Does my horse have colic and what should I do?
Key takeaways
- How to recognise the behavioural signs of colic before the situation becomes critical
- The five distinct types of colic, from gas colic to displacement, and why the difference in severity is significant
- What to do — and what not to do — in the time between spotting signs and the vet arriving
- Which management practices genuinely reduce colic risk, including feeding, pasture, and gut health support
Colic is not a diagnosis — it is a symptom. It means abdominal pain, and in horses that pain can come from a dozen different causes, some that resolve on their own in an hour and some that are life-threatening within the same timeframe. Knowing which signs to look for, and what to do while you wait for the vet, genuinely changes outcomes.
Signs that your horse has colic
Horses cannot vomit. That single anatomical fact means that whatever goes wrong in the gut has nowhere to go but further along, or into crisis. So they communicate distress through behaviour — and once you know what to look for, it is hard to miss.
The most common signs I see in practice are restlessness and an inability to settle, pawing at the ground, and repeatedly lying down and getting up. A horse that keeps looking back at its flanks — turning its head toward its belly — is registering pain in that region. Rolling on the ground is a clear alarm signal, and sweating without any physical exertion behind it tells you the pain is significant. Any one of these warrants attention. More than one together, or any of them recurring over 20 to 30 minutes, means you call the vet.
The five types of colic
Not all colic is the same. The type determines the urgency, the treatment, and the outcome.
Obstipation colic
A blockage in the large intestine, most often from impacted feed material. Too much dry hay without enough water is the classic scenario. Dental problems that prevent proper chewing are another route in — a horse that cannot grind its feed well enough produces material that is harder to pass. Annual teeth checks matter more than most owners realise.
Gas colic
Very common, especially in spring. When pasture grass grows rapidly, fructan levels rise sharply. Horses that graze that grass take in more fermentable carbohydrate than their hindgut microbiome can handle smoothly, and the resulting fermentation produces gas faster than the gut can move it on. The pain is real, but most cases resolve with medication and a bit of patience.
Spasmodic colic
Irregular, cramping contractions of the intestinal wall. A sudden change in diet is a common trigger — introducing a new hay batch without transitioning gradually, for instance. Worm burdens are another factor. The gut reacts, motility becomes erratic, and the horse shows intermittent, colicky pain. This is one of the reasons an appropriate deworming schedule is worth taking seriously.
Sand colic
Horses grazing on short, bare pasture inevitably ingest sand along with the grass. Over time, sand accumulates in the large colon, irritates the gut lining, and can cause both pain and disrupted motility. The fix is partly management: providing extra hay so horses spend less time hoovering at the ground.
Displacement colic
This is the serious one. A portion of intestine shifts out of its normal position, twists, or becomes trapped. When the blood supply to that section is compromised, the tissue can begin to die within hours. Displacement colic does not respond to pain medication the way simpler colic does — the horse stays distressed, or deteriorates. Surgery is often the only option, and timing is critical. This is why you never wait to see if a colic "sorts itself out."
What to do while you wait for the vet
Call first. Then, if the horse is alert enough and not at risk of injuring itself, walk it by hand at a quiet pace. Light movement can help with mild gas and spasmodic colic. It also keeps the horse from rolling violently, which in a displaced gut can make the situation worse.
Watch for manure. A horse that passes manure during or after a colic episode is a good sign — the gut is still moving. Note the time, the consistency, and whether the horse seems to improve afterward. Your vet will ask.
Do not give pain medication before the vet arrives unless you have been explicitly instructed to do so. Masking pain makes clinical assessment harder and can give a false impression that things are improving when they are not.
What to tell your vet
When you call: how long the signs have been going on, whether the horse has passed manure, its temperature if you can take it, heart rate if you know how, and any recent changes to feed, pasture access, or deworming. The more detail you can give, the better the vet can triage over the phone.
Prevention: what actually reduces colic risk
Most of what reduces colic risk is management, not medication. Horses evolved to move and graze continuously — 24-hour pasture access, where it is safe and feasible, is consistently associated with lower colic incidence than stabled horses on scheduled feeding. Regular exercise supports gut motility. Fresh water available at all times is not optional; dehydration is a direct route to impaction.
Avoid sudden feed changes. When you need to transition to a new hay batch or introduce a new feed, spread it over at least 7 to 10 days. The gut microbiome needs time to adjust. During spring, when fructan levels in grass peak, consider restricting grazing in the early morning when levels are highest, or using a grazing muzzle for horses that are prone to digestive upset.
On short pasture, put out hay. It gives horses something to eat that is not sand.
Supporting gut health between episodes
A well-functioning hindgut microbiome is the foundation of digestive resilience. In horses that have had repeated gas or spasmodic colic, or that are going through a period of stress or diet change, targeted digestive support can make a meaningful difference to gut flora stability and motility.
Guts & Glory
A natural digestive supplement with pre- and probiotics to support a balanced gut flora and healthy motility in horses prone to digestive upset.
Keep your horse's gut in good shape
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