
During the fall, the microbes in the horse’s digestive tract need time to adjust to nutrient changes in the grass, the addition of hay to the diet, and any fallen leaves the horse consumes. Watch for signs of digestive upset.
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Horses have evolved to handle a wide variety of vegetation in their diet, but with a few key differences
between the feral horse and the domesticated horse. A horse ranging freely in search of food
consumes nutrients such as
carbohydrates and fats in a very
diluted form because grasses and other plants are at least 75% water.
Wild horses also get a lot more
exercise than domesticated horses, which is important to good gut function. We
don’t really know exactly why, but research bears this out.
The dilution factor
is important because most gut upsets in the horse are related to the large
intestine. The horse’s large intestine is essentially a fermentation vat—like
the four stomachs of a cow. Nutrients are first broken down by the bacteria and
protozoa that live in the hind gut. The byproducts of that breakdown are
actually what the horse then absorbs and turns into proteins, fats, and
carbohydrates that the body can use.
| Seasonal Diets |
| Be aware that cool or wet weather can change
the nutritional balance of fall grasses.When switching from pasture to a hay-based
diet, do so gradually.If you choose to supplement with grain,
introduce small amounts slowly.When making any dietary changes, watch for
signs of digestive upset.Use the same precautions when switching to
different cuttings or varieties of hay as you would when changing or introducing
grain. |
Each specific type of organism (and there are hundreds)
will need a specific type of food to survive. Some are better at using complex
fibers. Some like simple sugars. Others will thrive on high protein. Still
others will be intermediate forms and will further break down the products
produced by other types of organisms. When the organisms receive a constant flow
of foods to ferment in a high volume of fluid, they can adapt to changes much
easier.
When a large “load”
of fermentable food hits the hind gut all at one time, if it is different from
what the organisms are accustomed to handling, the result can be a rapid
increase in the “bugs” that prefer that type of nutrient. This, in turn, can
change the chemistry in the intestine and cause other forms of bugs to die off.
Consequences for the horse range from poor utilization of feed (or some portions
of it) to gas, mild distention, diarrhea, or full blown colic.
If the large intestine becomes too acidic, as it can if
unusually high amounts of sugar, starch, or complex plant sugars enter it, the
lining can actually be damaged and bacterial toxins absorbed into the body. This
can make the horse very ill. It can even cause laminitis.
Most people know you shouldn’t start, increase, or change
grains rapidly. This is one of the most dangerous things you can do in terms of
risking intestinal upset. However, what you may not realize is that changes in
hay can be bad, too.

At this time of year, many of us begin to supplement pasture with hay and grain. Make dietary changes slowly, and be sure to balance the vitamin and mineral content of the ration.
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The large intestine
is the major site for breakdown of hay. Even if you always feed the same type of
hay, such as timothy, Bermuda grass, or alfalfa, not all hay is created equal.
Different cuttings, under varying growth conditions and even different strains
of the same type of forage, can vary by 100% or more in the level of rapidly
fermentable nutrients they contain. Changing hay types risks dietary differences
in both the levels and relative proportions of fermentables your horse’s system
must adapt to.
Even rapid changes in
pasture plants can cause problems for your horse if their composition changes too much. This is
especially true in the spring and fall when grasses are growing (or
regrowing) at a rapid rate. Young growths of grass are lower in slowly
fermented fiber types and can have wide
swings in the amount of simple
carbohydrate they contain. Very high protein levels in young, growing pastures can also cause gut
upset.
These guidelines can help you prevent feeding-related gut
upsets:
•
Introduce grain feeding gradually, no more than 1 pound per
feeding.
• Allow three days between each increase in grain to enable
organisms to adapt.
•
Don’t feed more than 4 pounds of grain at one time.
•
Make changes in hay
gradually, replacing from 10% to 25% of the old hay with the new variety;
increase every three days.
• Accustom horse to lush pastures gradually, especially if grass is
growing rapidly (spring and some fall conditions).
•
Keep hay available for horses on young growths of pasture grass to
provide complex and slowly fermented fiber which the grasses may be lacking.