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WWW.JUSTHORSERIDERS.CO.UKBrussels Sprouts For Horses: Safe Or Skip This Winter?8 min read Last updated: January 2026 Wondering if your horse can share a Brussels sprout this winter without risking colic? This UK-focused guide shows when to skip them and, if you must, how to limit to a pea-sized piece and wait 24 hoursplus safer treats (carrots, celery, green beans) to keep your horse comfy and gas-free. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Sprout policy What To Do: Treat Brussels sprouts as a rare, optional novelty; if unsure, skip them. Follow the most conservative advice for your yard. Why It Matters: Reduces gas build-up and colic risk from cruciferous veg. Common Mistake: Making sprouts a regular part of the ration. Area: Portion control What To Do: Start with a pea-sized piece or thin slice and wait 24 hours before offering another tiny piece. Keep it to very small amounts, very occasionally. Why It Matters: Limits hindgut fermentation spikes that cause discomfort. Common Mistake: Giving a handful because the horse liked them. Area: Safe serving What To Do: Feed in-hand, chopped or sliced, and never mix with kitchen scraps or cooked leftovers. Keep them separate from the daily feed. Why It Matters: Minimises choking risk and avoids additives while gas risk remains. Common Mistake: Bringing cooked, seasoned sprouts to the yard. Area: Skip for sensitivities What To Do: Avoid sprouts for horses prone to gas, colic, ulcers, or diarrhoea, and during routine changes, box rest, or winter stabling. Why It Matters: Sensitive or stressed guts react more strongly to gas-producing foods. Common Mistake: Trialling sprouts during turnout or forage changes. Area: Introduce and monitor What To Do: Introduce any new treat slowly and check droppings, appetite, and behaviour for 24 hours. Keep a simple treat log to track reactions. Why It Matters: Early spotting of changes prevents minor upsets becoming colic. Common Mistake: Increasing quantity quickly after one OK trial. Area: Safer treat options What To Do: Choose carrots, celery, green beans, lettuce, and purpose-made low-sugar treats. Offer small portions and rotate infrequently. Why It Matters: These are gentler on the equine gut than crucifers. Common Mistake: Assuming all veg are safe because theyre healthy for humans. Area: Winter gut care What To Do: Keep forage consistent, maintain regular movement, and make any diet change gradual. Use slow feeders and enrichment instead of novel veg. Why It Matters: Stable time and lower activity raise colic risk; routine supports gut motility. Common Mistake: Adding new snacks abruptly during cold snaps. Area: Yard etiquette What To Do: Never feed someone elses horse and always get permission first. Use a Please do not feed me sign during holidays to prevent surprise snacks. Why It Matters: Prevents tummy upsets and yard disputes from ad hoc feeding. Common Mistake: Sharing festive leftovers around the stables. In This Guide Can horses eat Brussels sprouts? Why sprouts can cause trouble in horses How much and how often? A safe approach When to avoid sprouts altogether Safer winter treat ideas for UK horses How to introduce any new treat and what to watch for Christmas leftovers and yard etiquette Sprouts on your plate, sprouts on the yard when winter rolls in, this question always crops up: can your horse have a Brussels sprout or two? Heres the straight-talking, UK-focused guidance you need to keep your horse comfortable and colic-free this season.Key takeaway: Treat Brussels sprouts as a rare, tiny treat (if at all) cruciferous veg can cause excess gas and may contribute to colic. Safer alternatives like carrots, celery, green beans and lettuce are a better bet.Can horses eat Brussels sprouts?Yes but only in very small amounts as an occasional treat, and many UK advice sources recommend avoiding them altogether because cruciferous vegetables can cause gas and colic. Several practical references allow a couple infrequently, while veterinary-facing guidance is more conservative.In UK resources, youll see two consistent themes. First, Brussels sprouts sit in the cabbage family (cruciferous veg), which are regularly flagged as problematic for horses because they increase intestinal gas. Animal Friends advises that cabbage-family vegetables should not be fed to horses due to the gas production associated with ingesting these foods (source). Second, some equine nutrition articles acknowledge owners may still want to offer the odd sprout as a novelty but only sparingly and never as a regular feed (source). That balance reflects real-world yard practice paired with sensible risk management.Yes, you can feed sprouts to horses, but as a rare treat and in moderation. Just Horse