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Feeding Horses - Are We Doing What's Right for Our Horses?

Feeding Horses - Are We Doing What's Right for Our Horses?

By Ann Pruitt · Health

Looking to feed horses - are We Doing What's Right the right way?

Feeding Horses - Are We Doing What’s Right for Our Horses?

How to Feed Your Horse Complete Guide. Horse Owner Preparing Feed ' Safe and Smart Feeding at a Modern Barn

Understanding How Nature Designed Horses to Eat and How We Can Do Better Today By Ann Pruitt, InfoHorse.com

How Horses Were Meant to Eat If we step back in time and look at how horses as created live, it’s easy to see why so many modern feeding practices can cause problems. In the wild, horses graze almost continuously, moving slowly from patch to patch of grass for 16 to 18 hours a day. Each mouthful is chewed carefully, mixed with saliva, and swallowed. That chewing time isn’t just idle nibbling—chewing creates alkaline saliva that helps neutralize stomach acid and keep the gut comfortable.

A horse can produce up to 10 gallons of saliva a day when grazing, and that saliva helps buffer the stomach, where acid is produced 24 hours a day. The fibrous forage combines with the saliva to form a protective, spongy mixture that gently moves through the stomach and intestines. When horses are allowed to eat this way, their digestive systems stay balanced, their energy levels steady, and their moods calm.

What Modern Feeding Gets Wrong Most stabled horses today are fed two or three meals a day—large, concentrated feedings that bear little resemblance to their natural grazing patterns. While this is convenient for people, it’s not ideal for horses. Intermittent feeding means fewer chewing hours and far less saliva to buffer acid. Add to that the starch-heavy grains many performance horses receive, and we have a recipe for ulcers, colic, and behavioral problems.

Without enough hay or pasture, the stomach sits empty between meals, leaving the unprotected upper portion of the stomach exposed to acid. Combine that with exercise, which sloshes acid around, and you have one reason up to 90% of performance horses develop gastric ulcers.

Large, grain-based meals also push undigested starch into the small intestine, where it’s converted rapidly to sugar. This “sugar rush” can make horses hyper, and when insulin rises to counter it, the blood sugar drops, leading to fatigue, irritability, and even metabolic stress. Worse, leftover starch that escapes digestion enters the hindgut, where it ferments rapidly and produces lactic acid. That acid can disrupt the delicate microbial balance, trigger colic, or even contribute to laminitis.

Inside Your Horse’s Digestive System Let’s take a short trip through your horse’s digestive tract - simplified and in plain barn language.

How a Horse's Digestive System Works ' From Mouth to Manure | InfoHorse.com

Mouth and Teeth: Healthy teeth grind hay into a fine, moist mixture. Sharp points or uneven wear can make chewing painful and reduce digestion efficiency. Floating teeth once a year is essential.

Esophagus: A strong valve at the stomach entrance prevents vomiting, which is why choking or gas build-up can quickly become dangerous.

Stomach: Holds only about 4 gallons, small compared to a horse’s size. When overfilled with grain, feed passes through too fast for proper digestion, or worse, risks rupture.

Small Intestine: About 70 feet long, this is where proteins, fats, and simple carbs are digested and absorbed.

Small Intestine: About 70 feet long, this is where proteins, fats, and simple carbs are digested and absorbed.

Cecum: A fermentation vat roughly 4 feet long, home to billions of microbes that digest fiber and produce vitamins and fatty acids.

Colon: The final stretch where water and electrolytes are reabsorbed and manure forms. Twists or impactions here can lead to painful, sometimes fatal colic.

Every step depends on what came before it - feed too much, too fast, or change feed abruptly, and the system struggles to cope.

Why Horses Get Colic So Easily Colic remains the number one killer of horses, and most cases start with the gut being asked to handle something unnatural. Too much grain, not enough forage, poor teeth, sudden feed changes, or dehydration can all set the stage. When weather swings from warm to cold, horses often drink less. Drier feed combined with less water means intestinal contents move slowly, the colon pulls out too much moisture, and impaction results. That’s why horses must always have fresh water available, especially in cold weather.

