sounds normal?

These small observations can give early clues about how well a horse is coping with the transition.

Many people use the rough guideline of three days to decompress, three weeks to begin understanding the routine, and three months to truly feel at home. It is a helpful framework, but it is not a rule. Some horses settle quickly. Others need more time to fully relax into a new place.

What helps the most during this period is patience.

On arrival, horses often benefit from simply being allowed to observe. Time to stand quietly, look around, take in the environment, and see other horses without immediately being asked to do anything. Hay, water, and calm surroundings go a long way toward helping the nervous system begin to settle.

What many horses do not need at that moment is pressure.

Starting training immediately, over-handling them, forcing social contact, or assuming that a quiet horse has already settled can create more stress rather than less. Stillness does not always mean relaxation. Sometimes it simply means the horse is overwhelmed and trying to process everything at once.

Settling into a new home is not just about the horse physically being in a new place. Their entire system is reorganising itself. They are learning the land, the herd, the routines, and the humans who will now be part of their world.

Understanding that process, and meeting it with patience and compassion, is one of the most important things we can offer a horse when they arrive somewhere new.

03/08/2026

And this doesn't include grain; the electricity for anything boarders or boarders' services (farrier, mangawave, groomers, veterinary, etc) plug in, fans, deicers, or lights they turn on; sanding, salting or driveway and parking lot maintenance; toiletries if there's a bathroom available; heat/AC if there is a lounge available; anything above and beyond normal wear and tear on the facility and property; the list goes on.

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When temps are supposed to be as low as -18° with windchills of -40° and a boarder sends you a message like this, it mak...
01/22/2026

When temps are supposed to be as low as -18° with windchills of -40° and a boarder sends you a message like this, it makes your day so much more brighter.....and warmer! Thank you JB ❤️

Beautiful sunrise this morning.
01/08/2026

Beautiful sunrise this morning.

IMPORTANT INFORMATION FOR HORSE OWNERS: Understanding EHV, How It Spreads, and How to Protect Your HerdWith recent EHV a...
11/23/2025

IMPORTANT INFORMATION FOR HORSE OWNERS: Understanding EHV, How It Spreads, and How to Protect Your Herd

With recent EHV activity in several states and regions (Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Colorado, Nevada, Arizona, Alberta, and spreading), this is a good time for horse owners to understand how Equine Herpesvirus works, why outbreaks happen suddenly, and what steps help keep horses safe.

🐴 What Is EHV?

Equine Herpesvirus (EHV) is a very common family of viruses in horses.
The two major types are:

EHV-1: Can cause fever, respiratory disease, abortions in pregnant mares, and the neurological form known as EHM (Equine Herpes Myeloencephalopathy).

EHV-4: Primarily causes respiratory illness.

According to the American Association of Equine Practitioners (AAEP), a large percentage of horses have already been exposed to EHV-1 or EHV-4 during their lifetime.

➡️ Source: AAEP Infectious Disease Guidelines (EHV-1)
https://aaep.org/guidelines/infectious-disease-control/equine-herpesvirus

🦠 Many Horses Carry EHV Quietly

Just like people can carry herpes viruses without active illness, horses can carry EHV in a latent (sleeping) state within their nerves or lymph tissue.

A horse may carry EHV for life without showing symptoms.

The virus stays dormant—until something triggers it.

⚠️ Stress Can Reactivate EHV

The Merck Veterinary Manual reports that stress is the most common trigger for reactivation.
Stress can include:

- Hauling or long trailer rides
- Being introduced to a new herd
- Weather extremes
- Illness
- Training, showing, or heavy exercise
- Weaning
- Overcrowding
- Poor nutrition or dehydration

When the virus reactivates, the horse begins shedding EHV even if it looks perfectly healthy.

Source: Merck Veterinary Manual – Equine Herpesvirus
https://www.merckvetmanual.com/horse-owners/viral-diseases-of-horses/equine-herpesvirus-infection-horses

📌 How EHV Spreads

EHV spreads very easily through:

- Direct Contact
- Nose-to-nose touching
- Coughing or sneezing droplets

Indirect Contact

- Shared water buckets
- Feed tubs
- Tack or grooming tools
- Stalls, trailers, fences
- People’s hands, clothes, and shoes
- Equipment or machinery moving between barns

The virus can survive hours to days on surfaces depending on temperature and humidity.