Riders article guidanceWhy sprouts can cause trouble in horsesBrussels sprouts are cruciferous; in horses these vegetables can ferment in the hindgut and produce excess gas, which may lead to discomfort or gas colic. The concern is about gas production, not a unique sprout toxin.Multiple equine references connect cabbage-family veg (sprouts, broccoli, cauliflower, kale) with gas build-up in the equine gut, and the resulting pressure can trigger abdominal pain or colic signs in some horses. Thats why many UK lists place these foods in the do not feed or only with caution category (Animal Friends; Horsix). Its also why forum contributors whove dabbled with sprouts typically advise keeping it to a couple at most, and closely watching the horse afterwards (Horse & Hound forum).Cruciferous vegetables such as cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, kale and Brussels sprouts should not be fed to horses due to the gas production associated with ingesting these foods. Animal Friends equine advice pageHow much and how often? A safe approachTreat sprouts as a non-essential, optional treat only; if you choose to feed any, offer a very small amount infrequently and never add them to the daily ration. Introduce slowly and monitor for any digestive changes.Across sources, theres no evidence-based safe number, so the most responsible stance is conservative:Offer a tiny piece first think a single thin slice or a small chunk and wait 24 hours before considering any more.Do not give large handfuls, mixed kitchen scraps, or cooked leftovers. Cooking doesnt remove the gas-related concern (source).Never make sprouts part of the routine. They shouldnt replace forage or a balanced feed.Chop or slice to reduce any choking risk, and feed in-hand so you can control the portion.Skip entirely for horses with a sensitive gut (more on that below).Vegetables from the cabbage family can be fed in small quantities Be careful not to give too much at once and try it out first. Ask HeltieGenerally cruciferous vegetables are best avoided with horses, but a couple sprouts usually wont cause any problems. Horse & Hound forum contributorQuick tip: If you want the fun without the fuss, purpose-made, low-sugar treats are easier to portion and far safer than kitchen veg. Browse our low-sugar horse treats for simple, yard-safe rewards.When to avoid sprouts altogetherAvoid Brussels sprouts for any horse prone to colic or gas, or if your horse has a history of digestive sensitivity. Also avoid during periods of significant routine change, box rest, or winter stabling when gut upsets are more likely.In colder UK months, horses are often stabled more and may move less. Sudden diet changes even just a few unusual veg can tip a delicate gut into discomfort. If your horse is on a careful management plan for ulcers, diarrhoea, or recurrent colic, stick to a predictable diet and skip sprouts entirely. The same goes if your yard has recently changed forage, turnout time, or workload.Pro tip: Support steady gut function in winter by keeping movement up and forage consistent. If your horse is spending more nights in, ensure theyre comfortable and settled with appropriate stable rugs for the season, and consider forage-based enrichment rather than novel veg. If youre actively managing a sensitive gut, talk to your vet and explore targeted digestive support supplements.Safer winter treat ideas for UK horsesChoose carrots, celery, green beans and lettuce as safer food treats, and pair them with purpose-made low-sugar treats and enrichment toys. These options are generally easier on the equine gut than cabbage-family vegetables.Veterinary and practical sources frequently list carrots, celery, green beans and lettuce as sensible alternatives to crucifers (source). Alongside these simple veg, consider:Commercial low-sugar treats for predictable calories and simple portion control see our treats collection.Treat balls and stable toys to slow intake and add enrichment browse ideas in our gifts for horses and seasonal Christmas gifts for horses.Forage-based boredom busters: double-netted or slow-feed hay nets, small-holed haylage nets, or scatter-feeding chaff in a treat ball for mentally engaging nibbling.More movement: a leg-stretch hack, in-hand walk, or groundwork session can all help gut motility. If youre heading out on grey afternoons, kit up with hi-vis for riders so you stay seen.Remember, even safe treats should be fed in moderation and introduced gradually. If your horse is on a specific diet or weight plan, check with your vet or nutritionist before adding extras.How to introduce any new treat and what to watch forIntroduce any new food slowly, in tiny amounts, and monitor for signs of digestive upset such as reduced appetite, pawing, looking at the