Recent Updates
All Countries
All Countries
Afghanistan
Albania
Algeria
American Samoa
Andorra
Angola
Anguilla
Antarctica
Antigua and Barbuda
Argentina
Armenia
Aruba
Australia
Austria
Azerbaijan
Bahamas
Bahrain
Bangladesh
Barbados
Belarus
Belgium
Belize
Benin
Bermuda
Bhutan
Bolivia
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Botswana
Bouvet Island
Brazil
British Indian Ocean Territory
Brunei Darussalam
Bulgaria
Burkina Faso
Burundi
Cambodia
Cameroon
Canada
Cape Verde
Cayman Islands
Central African Republic
Chad
Chile
China
Christmas Island
Cocos (Keeling) Islands
Colombia
Comoros
Congo
Cook Islands
Costa Rica
Croatia (Hrvatska)
Cuba
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark
Djibouti
Dominica
Dominican Republic
East Timor
Ecuador
Egypt
El Salvador
Equatorial Guinea
Eritrea
Estonia
Ethiopia
Falkland Islands (Malvinas)
Faroe Islands
Fiji
Finland
France
France, Metropolitan
French Guiana
French Polynesia
French Southern Territories
Gabon
Gambia
Georgia
Germany
Ghana
Gibraltar
Guernsey
Greece
Greenland
Grenada
Guadeloupe
Guam
Guatemala
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Guyana
Haiti
Heard and Mc Donald Islands
Honduras
Hong Kong
Hungary
Iceland
India
Isle of Man
Indonesia
Iran (Islamic Republic of)
Iraq
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Ivory Coast
Jersey
Jamaica
Japan
Jordan
Kazakhstan
Kenya
Kiribati
Korea, Democratic People's Republic of
Korea, Republic of
Kosovo
Kuwait
Kyrgyzstan
Lao People's Democratic Republic
Latvia
Lebanon
Lesotho
Liberia
Libyan Arab Jamahiriya
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Macau
Macedonia
Madagascar
Malawi
Malaysia
Maldives
Mali
Malta
Marshall Islands
Martinique
Mauritania
Mauritius
Mayotte
Mexico
Micronesia, Federated States of
Moldova, Republic of
Monaco
Mongolia
Montenegro
Montserrat
Morocco
Mozambique
Myanmar
Namibia
Nauru
Nepal
Netherlands
Netherlands Antilles
New Caledonia
New Zealand
Nicaragua
Niger
Nigeria
Niue
Norfolk Island
Northern Mariana Islands
Norway
Oman
Pakistan
Palau
Palestine
Panama
Papua New Guinea
Paraguay
Peru
Philippines
Pitcairn
Poland
Portugal
Puerto Rico
Qatar
Reunion
Romania
Russian Federation
Rwanda
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Saint Lucia
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Samoa
San Marino
Sao Tome and Principe
Saudi Arabia
Senegal
Serbia
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
Singapore
Slovakia
Slovenia
Solomon Islands
Somalia
South Africa
South Georgia South Sandwich Islands
Spain
Sri Lanka
St. Helena
St. Pierre and Miquelon
Sudan
Suriname
Svalbard and Jan Mayen Islands
Swaziland
Sweden
Switzerland
Syrian Arab Republic
Taiwan
Tajikistan
Tanzania, United Republic of
Thailand
Togo
Tokelau
Tonga
Trinidad and Tobago
Tunisia
Turkey
Turkmenistan
Turks and Caicos Islands
Tuvalu
Uganda
Ukraine
United Arab Emirates
United Kingdom
United States
United States minor outlying islands
Uruguay
Uzbekistan
Vanuatu
Vatican City State
Venezuela
Vietnam
Virgin Islands (British)
Virgin Islands (U.S.)
