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The Importance Of Different Horse Feeds For Different Needs - Kentucky Equine Research

The Importance Of Different Horse Feeds For Different Needs - Kentucky Equine Research Skip to content Select region United States Australia New Zealand Europe Canada Middle East Asia Kentucky Equine Research About Us Conference 2026 Consultation Competition Staff Careers Internships Products Antioxidants Nano-E Nano-Q10 Bone Health DuraPlex Triacton Digestive Health BMC EquiShure RiteTrac Electrolytes Race Recovery Restore SR Restore Paste Hoof & Coat Bio-Bloom PS Joint Health KER-Flex Synovate HA Omega-3, DHA & EPA EO-3 Vitamin/Mineral Micro-Max Total Wellness Feeds All-Phase RE-LEVE RE-LEVE Sport KERx Equine Omega Profile MFM Pellet ReSolvin EQ Partner Feeds Research Research Facilities Research Horses Product Development Published Research Library Equinews Advances In Equine Nutrition Published Research Nutrition Conference Proceedings Tools Microsteed Gro-Trac News Contact Shop NMDL Entire Site Library Section Only Everything Except Library Search Published Research and Advances in Equine Nutrition Home Published The Importance Of Different Horse Feeds For Different Needs The Importance Of Different Horse Feeds For Different Needs January 1, 1999 November 14, 2017 Kentucky Equine Research Crandell KM. 1999. The importance of different feeds for different needs. Equinews Vol. 2/1:5-9.]

In an ideal world all the horses on a farm, from broodmares to weanlings to horses in heavy work, could be fed the same feed out of the same bag. Unfortunately, the nutritional needs of horses in different life stages vary tremendously, and this makes it difficult to design a “one bag fits all” feed. The basis of any equine diet should be forage. Any concentrate (sweet feed, pellet or grain) should compensate for deficiencies in the forage. One forage may prove to be an acceptable complete diet for a maintenance horse while the same forage may have inadequate levels of protein necessary for a weanling or deficient levels of energy required by a sport horse.

Open Publication Subject: Energy, Feed Ingredients, Horse Feed, Management, Performance, Senior Horse Author: Kathleen Crandell Type: Article Publication: Equinews Year: 1999 Nutrition Behavior Digestive/GI Feed Ingredients Growth Lameness Metabolic Performance Reproduction Health Basic Health Diseases Emergency Care Lameness Latest Health News Preventative Reproduction Video Library General Interest Newsletter Sign up Today! Phone Numbers U.S. Headquarters T 1.859.873.1988 Australian Office TF 1 800 772 198 T +61 3 8562 7000 U.S. Headquarters T 1.859.873.1988 Australian Office TF 1 800 772 198 T +61 3 8562 7000 Kentucky Equine Research Social Media Links facebook twitter © Copyright 2026 Kentucky Equine Research. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy | Terms of Use X Subscribe to Equinews and get the latest equine nutrition and health news delivered to your inbox. Sign up for free now!

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