flank, restlessness, bloating, or other colic signs. If youre concerned, stop the treat and call your vet promptly.A sensible step-by-step for any novel treat (sprouts included):Offer a pea-sized piece first time and observe for 24 hours.Check droppings, appetite, and demeanour. Any change? Stop and speak to your vet.If no issues, you can occasionally repeat a small piece but dont escalate quantity or frequency.Never give a large portion because they liked it last time thats when gas-related issues can bite.The colic indicators to know include reduced appetite, pawing, flank-watching, bloating, restlessness, or lying down and getting up repeatedly. These are highlighted across UK advice pages warning against gas-producing foods (source). Trust your instincts: if something looks off, remove feed, keep the horse calm, and ring your vet.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend keeping a simple new treat log in winter so you can quickly correlate any tummy grumbles with changes to the snack menu. Its a small habit that can save a lot of second-guessing.Christmas leftovers and yard etiquetteDo not bring cooked Brussels sprouts, mixed vegetable scraps, or handfuls of leftovers down to the yard; sharing human food ad hoc is a common cause of upset tummies and yard disagreements. Stick to horse-safe treats and always get the yard owners permission before offering food to anyone elses horse.UK yards get especially festive, but kitchen sharing shouldnt become normal practice. Cooked sprouts are still cruciferous and remain a gassy choice for horses; adding butter, seasoning, bacon, or gravy only makes them less suitable. If you want to spread cheer, brighten the stable with a toy or stock up a friends grooming kit instead. Our Christmas gifts for horses and gifts for equestrians collections have yard-safe ideas that wont upset equine stomachs.Quick tip: Put a friendly sign on your stable door during the holidays: Please do not feed me Im on a special diet. Its a polite, effective way to keep surprise snacks out of your horses feed intake.Bottom line: If in doubt, dont feed it. Choose proven, horse-friendly treats and enrichment, and keep your horses gut routine steady through the winter.FAQsCan horses eat Brussels sprouts?Some equine sources say yes, but only in very small amounts and very occasionally; others recommend avoiding them entirely because cruciferous vegetables can cause gas and increase colic risk. See our overview and the balanced position in our earlier guide (source).Do Brussels sprouts cause colic?They can contribute to gas build-up, which may lead to abdominal discomfort or gas colic, especially if a horse eats too many at once. Thats why many UK lists put cabbage-family veg in the avoid category (source).Are raw Brussels sprouts safer than cooked?No. The main concern is the cruciferous veg gas effect, and cooking doesnt remove that reason for caution (source). Avoid cooked leftovers and mixed kitchen scraps entirely.How many Brussels sprouts can a horse have?Theres no evidence-based safe number. The practical consensus is very small amounts only, very occasionally or avoid them altogether to minimise risk (source).What signs should I watch for after feeding sprouts?Watch for reduced appetite, pawing, looking at the flank, restlessness, bloating, or other signs of colic. If you see any of these, stop the treat and call your vet (source).What are safer alternatives to Brussels sprouts?Carrots, celery, green beans and lettuce are widely listed as safer options than cruciferous veg (source). For simplicity and consistency, choose purpose-made, low-sugar treats from our treats collection.What else can I do to beat stable boredom without risky snacks?Try treat balls, forage-based slow feeding, in-hand walks, and short hacks to keep your horse occupied and gut motility ticking over. Browse yard-safe ideas in our gifts for horses, keep festive and practical with Christmas gifts for horses, and if your horse is stabled more, check theyre comfortable in the right stable rug. For sensitive tummies, consider targeted digestive support supplements and discuss options with your vet. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. 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WWW.JUSTHORSERIDERS.CO.UKUK Horse Forums: Can't Delete? Edit, Update Or Ask Mods9 min read Last updated: January 2026 Posted on a UK horse forum and now need to fix or remove itmaybe you shared too much or the advice feels unsafe? Learn exactly what you can edit in the first 15 minutes, when to ask moderators to remove content, and how to add a clear, dated update that protects welfare and helps other riders. