Expert Horse Health & Wellbeing Advice

How do I create a good feeding plan for my skinny horse? Step-by-step guide toward a suitable ration

Expert Horse Health & Wellbeing Advice

How do I create a good feeding plan for my skinny horse? Step-by-step guide toward a suitable ration

by Valerie De Clerck on Dec 18 2025
A horse loses weight for a reason. Finding that reason comes before changing the ration Forage is the foundation: at least 1.5–2% of body weight in dry matter per day, never more than 6 hours without roughage Concentrates and fat are tools — they support forage, they don't replace it Dental problems, gastric ulcers, and PPID each require different dietary adjustments
Horse Manure Poop Worms Parasite

Expert Horse Health & Wellbeing Advice

Horse Manure Explained: Gut Health, Worms & Parasite Detection Guide

by Valerie De Clerck on May 07 2025
Every horse passes manure 8 to 12 times a day. Most owners barely notice. That is a gap worth closing. Colour, consistency, frequency, and smell are all direct indicators of what is happening in the digestive tract, and so is what you can sometimes see in it. A change caught early is almost always simpler to deal with than one that has been developing quietly for weeks. Colic & digestion series Read the other articles: Colic: signs and what to do · Gastric ulcers · Horse manure explained 1. Color & Consistency: Your Horse's Health Barometer The ideal horse manure should be moist, neatly formed balls, usually greenish-brown. Easy to pick up, no fuss. But variations can mean problems: Runny or wet manure: Not just messy stalls. It can point toward stress, sudden diet shifts, bacterial or viral infections, or even parasites lurking inside. Have you recently changed their diet or routine? If not, dig deeper. It's time to investigate parasites or gut issues. Dry, pellet-like manure: Warning bells for dehydration, low water intake, or insufficient fiber. Your horse might need more forage or better hydration strategies. Black or reddish manure: This one's serious. Dark or bloody tinged manure indicates internal bleeding. Your horse needs veterinary attention ASAP. 2. Undigested Feed Particles: Why Chewing Matters More Than You Think Spotting grain or hay pieces in manure? Don't brush it off. It often signals: Dental discomfort: Tooth pain or dental issues make chewing difficult, decreasing nutrient absorption. Regular dental check-ups aren't optional. They're essential. Digestive inefficiencies: Your horse might not be digesting nutrients properly. Time to reevaluate feed quality or digestive aids. 3. Manure Frequency: Counting Matters Healthy horses typically drop manure 8-12 times daily. Keep track: Fewer droppings: Watch out. Could indicate dangerous conditions like colic or impaction. Act fast. Your horse might be suffering quietly. Excessive droppings: If your horse seems to poop constantly but maintains poor condition, nutrient absorption might be impaired. Time to check diet composition and digestive health. 4. Odor: Trust Your Nose Horse manure typically has an earthy, mild odor. Here's when you should worry: Strong, foul-smelling manure: Likely a bacterial imbalance or infection like Salmonella. Don't gamble. Call your vet. Sharp, sour smell: Indicates too many rapidly fermenting carbohydrates (grain overload). Adjust feeding gradually and carefully to avoid bigger digestive upsets. 5. Worms in Manure: Parasites Aren't Always Hidden Sometimes, parasites openly declare war: Long, spaghetti-like roundworms (Ascarids): Common in younger horses. They can lead to severe colic or intestinal blockage. Act fast. Tiny rice-like tapeworm segments: Tapeworm infestations increase colic risk by obstructing intestines. Take action immediately. Pinworms (around anus): Causes tail rubbing, irritation. Not life-threatening, but extremely uncomfortable. Solve it with targeted treatments. Strongyles: Often microscopic, but heavy burdens wreak havoc internally. Regular fecal egg count tests are your best weapon here. 6. Parasites and Gut Health: Understanding the Connection Worm infections severely impact gut health. Parasites damage intestinal linings, disrupt beneficial gut bacteria, and hinder nutrient absorption. While deworming treatments are vital for eliminating parasites, they temporarily stress your horse's gut and disrupt natural gut flora. 7. Optimal Worm Management: A Proactive Approach Gone are the days of deworming on a schedule. Why? Because resistance is on the rise. Enter Worm & Co, the expert in equine fecal testing. Research shows that 74% of horses are dewormed unnecessarily. Not only does this harm your horse's gut health. It fuels faster resistance development. That's why Worm & Co promotes a smarter strategy: test before you treat. With Worm & Co, you get: Professional and accurate manure analysis Personalized insights into your horse's parasite load A sustainable worm management plan It's the gold standard for keeping your horse healthy and avoiding unnecessary treatments. 💡 Did you know? Parasite resistance means that formerly reliable treatments like ivermectin and moxidectin don't work as long as they used to. Testing helps you stay one step ahead. How Does Optimal Worm Management Look? Fecal testing 3-4x per year Targeted treatment only when needed Follow-up testing 14 days after treatment Pasture rotation and manure removal With Worm & Co as your guide, you're not guessing. You're leading with knowledge. 8. Gut Health: Your Horse's Defense & Recovery System Maintaining a healthy gut is your horse's greatest shield against parasites: Blocks infestations: Strengthens gut barriers, preventing parasite attachment. Accelerates recovery: A healthy gut heals faster post-infection. Eases deworming side-effects: Reduces stress on the gut, facilitating quick restoration of balance. How Curafyt Supports Your Horse's Gut Health At Curafyt, we know a resilient gut is your horse's best health investment. A strong digestive system prevents issues and accelerates recovery post-deworming. That's why we've crafted targeted supplements to reinforce gut balance, support rapid healing, and build lasting resilience. Meet Guts & Glory: Your Horse's Digestive Hero Our plant-based powerhouse, Guts & Glory, is packed with essential digestive enzymes, probiotics, and prebiotics. Designed specifically to restore gut flora, it repairs intestinal lining, fortifies the mucosal barrier, and promotes internal detoxification. This gives your horse the strongest foundation for long-term health, from the inside out. Bottom Line: Your horse's manure is trying to tell you something. Are you listening?With Worm & Co by your side for accurate testing, and Curafyt's Guts & Glory to support gut health, you've got the tools to prevent problems before they start. Let's stop guessing and start listening, because your horse deserves proactive care rooted in knowledge. Support your horse's gut from the inside Guts & Glory helps maintain a healthy hindgut microbiome and digestive function. View Guts & Glory
Is Your Horse Too Skinny?