Feeding by Body Type Every horse is an individual, but breed tendencies tell us a lot about how they process food. Matching feed programs to body type can prevent ulcers, weight issues, and laminitis.

Infographic showing feeding tips for Draft Horses, Thoroughbreds, Morgans, and Ponies, comparing calorie needs, hay type, and risk factors like laminitis.

Draft Horses Drafts like Percherons and Belgians have slow metabolisms and are classic “easy keepers. ” They do best on high-quality grass hay and minimal grain. Too many calories lead to obesity, which raises the risk of laminitis and joint strain. Provide plenty of turnout and slow-feed hay nets to mimic grazing without overfeeding.

Thoroughbreds Thoroughbreds burn calories fast. These “hard keepers” often need extra fat and fiber calories rather than more starch. Adding stabilized rice bran, beet pulp, or oil can keep weight steady without triggering ulcers. Keep hay available at all times, and alfalfa can be used for its buffering calcium.

Morgans Morgans are athletic but efficient. They maintain weight easily, even on modest rations, and can become cresty-necked if overfed. A ration of mostly grass hay with a low-starch balancer and daily turnout keeps them fit and happy.

Ponies Ponies evolved on sparse grasslands. Their metabolism is so efficient that even a few extra pounds of grain or lush pasture can cause laminitis. Feed small amounts of coarse grass hay, avoid sweet feeds, and consider a grazing muzzle if turnout is on rich grass. Ponies thrive on movement and moderation.

Simple Rules for Smarter Feeding 1. Feed more often, in smaller meals. If possible, divide feedings into three or four smaller portions a day, or use slow-feed nets to extend hay time.

2 Provide free-choice hay whenever you can

3 Always ensure clean, fresh water

4 Introduce new feeds gradually

5 Replace excess starch with healthy fats

6 Keep up with dental and deworming care

Gut-Health Support and Functional Feeding Modern research has introduced the idea of “functional feeding” - supporting the gut itself rather than just meeting calorie requirements. Certain natural ingredients can help restore balance and strengthen the digestive lining:

Beta-Glucan: From oats, yeast, or mushrooms, helps immune balance and slows digestion for better nutrient absorption.

Polar Lipids: Found in oat oil, coat the gut lining to protect and improve nutrient uptake.

Glutamine: Nourishes the intestinal cells and supports healing after stress or ulcer damage.

Threonine: An amino acid critical for producing protective mucus in the digestive tract.

MOS (Mannan Oligosaccharides): From yeast, attract harmful bacteria and help flush them out.

Nucleotides: Support the renewal of rapidly dividing intestinal cells, keeping the gut resilient.

Supplements containing these nutrients can gradually help a horse recover from the stresses of modern feeding. They aren’t drugs and won’t work overnight, but steady use builds long-term digestive stability.

Ann Pruitt and her Morgan Horse SUGAR
The Final Word from InfoHorse.com’s Ann Pruitt

Feeding horses well isn’t about fancy formulas or expensive grains, it’s about understanding what nature designed them to eat.

When we mimic grazing by offering more forage, clean water, consistent schedules, and thoughtful supplementation, our horses stay healthier, happier, and more willing to perform.

Whether you’re caring for a mighty draft, a lean Thoroughbred, a sturdy Morgan, or a bright-eyed pony, the secret is the same: feed the gut first, and the rest will follow.

Key Article Takeaways
  • Feeding by Body Type Every horse is an individual, but breed tendencies tell us a lot about how they process food.
  • Keep hay available at all times, and alfalfa can be used for its buffering calcium.
  • Feed small amounts of coarse grass hay, avoid sweet feeds, and consider a grazing muzzle if turnout is on rich grass.
  • Feeding Horses - Are We Doing What’s Right for Our Horses?
  • In the wild, horses graze almost continuously, moving slowly from patch to patch of grass for 16 to 18 hours a day.
Questions readers commonly ask:
How do I know if my horse's feeding program is causing him problems?

Per Ann Pruitt: most stabled horses today get two or three large meals a day — convenient for people, but a poor match for a digestive system designed to graze 16 to 18 hours daily. The early signs that the gut is struggling are recognizable.

