SUCCEED® Blog:

Where #SeriousHorsePeople come to better understand digestive health in horses and its impact and management.

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Myth: Horses Need Blankets in Winter

It seems so cozy – a slighly fuzzy horse tucked into a nice clean stall with a warm blanket, a pile of hay, and a heated water bucket as winter cold and snow descend outside […]

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Hay is for Horses, on Selecting and Inspecting Quality Hay

There’s nothing nicer than climbing up in to a hayloft filled with dry, sweet-smelling hay. Your horse would agree — in general, the better hay smells and looks, the better it tastes and the more […]

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Horses and Hay: Best Types of Hay for Horses

Unless your horse lives in a climate where the pastures are always pristine and never have to be closed for inclement weather, you probably feed your horse hay. (So that means most of us.) And […]

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Hay is for Horses, or Forage First

There’s a reason the flippant phrase, “hay is for horses!” has found its way into popular conversation, even among non-horsey folk. Sure, it’s a funny way to tease someone who overuses the expression “hey” — […]

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Monday Myth: Feed Horses Corn Oil for Weight and Shine

Horse owners have widely different approaches to what goes in our horse’s feed. Oats, pellets, chaff, grain and sweet feed have been popular at various times, but nearly all horse owners agree on one ingredient: […]

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Myth: Beet Pulp is High in Sugar & Shouldn't Be Fed to Horses

If you’re driving through Minnesota, Michigan or North Dakota in late September or October, you might notice harvesters working hard to get that year’s supply of sugar beets into trucks and on the way to […]

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  • Specific GI tract conditions
  • Digestive impact on overall health
  • Symptoms, diagnosis, and treatment of digestive
    health conditions ...and much more!