Expert Horse Health & Wellbeing Advice

Is Your Horse Too Skinny?

by Valerie De Clerck on Nov 27 2024
Rule out worms, teeth and disease first, then look at whether feed is actually being absorbed A 500 kg horse needs 7.5 to 10 kg of forage dry matter daily as the foundation Oil adds dense, low-starch calories; the right omega-3 blend beats cheap corn or sunflower oil Gut health is where most stubborn skinny-horse cases hide; fix absorption, not just intake
Does my horse have colic and what should I do?

Expert Horse Health & Wellbeing Advice

Does my horse have colic and what should I do?

by Valerie De Clerck on Sep 21 2023
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
Gastric Ulcers in Horses: Recognizing and Preventing

Expert Horse Health & Wellbeing Advice

Gastric Ulcers in Horses: Recognizing and Preventing

by Valerie De Clerck on Sep 21 2023
Why nearly 70% of sport horses develop gastric ulcers, and the feeding patterns that drive it The non-obvious signs — girthiness, dull coat, gradual weight loss — that owners often miss for months How transport specifically damages the gastric mucosa through bile acid reflux, and what to do before loading A practical prevention protocol: forage amounts, concentrate limits, alfalfa, and stress reduction
This is how you treat an underweight horse

Expert Horse Health & Wellbeing Advice

This is how you treat an underweight horse

by Valerie De Clerck on Sep 21 2023
How to confirm a horse is genuinely underweight using Body Condition Score, including what tactile assessment adds beyond visual inspection The five most common causes of weight loss in horses — and why identifying the cause before changing the diet matters Why grain is a risky first choice for adding calories, and how vegetable oil with high omega-3 content delivers energy more safely What realistic recovery looks like: timelines, benchmarks, and how to track progress without second-guessing a working approach
Why is my horse too skinny?

Expert Horse Health & Wellbeing Advice

Why is my horse too skinny?

by Valerie De Clerck on Sep 21 2023
Did you know that almost 16 % of older horses are too skinny? The same applies to 6 % of adult horses. As extreme weight loss can be life-threatening for your four-legged friend, it is important to intervene in good time— but to do just that, you need to find out why your horse or pony is too skinny first. Often that can be difficult to establish, which is why we list the main causes of weight loss in horses here.