Wallis and Futuna Islands
Western Sahara
Yemen
Zaire
Zambia
Zimbabwe
-
WWW.PREMIEREQUINE.CO.UKEventing Boots Built For Modern Cross Country...Built For Cross CountryCross-country puts huge demands on a horses legs. Fast ground, water complexes and solid fences all require lightweight protection that performs without restricting movement.Premier Equines Eventing Boots are designed to combine airflow, lightweight performance and durable strike protection for modern eventing. Our ranges of Eventing Boots are available In Front & Hind.Cooling Technology That WorksAs the horse gallops, air flows through front vents, circulates around the tendons and exits through side vents, helping maintain airflow throughout the boot while in motion.The lightweight construction and EVA lining help prevent water retention, making them ideal for demanding cross-country conditions.Trusted By Riders This SeasonPaul TapnerBadminton winner and one of the sports most respected cross-country riders.Lizzie BaughCCI4* winner with an exciting season ahead competing at top level.Jemima HowdenAlready one of the most exciting young names in British eventing, Jemima Howden continues to establish herself on the international stage with impressive performances across both Young Rider and CCI levels.The Air Cooled OriginalsThe Air Cooled Original Eventing Boots combine durable 2520D ballistic nylon with supple microfibre leather for lightweight, flexible protection across country.EVA lining helps prevent water retention so the boots stay lighter on the horses legs through demanding cross-country conditions, while strike guards offer reliable protection where it matters most.Carbon Tech Air Cooled BootsCrafted entirely from Carbon Tech microfibre leather, these eventing boots offer exceptional strength, durability and protection for demanding cross-country riding.The lightweight construction moulds comfortably to the horses leg while maintaining the airflow and impact protection needed for modern eventing.Super Lite Carbon Tech BootsFavoured by both event riders and racehorse trainers, the Super Lite Carbon Tech Boots are designed for horses that perform best in lighter equipment.Made from lightweight Carbon Tech microfibre leather, they provide streamlined protection without unnecessary bulk, ideal for fast work and solid jumping fences.0 Comments 0 Shares 10 ViewsPlease log in to like, share and comment!
-
WWW.JUSTHORSERIDERS.CO.UKPricing A Green 6-Year-Old Horse: UK Values & Risks12 min read Last updated: January 2026 Worried about overpricing or underselling your green six-year-old, especially with a lameness note or a hint of napping? You'll get today's UK market price bands, risk-based adjustments, and evidence to price with confidence, including why many kind, usable six-year-olds land at 6,000-8,000 with a clean, current vetting. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Define Current Job What To Do: State exactly what the horse does today: walk/trot/canter in a school, hacks alone/in company, poles/small fences, traffic exposure. Put this in the advert and viewing plan. Why It Matters: Buyers pay for proven suitability now, not vague potential. Common Mistake: Selling on potential without a clear, current workload. Area: Benchmark Price Band What To Do: Compare like-for-like ads and forum ranges; start 6,0008,000 for ordinary, kind green six-year-olds, higher for smart natives/show types, much higher for produced talent. Sense-check against real UK listings. Why It Matters: Realistic bands attract the right enquiries and quicker sales. Common Mistake: Cherry-picking outlier prices to justify an inflated figure. Area: Adjust for Lameness What To Do: Document diagnosis, treatment, and months of sound work; price below a clean-record equivalent unless current vetting is exemplary. Share dates, reports, and workload in writing. Why It Matters: Transparent risk pricing keeps deals moving and avoids disputes. Common Mistake: Pricing as if the history never happened. Area: Manage Napping Disclosure What To Do: Describe triggers, frequency, and what training helps; demonstrate schooling and a short hack, solo and in company. Provide recent progress videos. Why It Matters: Honest, testable behaviour info preserves trust and value. Common Mistake: Hiding napping until the viewing or glossing it over in the advert. Area: Prove Soundness What To Do: Arrange a pre-purchase vetting (2 or 5 stage) and follow imaging advice; keep a 24 week work diary and up-to-date videos. Flag any past issues to the vet beforehand. Why It Matters: Objective evidence underpins price and suitability decisions. Common Mistake: Relying on verbal assurances instead of reports and footage. Area: Set Up Viewings What To Do: Plan a safe, repeatable demo: schooling with transitions, poles/small fences, then a short hack. Use proper kit (hi-vis, protective boots) and present tidy without disguising anything. Why It Matters: A professional, transparent assessment boosts buyer confidence. Common Mistake: Only showing perfect conditions or a quick trot round the yard. Area: Prepare for UK Conditions What To Do: Prove the horse