  • Behavioral changes — hyperness after grain, irritability or fatigue 1-2 hours later as blood sugar drops.
  • Recurring colic episodes — a flag that grain volume, feed-change pace, or hydration is off.
  • Performance decline or sourness under saddle — up to 90% of performance horses develop gastric ulcers, often from empty-stomach intervals plus exercise sloshing acid.

Per Ann Pruitt: large grain meals also push undigested starch into the hindgut where it ferments to lactic acid, disrupting microbial balance — a chain that can trigger colic or contribute to laminitis. Two or three of those signs together means the program needs adjustment.

What should I actually do to feed my horse the way nature designed him?

Per Ann Pruitt: six rules cover most of the work.

  • Feed more often, in smaller meals — divide into three or four portions a day, or use slow-feed nets to extend hay time.
  • Provide free-choice hay whenever possible. Long-stem forage keeps the system moving and produces saliva that buffers stomach acid.
  • Always ensure clean, fresh water. A horse may drink 10–20 gallons a day. Add a salt block or electrolyte supplement to encourage drinking, especially in winter.
  • Introduce new feeds gradually — three to four weeks for hay or grain changes.
  • Replace excess starch with healthy fats. Vegetable oil, flax, or rice bran adds calories without disturbing gut bacteria.
  • Keep up with dental and deworming care.

Per Ann Pruitt: feed the gut first, and the rest follows.

How do I prevent winter colic when horses are eating drier feed and drinking less?

Per Ann Pruitt: when weather swings from warm to cold, horses often drink less. Drier feed combined with less water means intestinal contents move slowly, the colon pulls out too much moisture, and impaction results — one of the most preventable colic patterns.

Three habits move the needle.

  • Always-available fresh water, ideally not ice-cold — horses drink less from frozen or near-frozen sources.
  • Salt block in stall and pasture; salt drives drinking, and drinking prevents impaction.
  • Quality hydrated forage they want to eat. Per Hydration Hay (a current InfoHorse advertiser): pre-soaked hay products give a winter-confined horse something hydrated to actually want at the feeder — which raises total water intake when pasture is gone.

Per Ann Pruitt: horses must always have fresh water available, especially in cold weather.

Should I feed my draft, my Thoroughbred, my Morgan, and my pony differently?

Per Ann Pruitt: yes — breed tendencies tell you a lot about how a horse processes food, and matching the program to body type prevents ulcers, weight issues, and laminitis.

  • Drafts (Percherons, Belgians) — slow metabolisms, classic easy keepers. High-quality grass hay, minimal grain, plenty of turnout, slow-feed hay nets to mimic grazing without overfeeding.
  • Thoroughbreds — hard keepers. Add fat and fiber calories (stabilized rice bran, beet pulp, oil) rather than more starch. Hay always available; alfalfa for buffering calcium.
  • Morgans — athletic but efficient. Mostly grass hay, low-starch balancer, daily turnout. Watch for cresty necks if overfed.
  • Ponies — metabolism so efficient that a few extra pounds of grain or lush pasture can cause laminitis. Coarse grass hay in small amounts, no sweet feeds, grazing muzzle on rich pasture.

Per Ann Pruitt: ponies thrive on movement and moderation.

What is functional feeding, and how long does it take to help a struggling gut?

Per Ann Pruitt: functional feeding means supporting the gut itself rather than just meeting calorie requirements. Specific natural ingredients restore balance and strengthen the digestive lining — beta-glucan, polar lipids, glutamine, threonine, MOS, and nucleotides all play distinct roles in protecting the intestinal wall and microbial environment.

Per Ann Pruitt: they aren’t drugs and won’t work overnight, but steady use builds long-term digestive stability. Plan on weeks to months of consistent feeding rather than days. Supportive products like SUCCEED® Digestive Conditioning Program (a current InfoHorse advertiser) target the broader gut-health environment that modern feeding patterns disrupt — though the management discipline (more frequent meals, free-choice forage, gradual feed transitions) does most of the work. Functional feeding is a foundation layer; it doesn’t replace the foundational rules in Q2.

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