Managing Body Condition With Forage

FILES2f20162f032f0315_03.jpg.jpg

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

Many horse owners struggle with the body condition of their horses. Some horses seem to gain condition easily; others seem to eat and eat while not gaining body condition and become thin.

A Body Condition Scoring (BCS) system has been developed to help horse owners visually determine if their horse is overweight, underweight or in ideal condition. It assigns values from 1 to 9, to classify horses from underweight to overweight in each of the following areas: the loin, ribs, tail head, withers, neck, and behind the shoulders.

Horses with a BCS of:

  • 3 or less are underweight
  • 4-6 are ideal
  • 7-8 are overweight
  • Greater than 8 are obese

So how do we manage the body condition of our horses? If we want a horse to lose condition, we need to feed fewer calories and expend more calories through exercise. Horses eat from 1.5% to 3% of their body weight per day in feed. For a 1,000-pound horse, this equals 15 to 30 pounds of feed per day. Most horses will consume more forage (hay/pasture) in their diet compared to grain. Horses on a weight-loss program should never be fed less than 1.2% of their body weight.

Forage type can dictate calorie content. Grass hays, such as timothy and orchard grass, contain fewer calories compared to legumes, such as alfalfa. Mixed hays containing a combination of both are intermediate in calorie content. A horse in a low body condition would benefit from some alfalfa in the diet. A horse that is overweight would benefit from more grass hay in the diet.

Read more about Managing Body Condition Scoring With Forage at standleeforage.com.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1019_02

5 years ago

Alexander Neville Foundation Set to be Our Ritchie Charity Group in Texas

The Alexander Neville Foundation will be joining us at the Dripping Springs, Texas Walkabout Tour November 13th and 14th as…

Read More
FILES2f20152f072f0728_02.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Tunica, Mississippi Fundamentals Clinic

26 individual Fundamentals groundwork and riding exercises learned 24-plus hours of instruction, covering the first level of the Method 20…

Read More
FILES2f20152f052f0526_03.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

First Ambassador Course Begins

This Sunday, the 2015 Clinician Academy course officially begins with a day of orientation, which is followed by the students…

Read More
0719_Tip

4 years ago

Training Tip: Fixing a Horseback Riding Issue Without Mecate Reins

Question: Frosty is a 9-year-old sensitive Quarter Horse that I have begun with the Fundamentals and ride English. What do…

Read More