copes with wind, drizzle, traffic, mud, and time off; include video from less-than-ideal days. Support with sensible turnout, feeding, and management. Why It Matters: Horses that handle real British conditions sell faster and stronger. Common Mistake: Marketing a fair-weather schoolmaster that struggles outside the arena. Area: Nail the Paperwork What To Do: Compile passport/ID, disclosures, vet history, imaging, work diary, and a plain-English summary of current work/quirks. Put deposits, subject to vetting, and warranties in writing. Why It Matters: Clear records protect both parties and support the agreed price. Common Mistake: Leaving disclosures verbal and off the bill of sale. In This Guide What is a fair price for a green 6-year-old in the UK? How does a lameness history change value even if the horse is sound? Napping and behaviour: how should this affect pricing and disclosure? How do you evidence soundness and suitability before you agree a price? How do you set an asking price that sells in todays UK market? What UK-season and management factors affect saleability and price? What paperwork protects both buyer and seller in the UK? What kit helps prepare your green horse for viewings and a return to consistent work? Pricing a green six-year-old is one of the hardest calls youll make get it wrong and you either leave money on the table or watch a decent horse go stale on the market. Add a past lameness or napping history and the price has to reflect both what the horse can do today and the risk a buyer takes on.Key takeaway: In todays UK market, ordinary but kind, sound, green six-year-olds often sell around 6,0008,000; disclosed lameness or napping usually knocks this down unless you can evidence a clean, current vetting and consistent work.What is a fair price for a green 6-year-old in the UK?In the current UK market, a usable, kind green horse commonly advertises around 6,0008,000, while very nice native/showing types can reach 10,00015,000+, and talented six-year-olds aimed at age classes sit nearer 20,00030,000. These figures reflect forum-reported deals across the UK and the strong link between price, job, and proven ability.Experienced buyers repeatedly cite a middle ground of 6,0008,000 for the ordinary, mannerly, green horse that schools and hacks reliably, with soundness documented. Community examples also show outliers from roughly 1,000 for urgent or low-quality sales up to well into five figures for smart natives and showing types with obvious quality and manners a spread captured in recent Horse & Hound forum discussions. Horses with the jump, movement and production to place in age classes as six-year-olds are frequently discussed in the 20,00030,000 range.Value is job-specific. UK adverts on platforms like Horsemart and ehorses are segmented by breeding, discipline and price because a horse that quietly hacks and attends riding club is a different proposition to a young eventer or show ring native. Classifieds show green as an active category see Pets4Homes but green plus kind, easy, mannerly, safe, sound, obedient attracts the stronger bids reported on the forums.How does a lameness history change value even if the horse is sound?A disclosed lameness history almost always reduces price because it lowers buyer confidence; the less clearly diagnosed and evidenced the resolution, the larger the discount. Buyers will also price in future diagnostic and management costs if the horse goes unsound again.Before you talk numbers, understand what the lameness actually was and how it was resolved. A modern lameness examination is systematic and staged. As the University of Edinburgh Equine Hospital puts it:The lameness examination aims to first localise the origin of pain, then obtain more information about that source of pain, and finally to determine the bestRead the overview from their orthopaedics team here: University of Edinburgh Equine Orthopaedics. If you can show a full work-up, a clear diagnosis, appropriate treatment, and a period of consistent sound work since, you defend more of the horses value. If the cause was never identified, or required extended rest and treatment, buyers will expect a keener price.In the UK, expect a pre-purchase vetting to be standard on any horse with a history of lameness. Equine vets routinely offer these assessments to advise on suitability and risk see Dr Alex Knotts service summary: vettings and sales. Where lameness was disclosed, sales can still complete with price reductions, but documentation matters; legal disputes often turn on what was written and agreed at the time of sale, as echoed in UK Q&A cases such as this JustAnswer example.Quick tip: Ask for the timeline in writing onset date, diagnostics used, treatment given, rest period, date of return to work, current workload, and the last date the horse was assessed sound. The clearer the paper trail, the firmer your pricing position.Napping and behaviour: how should this affect pricing and disclosure?Napping reduces value because it introduces risk and uncertainty; buyers will discount based on frequency, triggers, and how easily the behaviour resolves