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Question:

At our court house they remodeled to comply with the disability laws but they haven't done enough.?

Our court house had new ramps built and an elevatorBut their lobbies are inbetween flights of stairsJust short ones like 4 steps to one and then 5 steps to anotherIt would be hard to get a wheel chair up and down them.I can walk but am disabled from a broken ankle and back surgeryI can not stand for a long timeThe baliff told me to go either to the lobby or wait down stairs which their was no seating availableI had my cane with meI finally went to the lobby and painfully managed the stairs.Another note, someone from the other side relative stood upstairs in the court area and chatted the whole time with the baliffDo I have legal recourse? Would it be worth going to a lawyer for? I am mad.

Answer:

Well it can vary depending on if their clipped but most horses are ok with a thick coat a 30 degreesAny below that and they need a blanketI personally like to put blankets on way before that temptheir is a good article out in equine journal right now about horse blanketing, and when to use which types.
Horses, like people will shiver and tense upThat's one way to know for sure how cold they areAlso, if they're wet/sweaty and are steaming they DEFINITELY need a blanket, or they'll catch a chill! Some horses never need blankets, while others require them as soon as the leaves start to changeIt really depends on the specific horseHope this helps! Cheers, K
I never put a blanket on my horse cause he always has a really thick winter coat, but for horses with thin ones I would say put one on if it is under 30 degrees, but horses are more equipped to deal with cold weather than hot so make sure the blanket isn't TOO heavy or they could overheat
Hollywood has a pretty decent coat but if it gets below 30 or will be getting below 30 overnight I blanket himI was asking earlier about leaving his blanket on tomorrow since it's going to be snowing all dayI decided I am going to leave his blanket on while he's out tomorrow because it's snowing pretty good and isn't supposed to stopThey don't have any shelter in the pasture and even though he's got a pretty good coat, it's going to snow enough so that he'll be wet and might get cold At our ranch we blanket all the horses that are in the barn when it gets below freezing but that's down in Texas where they grow crappy coatsSince you're up north, I would blanket below 30 or if your horse is out in the snowI think if a horse gets wet and it's cold out, if you know he'll get wet and it's cold out, or if he feels cold to the touch then you need a blanket (of course you would rub him dry before blanketing).
I have hard time standing and walking too, so I know what you are going throughBesides that my husand deals with ADA regulations all the time with his work (he is a draftsman)The moral and right thing that should have been done was that the baliff should have taken in count your disablities or that someone should have help you find seating where you didn't have to walk all that far.
Well it can vary depending on if their clipped but most horses are ok with a thick coat a 30 degreesAny below that and they need a blanketI personally like to put blankets on way before that temptheir is a good article out in equine journal right now about horse blanketing, and when to use which types.
Horses, like people will shiver and tense upThat's one way to know for sure how cold they areAlso, if they're wet/sweaty and are steaming they DEFINITELY need a blanket, or they'll catch a chill! Some horses never need blankets, while others require them as soon as the leaves start to changeIt really depends on the specific horseHope this helps! Cheers, K
I never put a blanket on my horse cause he always has a really thick winter coat, but for horses with thin ones I would say put one on if it is under 30 degrees, but horses are more equipped to deal with cold weather than hot so make sure the blanket isn't TOO heavy or they could overheat
Hollywood has a pretty decent coat but if it gets below 30 or will be getting below 30 overnight I blanket himI was asking earlier about leaving his blanket on tomorrow since it's going to be snowing all dayI decided I am going to leave his blanket on while he's out tomorrow because it's snowing pretty good and isn't supposed to stopThey don't have any shelter in the pasture and even though he's got a pretty good coat, it's going to snow enough so that he'll be wet and might get cold At our ranch we blanket all the horses that are in the barn when it gets below freezing but that's down in Texas where they grow crappy coatsSince you're up north, I would blanket below 30 or if your horse is out in the snowI think if a horse gets wet and it's cold out, if you know he'll get wet and it's cold out, or if he feels cold to the touch then you need a blanket (of course you would rub him dry before blanketing).
I have hard time standing and walking too, so I know what you are going throughBesides that my husand deals with ADA regulations all the time with his work (he is a draftsman)The moral and right thing that should have been done was that the baliff should have taken in count your disablities or that someone should have help you find seating where you didn't have to walk all that far.

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