Source: Colorado State University Veterinary Teaching Hospital
https://csu-cvmbs.colostate.edu/vth/Pages/equine-herpesvirus.aspx

📈 How Common Is EHV?

There is no exact nationwide annual count, because EHV is not reportable in all states, but veterinary surveillance shows:

Mild respiratory EHV infections are very common every year.

Serious EHM outbreaks (neurological cases) occur 15–30 times per year in the U.S.

These outbreaks typically involve a handful to several dozen horses.

Source: USDA APHIS Equine Disease Events
https://www.equinediseasecc.org

🩺 Signs to Watch For

The earliest and most important sign is fever.
Other symptoms include:

- Nasal discharge
- Lethargy
- Loss of appetite
- Cough
- Hind-end weakness
- Stumbling or wobbliness
- Difficulty urinating
- Abortions in pregnant mares

Call a vet immediately if any horse has a fever or neurological signs.

🧪 Diagnosis & Treatment

Veterinarians use:

- Nasal swabs
- Blood samples

There is no cure, but supportive care—including fluids, anti-inflammatories, and NSAIDs—can help. Neurological cases may require hospitalization.

🛑 Biosecurity Is the Best Defense

Veterinary experts strongly recommend:

✔️ Isolate new or exposed horses for 21–28 days

✔️ Take temperatures twice daily

✔️ Do NOT share equipment

✔️ Disinfect buckets, stalls, and trailers

✔️ Limit hauling during outbreaks

✔️ Avoid visiting multiple barns

✔️ Wear clean clothes and wash hands between horses

These steps slow or stop nearly every outbreak.

Source: UC Davis Center for Equine Health
https://ceh.vetmed.ucdavis.edu/health-topics/equine-herpesvirus

💉 What About Vaccines?

Vaccines:

- Reduce viral shedding
- Help reduce spread
- Help with respiratory and abortion protection

But vaccines DO NOT prevent the neurological form (EHM).

Still, vaccination can slow outbreaks and reduce severity.

Source: AAEP Vaccination Guidelines
https://aaep.org/guidelines/vaccination-guidelines

🟢 Summary

Many horses carry EHV silently.

Stress can reactivate the virus.

A shedding horse can infect others before showing symptoms.

EHV spreads easily through direct and indirect contact.

Good biosecurity dramatically lowers risk.

Most cases are mild, but EHM is rare and serious.

Communication and quarantine save horses.

I absolutely love my boarders! Found this little "Cowboy It" at our entrance sign yesterday.  TDF
11/15/2025

I absolutely love my boarders! Found this little "Cowboy It" at our entrance sign yesterday. TDF

UPDATE: Project is complete! Thanks again to Signature Landscapes for your hard work. It's still a work in progress, but...
09/24/2025

UPDATE: Project is complete! Thanks again to Signature Landscapes for your hard work.

It's still a work in progress, but a big THANK YOU to Shane Mulhaney with Signature Landscapes out of Valders for an amazing start on our new manure bunker.

Finally filled the upper mow with a year's worth of small bales. Thank you to Jason and Amanda Kiesow Preston for making...
09/15/2025

Finally filled the upper mow with a year's worth of small bales. Thank you to Jason and Amanda Kiesow Preston for making, providing and delivering beautiful hay, year after year.

And thank you to all our helpers (there are too many to list), but you all know how much we appreciate you! We're so blessed to have such an amazing and awesome group of boarders and friends.

In addition to having all our small bales in the barn (30 more big bales coming in a couple weeks), the other good news is that the small indoor arena joins the large indoor arena in being available once again!

Here's to another healthy and happy year for all our horses, boarders, and friends!

Koco Ranch

Thank you Sam Burns for catching this beautiful picture!
06/09/2025

Thank you Sam Burns for catching this beautiful picture!

Address

Valders, WI

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 9pm
Tuesday 9am - 9pm
Wednesday 9am - 9pm
Thursday 9am - 9pm
Friday 9am - 9pm
Saturday 9am - 9pm
Sunday 9am - 9pm

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