with schooling and management. You must disclose when and how it happens, and demonstrate what the horse can currently do safely.Napping can stem from confidence, schooling gaps, management changes, or pain. UK buyers will probe whether it appears in new places, on solo hacks, in winter wind and rain, after time off, or when the horse is in low light and heavy traffic because these are typical British conditions. Detail the circumstances and what training has helped. Invite viewings that include schooling and a short hack (ideally both in company and alone) so buyers see the real picture.Pro tip: Set viewings up for safety and clarity. Kitted-out riders increase confidence and professionalism think high-visibility for roadside assessments. Our range of rider hi-vis essentials helps keep everyone seen on short hacks around the yard approaches.How do you evidence soundness and suitability before you agree a price?Always commission a pre-purchase vetting (2- or 5-stage) and budget for imaging if the vet recommends it; pair this with a written work record and up-to-date video of schooling and hacking. This objective evidence protects both price and saleability.Whether buying or selling, lean on an experienced equine vet to navigate the decision:Whether you are buying or selling, my experience, across a number of equine disciplines, allows me to help and advise you on the best course of action.Find details on typical UK vettings here: Alex Knott Equine Vet. If the horse has any history of lameness or behavioural resistance, tell the vet in advance. If the clinical exam suggests a concern, expect nerve blocks, ultrasound or Xrays to localise pain and confirm the diagnosis the staged approach explained by the University of Edinburgh team above supports clear decision-making and fair pricing.Present the horse honestly and professionally:Keep a two- to four-week work diary showing what the horse is doing now (schooling alone/in company, hacking routes, poles or small fences, traffic exposure).Film schooling, transitions, a simple hack, and any relevant trigger context (e.g., wind, new route) to show improvement and current behaviour.Prepare for travel to the vet or to a school with good protective kit; our horse boots and bandages range includes travel protection for legs now and during any rehab period.Arrive turned out well a tidy, clean horse with neat mane and tail reads as well cared-for. See our curated grooming collections for quick, professional presentation at viewings.How do you set an asking price that sells in todays UK market?Price the horse on current evidence, not wishful potential, and reflect any lameness or napping in the figure while backing your ask with documentation and a transparent, testable description of the horses work. Buyers pay for safe, sound, obedient and mannerly and they discount for uncertainty.Use this step-by-step to land on a figure that attracts the right buyers:Define the job today. Riding club all-rounder, low-level eventer, hacking and fun rides, show ring native? UK adverts segment by discipline for a reason value tracks the intended job and proven suitability (Horsemart, ehorses).Benchmark against the market. For a kind, mannerly, green horse doing flatwork correctly and hacking, forum contributors often cite 6,0008,000 as a fair band; nicer showing or native types can reach 10,00015,000+; horses with clear talent and production for age classes may be 20,00030,000 (H&H pricing thread, H&H age-class thread).Adjust for history with evidence. A green six-year-old with resolved, well-diagnosed lameness and months of sound work usually prices below a comparable horse with a clean record. If your clean-history benchmark would be ~7,500, a sensible reduction might put you in the mid-four figures to low five figures depending on vetting findings and how robust your work diary and videos are.Describe what the horse can do now, in writing. Sellers should state: walks/trots/canters in a school, hacks alone/in company, small fences or poles, exposure to traffic, and any known behavioural triggers. Buyers should request the same info up front. This clarity encourages firm, fair offers.Invite a proper assessment and vetting. Expect most UK buyers to arrange a pre-purchase exam; be ready with dates and locations, and include any previous veterinary reports. Transparent organisation justifies a stronger price.Pro tip: If youre on the fence between two figures, test the higher one only if your documentation is bulletproof and the horse is quietly doing the job today. Otherwise, launch keenly, sell promptly, and protect your net result.What UK-season and management factors affect saleability and price?Horses that cope with wet, muddy winters, solo hacks in wind and drizzle, variable turnout, and busy lanes are easier to sell and can command more. A horse that only goes well in perfect conditions is a harder UK sell.British winters test horses and riders: limited daylight, sloppy ground, and inconsistent work patterns. If your green horse hacks sensibly in fluorescent kit, keeps condition with thoughtful feeding, and stays straightforward after