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Forum Rules What To Do: Check the forum policy; assume you can edit briefly but need moderators for deletions. Plan any changes within the limited edit window. Why It Matters: Youll act within site rules and avoid frustration or sanctions. Common Mistake: Expecting to fully delete your own post or thread. Area: Use Edit Window What To Do: Immediately copy your post, strip sensitive details, and add a holding note like Temporarily redactedawaiting moderator help. Then contact moderators. Why It Matters: Quick triage limits harm while you wait for admin action. Common Mistake: Letting the edit window expire before removing risky details. Area: Escalate to Mods What To Do: Escalate if theres a privacy breach, legal risk, or unsafe/misleading welfare advice. Ask for redaction or removal as appropriate. Why It Matters: Moderators can mitigate harm and keep the thread coherent. Common Mistake: Treating routine updates as emergencies that need deletion. Area: Request Removal What To Do: Message moderators with the post link, exact text to remove, your reason, and the remedy you want (redaction/partial/full). Be concise and factual. Why It Matters: Clear requests get faster, more accurate outcomes. Common Mistake: Sending vague or duplicate requests to multiple moderators. Area: Leave Resolution What To Do: Keep the thread up and add a dated Resolved update plus a final summary of what worked and what didnt. Correct earlier inaccuracies visibly. Why It Matters: It helps future riders and preserves thread context. Common Mistake: Deleting details that make replies make sense. Area: Correct Risky Advice What To Do: If advice could harm welfare or safety, edit immediately with Edit: unsafesee update below, and replace with vetted guidance or cite your vet. Why It Matters: UK guidance expects foreseeable risks to be reduced promptly. Common Mistake: Quietly tweaking wording without signalling the correction. Area: Preserve Context What To Do: Prefer redaction notes or moderator flags over hard deletion; explain why changes were made. Leave a clear audit trail in your edits. Why It Matters: Threads stay readable and trustworthy for the community. Common Mistake: Removing chunks that make the discussion incoherent. Area: Yard Actions What To Do: Turn your solution into practical yard stepsnoticeboard bullets, a quick-reference diary, and a short kit list to implement the fix. Why It Matters: Translating forum advice into action improves daily horse care. Common Mistake: Leaving solutions online only, so the yard team never applies them. In This Guide Can you delete your own forum post? The UK reality When should you edit, correct, or delete? How to request moderator removal the right way Best practice for leaving a helpful record Protecting welfare and safety in online advice Practical steps before the edit window closes Yard-life extras: turn forum solutions into action Bottom line: steward your posts like you steward your horse Youve posted a question on a UK horse forum and now want to delete or amend it. Whether its a quick fix, a sensitive issue, or safety-critical advice, how you handle it matters for your horse, for other riders, and for forum etiquette.Key takeaway: On most UK equestrian forums you cant delete your own post, only edit it for a short time; if content is sensitive, unsafe or legally risky, contact moderators for removal, but otherwise leave the thread up and add a clear, helpful update.Can you delete your own forum post? The UK realityNoon many UK equestrian forums you cant delete your own post; you usually get a short edit window and must ask moderators for removals. The Horse & Hound forum, for example, allows only brief edits and reserves deletion for admin action.Forum users and moderators consistently report that posts and threads are part of a wider conversation and cant simply be erased by the original poster. On the Horse & Hound forum, a moderator/user explains you can edit briefly (around 15 minutes) but need to request removals from the admin team. Other platforms also avoid full deletion to preserve clarity; moderators on The Farming Forum note that taking posts out completely can make threads make no sense, so they often leave a removed by moderator notice instead.You cant delete a thread or post on this forum. You can edit posts for 15min after you posted it. You can request admin team delete a thread or post Horse & Hound forumWhen should you edit, correct, or delete?Edit for routine updates or solved issues; ask moderators to remove or redact if theres personal data, legal risk, or unsafe/misleading welfare advice.Most day-to-day forum posts (rugging choices, yard rules, muddy gateways, winter feed tweaks) benefit from being left visible with a clear, dated update that shows what worked. This helps other UK riders who will search for the same problem next week