
Flaxseed-based supplements, like omega shine and Grand Coat, will add gloss to your horse's coat.
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When the
weather begins to get cooler, it’s a mistake to cut back on grooming time and to
assume that your horse’s nutritional needs are still being met. Just knocking
off the surface dirt isn’t enough. Break out your favorite curry. Get all the
way down to skin level so you remove trapped dirt and dead skin cells. Once the
dirt and debris are loosened, a vacuum makes removing it infinitely easier.
Regular
exercise is also important. In cold weather, circulation to the skin surface is
greatly decreased, and with it the production of sweat and skin oils. When you
exercise the horse, circulation to the skin picks up. Benefits to the coat often
are apparent in as short a period of time as a few days.
START NUTRITION NOW
Finally,
there’s nutrition. If your horse has any dietary shortfalls, they’re likely to
surface as a dull coat, often in combination with poor hooves. The end of
grazing season deprives your horse of quality protein, essential fatty acids and
vitamins in their optimal form. If they are not replaced in the diet, the coat
and hooves will be the first to show it.
A horse’s
natural diet, grass, is very low in fat but does provide a constant source of
the omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids. These are the only fats that the horse
can’t manufacture for himself. Hays, grains and processed oils have little or no
essential-fatty-acid content left in them. Even storage of whole grains leads to
a reduced level of fatty acids.
To make
matters worse, grass is rich in omega-3 anti-inflammatory fatty acids, which are
more fragile than the omega-6 fats, and everything else we usually include in
the base diet, like grain products, is high in omega-6. Adequate essential fatty
acid intake is also important for hoof quality and immune function. The solution
is to feed flaxseed. Flaxseed contains both omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids, in
a ratio close to grass.
Most horses
have adequate total protein in their diet but could easily be lacking key amino
acids because of insufficient variety of foods. Every plant, seed and grain has
its own distinctive amino acid pattern. None are perfect, so feeding a variety
helps guarantee all bases are covered. Feeding mixed hay is a good place to
start, but if you can’t feed it on a consistent basis, you can look into
purchasing hay pellets or cubes to substitute for some of your regular loose
hay.
SPECIFICS
Zinc is a
common mineral deficiency that can manifest itself as poor quality hooves, dry
skin with low resistance to infections and a dull coat. Many of the B vitamins
play critical roles in hoof and skin/coat health as well. The horse’s main
source of B vitamins is from the teeming micro-organisms that live in a healthy
digestive tract, but they are present in fresh feedstuffs as well. Estimates of
B-vitamin requirements are for levels needed to avoid full-blown deficiency
states but may not be the same as those required for optimal health, including
hoof and skin condition. Supplementing Bs, especially biotin and pyridoxine, may
help most horses that have skin/hoof problems, especially older horses or those
with digestive-tract problems.
Vitamin C
is another vitamin in abundant supply in fresh food and rapidly destroyed by
drying and storage. Horses can make their own vitamin C when the diet is lacking
it, and it’s still not really clear if C supplementation is helpful. Consider
adding C in winter for horses that are working hard, have lung problems of any
type, or are prone to infections. C can upset the gut in large amounts, so feed
no more than 5 grams/day.
Although
vitamin A is critical to maintaining healthy skin, hays contain abundant vitamin
A and grains/supplements are heavily fortified with it. If your hay is over six
months old and you’re not feeding at least 5 lbs./day of commercial grain or a
high A supplement, add a few carrots a day to boost A.