Misconceptions in Selecting Forage for Horses – Forage Type

1108_03

Dr. Stephen Duren, Performance Horse Nutrition and Standlee Premium Western Forage® Nutritional Consultants

Forage in the form of hay or pasture is the primary ingredient in the diet for most horses. Horses can consume many different varieties of high-quality forage, both alfalfa and grasses, without digestive upset, provided the horse is properly adapted to the forage.

There are many plants that can be grown, cut and stored for use as horse forage.  From a practical standpoint, forages can be roughly divided into legumes and grasses.  Legumes commonly include alfalfa and clover.  Grasses consist of many varieties including: timothy grass, orchard grass, rye grass, bermuda grass, teff grass, blue grass, fescue and many others.

Misconception: Horses can’t eat “pick a variety” forage. I have personally heard that horses can’t eat alfalfa, clover, fescue or bermuda grass, as well as other varieties.

Fact: If forage is properly cut, harvested and stored, horses can eat many varieties of forage.  Unless the horse has a specific allergy or health condition, many different forage choices will suffice. 

Solution: Many horse owners choose forage based on what is familiar to them.  Then these people move to a different area of the country that raises different varieties of forage. Rather than condemn a forage as evil, talk with your veterinarian or nutritionist to make an informed decision.

Are you prepared for winter? Here’s a deal to fill your hay barn!
Buy 4 Get $10 off! That’s right, buy any 4 Standlee bagged or compressed baled products and get $10 off your entire purchase. Keep your horses happy and healthy during winter. Offer excludes Standlee Chopped Straw, Straw Grab & Go® and Straw Compressed Bales and all 2 or 3 string bales. Valid 10/1-11/30/16. Learn more at our website.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1227_03

9 years ago

Hats Off to Our Sponsors

It would be impossible to share the Method and operate Downunder Horsemanship without our sponsors’ support. Many of our sponsors…

Read More
0507_Tip

2 years ago

Training Tip: Horses That Paw and Get Antsy In Cross-Ties

Horses that paw in cross-ties or constantly fidget – twisting their bodies from side to side and biting on the…

Read More
FILES2f20152f102f1020_04.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Your Horse Plus Our Phenomenal Results

Most horses never reach their full potential because their owners lack the consistency and knowledge to train them and continue…

Read More
0903_01

2 years ago

Negotiating Gulleys With Your Horse

Gulleys are one object on the trail that almost all horses initially fear. One of the main reasons gulleys are…

Read More