when the weather turns or a yard policy changes.Escalate to moderators if your post contains identifying details you didnt intend to share, defamatory comments, or advice that could foreseeably put a horse or rider at risk. UK safety guidance for riding establishments states that if a risk is foreseeable, theres a duty to reduce it as far as reasonably possible (CIEH), and the Pony Club urges us to minimise injuries in equestrian activities. Thats why leaving a corrected, transparent record is usually better than a vanishing act when safety is in play.For welfare questionsstable environment, fencing, turnout, and exercisethe UK Code of Practice advises seeking help from a vet, an experienced professional, or an equine welfare organisation if youre unsure. The RSPCA also highlights the need for secure fencing, adequate exercise, and appropriate environmental conditions. If your original post could mislead on these points, correct it promptly and, if needed, ask for moderator support.How to request moderator removal the right wayMessage the moderators with a concise reason, link to the post, and a clear request (redaction, partial removal, or full deletion); be specific about any legal or welfare concerns.Moderators appreciate clarity and evidence. Include:A direct link to the post or thread and the exact content to remove.The reason: privacy breach, legal risk, welfare/safety concern, or off-topic drift causing harm.The remedy youre seeking: redaction of names, removal of a paragraph, or deletion of the thread.On some platforms, moderators can add a visible note explaining the reason for removal; users on The Farming Forum describe options to leave a removed by moderator line with a short explanation. Expect them to prioritise thread coherence and community rules.Quick tip: If the edit window is still open, temporarily remove any sensitive details while you wait for moderator action. Keep a copy of the original wording in case they need it for context.Best practice for leaving a helpful recordLeave the question up and add the solution with a timestamp; note corrections clearly so other riders benefit and the thread stays coherent.UK equestrian life is seasonal, and solved threads become gold dust when the same issue rolls round again. Preserve that value with a clean, visible resolution:Add a short Resolved line at the top of your original post: Resolved on 10 Nov: changing to a 200g rug and adding a neck solved the chills at night.Write a final reply summarising what worked, what didnt, and any professional advice you received (for example, vet or saddler input, in line with the UK welfare code guidance to seek expert help).Correct any inaccuracies rather than hiding them: Edit, 12 Dec: my earlier comment on ad-lib hay for this laminitic was wrongour vet advised controlled portions and turnout management.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend thinking about how your update could help someone searching rugging for clipped cob at 3C or livery yard mud control. Linking practical kit can be a kindness as well: if your winter fix was a different rug weight, point people to reliable winter turnout rugs or cosy stable rugs that matched your solution.Protecting welfare and safety in online adviceCorrect welfare and safety information immediately and cite trusted UK sources; if harm is plausible, ask moderators to trim or remove the risky content.The UK has clear expectations when horse welfare or safety is involved. The governments keeping horses guidance and the Code of Practice emphasise proper management and seeking advice from a vet, an experienced professional, or an equine welfare organisation when in doubt. The RSPCA sets out environmental needs such as secure fencing and adequate exercise. If an old post of yours conflicts with this guidancesay, it suggests inadequate fencing or unsafe turnoutedit it now and note the change.Safety is a community responsibility. The CIEH states that foreseeable risks should be reduced as far as reasonably possible, and the Pony Club reinforces reducing injuries wherever possible. That makes transparent corrections the right thing to doespecially on topics like hacking, yard machinery, rugging heat-stress, or stable fire safety. When in doubt, pair your update with a pointer to protective kit such as a properly fitted riding helmet and hi-vis for riders during low winter light.Pro tip: If youve recommended a management change (e.g., turnout schedule, feed, or gear) and later learn it risks laminitis, colic, or injury, add: Edit: unsafeplease see updated vet-advised approach below, then replace the original content with the correct advice, citing your source or vet.Practical steps before the edit window closesAct fast: copy your post, remove sensitive details, add a