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Living Tips for Naturally Happier
Healthier Horses.

Give your horses the benefit of new information and ideas to bring out their full potential.

The Seven Things Your Horse Needs to be Happy and Healthy

  1. Food, Water and Shelter
    A mix of grazing at appropriate times along with hay most of the time. Fresh water at all times and shelter from the wind and hot sun are absolutely necessary.
  2. Companionship
    A herd is ideal but at least one other equine companion is necessary for a herd animal – cattle or goats won’t provide mutual grooming.
  3. Room to move freely at all paces
    Long, narrow pastures or a track and no rugs encourage more movement.
  4. Regular Hoof Care
    Maintenance trims every 2-4 weeks on a barefoot horse is the ideal, and using hoof boots gives better protection than metal horse shoes.
  5. Healthcare when needed
    Regular minerals, worming and using natural therapies in conjunction with veterinary care will give optimum health.
  6. Kindly fitted equipment
    Bitless Bridle or natural hackamore, well fitted saddle, no artificial control devices, no halters left on in the paddock, no rug unless absolutely needed for ill-health or no shelter available.
  7. Considerate Training & handling
    Using understanding and psychology rather than force, fear and intimidation.


    Your Horse is what it Eats

    Horses evolved to eat small amounts of grasses, herbs and minerals almost constantly throughout the day.
    They covered many miles to reach water and lived in small herds of varied ages and sexes.
    Does this sound like the modern horse?
    Not really - their involvement with humans has necessitated their restriction and artificial feeding to easily use them as a working animal.
    Today the majority of horses are kept for pleasure and that pleasure need not be all ours. If we want a happy, healthy horse to provide many years of companionship then we can change our ways a little to suit their nature.

    Many new ideas are replacing traditional methods of horsemanship and health care with hoof care and feeding now the focus. Natural Hoof Care practitioners and forage researchers have discovered that horses cannot be fed like cows – on high sugar grasses that maximise beef and milk production. To do so, compromises the health of our horses by causing laminitis as horses become more carbohydrate intolerant – they are commonly called ‘good doers’.

    When horses eat high sugar grass it causes a toxic reaction in the hind gut which then affects the connection between hoof wall and laminae (sensitive internal structure). This causes common hoof ailments such as abscesses, seedy toe/white line disease and deformed, shallow, sensitive hooves.

    With a little thought and planning, better management and feeding practices can change all of this.
    Here are some changes you can make with feeding to improve health:

  • Ensure grass hay is fed as the main diet, along with free choice minerals and salt.
  • Try to feed as far from the water as possible to encourage movement.
  • Give your horse room to move by fencing an 8–20m wide track around your pasture which makes a long, thin paddock and reduces grass intake.
  • Restrict grass appropriately for each horse – most will need to be kept off the grass during the evening when the sugars in the plant are highest. Provide hay for them to eat instead.
  • Some ‘good doers’ will need to wear a grazing muzzle some of the time to remain with the herd. It’s not comfortable for them to wear a muzzle all the time and may even cause colic if left on 24/7.
  • Some good doers will need to have their ‘sugar rich’ hay soaked for a few hours to lower the sugar content. Rich hay is usually cut from rye grass and clover pastures designed for cattle.
  • Avoid feeding grain unless your horse is receiving enough additional exercise to utilise the energy such as racehorses, endurance and performance horses. Broodmares, foals and young horses may need some grains and legumes (lucerne) to provide additional protein and calcium. All other horses will gain more weight on free choice hay.

    Recommended Resources

    BOOKS:
    The Natural Horse – Jaime Jackson
    Paddock Paradise – Jaime Jackson
    Founder: Prevention & Cure – Jaime Jackson
    Making Natural Hoof Care Work For You – Pete Ramey
    Above available from www.amazon.com

    The Secret of Happy Horses by Sabine Kells
    A Lifetime of Soundness by Dr Strasser
    The Abusive Effects of Bitted Bridles by Dr Cook & Dr Strasser
  • horsemanshipnz.com Great info on all aspects of horse care and health problems associated with grass.
  • Successful-natural-horsecare.com - Fabulous all round horse care advice
  • naturalhorsemanagement.com - useful info on Paddock Paradise
  • Bitlesshorse.com - For lots of info on Bitless Bridles and sales/trials
  • www.safergrass.org - an excellent site on feeding to avoid laminitis and founder.

    Many more web site links can be found here.

 

 

 

 

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Disclaimer: The information contained within this website is soley the expressed views and opinions of the author, unless otherwise stated, and the author accepts no responsability for the way this information is used by viewers. The information is provided to help PREVENT problems, not to replace veterinary advice.

Contact:

Cynthia Cooper -
Natural Horse World

46 Wattle Lea Lane, Golden Valley. Tasmania, 7304. Australia.

Ph. 0419 372279

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