Free Gastric Ulcer Risk Quiz
Are you putting your horse at risk of gastric ulcers?
Take the Ulcer Risk Quiz
Find out in 2-minutes flat if your horse is at risk of gastric ulcers.
Did you know:
Riding your horse on an empty stomach is one of the leading causes of gastric ulceration?
As humans, we think our horses are just like us… For us, running on a full stomach is uncomfortable, so we think it must be for our horses too.
But the opposite is true! Working a horse on an empty stomach is painful and over time will increase the risk of gastric ulcers for your horse.
Our human stomach switches on acid production when we eat. And it switches off when we stop eating.
But our horses’ acid production is ON 24/7!
So if we let them get an empty stomach, what they end up with is a stomach full of strong, burning acid (see diagram, right).
THE BOTTOM LINE
If you ride your horse on an empty stomach, the strong acid from the lower section of the stomach splashes up and burns ulcers into the upper section of the stomach.
The result, pain! And anxious, sour, ‘hyperactive’, and generally undesirable behaviour. Plus loss of appetite, weight loss and a leaking gut which can lead to systemic inflammation. So what can you do?
FEED ALFALFA HAY BEFORE YOU RIDE!
Simple – this is such an easy way to reduce the risk of ulcers for your horse. And if you don’t normally feed alfalfa to your horse, his usual hay will do. This one simple change is creating a huge welfare shift for horses everywhere!
Try it, your horse will quickly show you that it is better for him to work with a full stomach!