holding note, and contact moderators with a precise request.Most forums offer a short editing windowusers on Horse & Hound report around 15 minutes in practice. Use those minutes well:Copy and paste your original post to a safe document for records.Strip out names, locations, plate numbers, or legally sensitive wording.Add a top-line edit: Temporarily redacted for privacyawaiting moderator assistance.Send a single, clear message to moderators with your link, reason, and exact request (redaction/deletion).Once calm, refine your final update so others can follow your journey. If the issue was tack- or care-related, list what you tried, what failed, and what solved it. For example, Swapped to a broader noseband and booked a saddle check; behaviour improved in 72 hours. If grooming or skin care solved it, say so and point others towards a reliable grooming kit that supported your plan.Yard-life extras: turn forum solutions into actionWrite up your solution for your yard noticeboard or team chat, and keep a quick-reference diary so fixes arent forgotten when the weather turns again.Forums are brilliant for ideasyour yard is where they stick. Turn a solved thread into action by:Posting the key steps on a stable noticeboard so sharers and liveries are aligned.Keeping a waterproof yard diary of what worked in cold snaps, heatwaves, or boggy gateways.Printing a one-page how we do X here for helpers on clipping days or box-rest routines.If youre equipping for the fix you describe, make it easy for others to follow by naming tried-and-tested kit. For winter comfort and consistent routines, that may include dependable turnout rugs, warm stable rugs, protective horse boots and bandages for exercise, and a robust grooming set for mud-season management. For you and your helpers, add a small equestrian gift like a notebook or stocking-filler diary to capture what worked for your horse when the frost or flies return.On access and yard policy topics, the British Horse Society emphasises involving local equestrians to target limited resources effectively. If your thread touches bridleways, gate widths, or surfacing, share it with your yard or local group and feed into consultations so riders needs are heard (BHS Countryside Access guidance).Quick tip: Winter hacking in low light? Add your final thread update and remind readers to ride out with high-visibility layers. Our customers often combine a bright quarter sheet with reliable hi-vis for the rider and a snug helmet cover to be seen sooner.Bottom line: steward your posts like you steward your horseTreat your forum posts as part of the UK riding communitys knowledge base: update them clearly, correct them promptly, and remove them only when privacy, legality, or safety demands it.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend leaving a helpful trailwhat you tried, what worked, and where professional advice made the difference. It protects horses, saves riders time, and turns one persons headache into everyones shortcut.FAQsHere are concise answers to the most common UK questions about editing or deleting forum posts.Can I delete my own forum post in the UK?Often no. Many UK equestrian forums allow only a short edit window, with deletion handled by moderators or admins. See the Horse & Hound forum guidance.Is it better to edit or leave a solved question up?Leave it up and add the solution with a date. It preserves context and helps other riders facing the same issue next week or next winter.When should I ask moderators to remove a post?When theres a privacy breach, legal risk, or unsafe/misleading welfare advice. UK guidance expects foreseeable risks to be reduced as far as reasonably possible (CIEH).Why do moderators sometimes refuse full deletion?Complete removal can break the flow of a thread and make replies meaningless. Many forums prefer redaction or a removed by moderator note (The Farming Forum discussion).What if my post includes wrong welfare advice?Correct it immediately and note the change. The UK welfare code advises seeking advice from a vet, experienced professional, or equine welfare organisation if unsure (GOV.UK: Code of Practice).Should I add links to helpful kit in my update?Yes, if it genuinely helped you. For example, if a warmer rug fixed a problem, point to quality turnout rugs or stable rugs. If winter visibility was the issue, note your hi-vis solution and a correctly fitted helmet.How can I make my update useful at the yard?Summarise the steps on a noticeboard, keep a diary of what worked, and share a one-page how we do it with sharers. A simple list plus go-to kitlike grooming essentials or horse boots and bandageshelps everyone act consistently. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. 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