Basic Nutrition For Horses

By Owen Jones


Novice horse-owners and infrequent riders may not know the precise nutritional needs of horses. However, this is not strange because there are several variables in calculating what a horse requires in the way of food. The factors to take into account when working out the needs of horses are: age, weight and degree of activity.

You cannot put rubbish in and expect your horse to perform marvellously. You cannot only turn your horse out into a field and expect it to find all that it needs. There are frequent cases of wild horses dying of starvation, particularly if the weather is bad.

Having said that, foraging, which mainly involves eating grass, is a major source of food and it gives the horse an interest, a varied diet and plenty of roughage as well. Roughage will also help your horse's digestive system continue working properly. Just like eating just junk food is not healthy for the human digestive system.

A mature, working horse requires about 2-2.5% of its body weight in good quality grass or hay a day. Therefore, a horse of 1,000 pounds will require 20-25 pounds of decent, fresh grass or hay a day. If the horse is not worked, it can almost certainly get by on about 1% of its body weight in feed.

In the summer, this is probably not much of a difficulty, but if it is in the winter or if the land cannot sustain the number of horses you keep on it. If this is the case or if you would like to breed or work the horse, you will probably need to supplement the forage food with grain or oats. In this case forage food ought to make up around half of a horse's feed for top quality nutrition.

However, it is not just as easy as that either because not all grass and not all hay is of the same quality. The quantity that you feed depends on the quality needed not the quantity, so the feed that you give has to be tested too.

Your pasture is the best and the cheapest way of feeding your horse(s). Here is a rough and ready guide to feeding an average horse of 1,000-1,200 pounds in a decent quality summer pasture. A mare and foal needs 1.75-2 acres; a yearling needs 1.5-2 acres and a weanling needs 0.5-1 acre.

You can crop feed for the winter by cutting grass from another field or by buying it. The hay should be pure and not dusty. It should also be free of damp and mould. It may not show any signs of rot or mildew.

There are other feeds that you can supplement with, but you have to do more research. Alfalfa hay can be used but it is not the same as grass hay and you need to carry out other calculations. Oats and grain may also be used, but again more calculations are required. There are services that you can employ to get your horse's feed checked.




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