Learn Practical Nutrition Tips with New Equine Guelph Videos

View of horse digestive system.
View of horse digestive system. My Horse University

Newsdate: Mon 30 November 2020 – 7:00 am
Location: GUELPH, Ontario

Why are forage and/or forage-based feeds or alternatives so important for a horse’s digestive system?  You will find out in part three of their three-part video series on equine digestion.

Horses eating forage from a feeder.

Horses eating forage from a feeder

Part 3 of the digestive journey of a horse is coming to your screen December 2020!.
© 2017 by Sedin New window.

Watch as we take what we’ve learned in the previous two videos and apply it to how and what we feed horses. You’ll learn practical information that will help you meet the needs of your horse’s digestive system. 

All three videos will be available in Equine Guelph’s December Enews that will be released on December 2, 2020.  Subscribe to Equine Guelph's monthly Enews, for free so you don’t miss out on the video series,  generously made possible by Trouw Nutrition Canada. 

Gayle Ecker and Jack the standardbred are both featured in Equine Guelph’s three-part video series that takes viewers on a journey through the horse’s digestive tract. All three videos will be available to subscribers of Equine Guelph’s monthly communications. Sign up here to be sure you catch the release on December 2, 2020.

The three-part video series helps viewers learn what the equine digestive system looks like and how it works and uses this to explain why certain feeding strategies are more appropriate than others. The series uses a life-size model of the digestive system to show viewers what each organ looks like and how big it really is. The model was made with artificial materials, so the videos are ideal for anyone with a weak stomach (no pun intended) as there are no graphic images.

Part one covers the first section of the horse’s digestive system, including the mouth, teeth, esophagus, stomach and small intestine.

Part two focuses on the horse’s hindgut, which is a term that refers to the horse’s cecum, large colon, small colon and the rectum.

Part three takes what we’ve learned about the digestive system and applies it to how we feed horses, including what we feed them.  

Part three will cover why forage and/or forage-based feeds are important for a horse’s digestive system. The video also discusses feeding strategies, like providing small, frequent amounts of food and keeping the diet consistent from day to day.

As an Equine Guelph monthly E-news subscriber you will also receive the interactive Horse Health Tool of the Month. November's tool is the Senior Horse Challenge with new feature video on how to care for senior hooves!

Equine Guelph is the horse owners' and care givers' Centre at the University of Guelph in Canada. It is a unique partnership dedicated to the health and well-being of horses, supported and overseen by equine industry groups. Equine Guelph is the epicentre for academia, industry and government - for the good of the equine industry as a whole. For further information, visit www.equineguelph.ca.


Press release article by: Nicole Weidner, Equine Guelph 

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This news article is a press release received by the organization or person noted above. Press releases from recognized horse health companies and individuals are frequently posted on EquiMed as a service to our visitors. Please contact the author of the press release directly for additional information.

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