time off, buyers notice and pay for it. Build this into your presentation:Show video from a breezy day and a damp lane; demonstrate traffic sense and soft hands, not just a perfect school surface.Keep the horse comfortable in changeable weather; well-fitted, weatherproof turnout is a real plus in viewings. Explore our dependable winter turnout rugs to keep coats clean and muscles warm on wet days.Support joints and recovery appropriately when bringing a horse back into work under veterinary guidance. Our targeted joint and mobility supplements can complement vet-led rehab plans.Prioritise rider safety and confidence; a correctly fitted hat is non-negotiable for trials and hacks. See our approved riding helmets collection before viewings.Quick tip: Plan viewings earlier in the day in winter to avoid fading light and icy verges. Buyers appreciate a thoughtful, safety-first approach.What paperwork protects both buyer and seller in the UK?Keep written records of every disclosure, attach veterinary reports to the file, and ensure the bill of sale reflects known issues and any warranties. UK disputes frequently hinge on what was disclosed in writing, especially around lameness.If youre the seller, prepare a simple dossier: horse ID, passport details, work diary, behavioural notes, veterinary history summaries, and copies of any imaging or treatment plans. Include a plain-English statement of current work and any known quirks or limitations. Agree the price subject to vetting, put deposits and terms in writing, and retain signed confirmation that the buyer has received all disclosures.Where lameness is known and disclosed, price adjustments are common, but clarity protects both parties a point underlined by legal Q&A cases like this front-leg lameness sale example. Buyers should keep the full pre-purchase report, including the vets risk commentary, as part of the horses file going forward.What kit helps prepare your green horse for viewings and a return to consistent work?Focus on safety, comfort, and professional presentation; the right basics reassure buyers and make assessments smoother. Choose protective legwear for travel and schooling, clear safety gear for riders, weather-ready rugs, and a tidy grooming kit.Protection on the move: travel and brushing protection from our horse boots & bandages range keeps legs safe for vet visits and viewings.Turnout that works: a clean, well-fitted rug signals good management; browse proven turnout rugs for British weather.Rider presentation and safety: arrive looking the part and protected, with a properly fitted hat from our riding helmets collection and smart, comfortable bottoms from our womens jodhpurs & breeches.Polish the picture: quick-fix brushes, coat sheen, and tidy manes from our grooming collection help the horse look their best without hiding anything.Thoughtful support: if your vet advises, consider targeted supplements for joints and recovery while bringing the horse back into steady work.At Just Horse Riders, we stock trusted brands and ship fast across the UK, so you can get the essentials in place before you open the gate for viewings.FAQsWhat is a fair price for a green 6-year-old mare with resolved lameness?Expect mid four figures to low five figures depending on diagnosis, treatment, and current workload. Many ordinary but usable green horses are discussed around 6,0008,000 in the UK; a resolved, well-documented lameness history usually places you toward the lower end compared to a similar horse with a clean record. See recent market chatter on the H&H pricing thread.Does a lameness history reduce value even if the horse is sound today?Yes. Buyers discount for risk of recurrence and future costs. You retain more value with a clear diagnosis, appropriate treatment, and months of consistent, evidenced sound work backed by a current pre-purchase exam the staged lameness approach from the University of Edinburgh clarifies why diagnosis matters (equine orthopaedics).Is napping a serious issue for resale?Often yes. The impact depends on how frequent and severe it is, what triggers it, and whether schooling and management reduce it. UK buyers test for solo hacks, winter wind, traffic and time off. Full disclosure and a calm, honest demo help protect price.Should I vet a green horse with a resolved issue before buying?Absolutely. UK buyers routinely commission pre-purchase assessments to gauge suitability and risk, especially after any lameness. Discuss concerns with your vet ahead of time and authorise imaging if indicated see vettings and sales for how equine vets support purchase decisions.Whats the main pricing mistake sellers make with horses like this?Pricing as if the horse has a spotless history and proven production. Buyers will price in uncertainty around lameness and behaviour. Lead with current evidence, be transparent, and set a realistic figure that sells promptly to the right home.How should I present the horse at viewings?Clean, tidy, and professional without hiding anything. Bring a recent work diary and videos; demonstrate schooling and a short hack. Prioritise safety gear (a compliant hat, ideally hi-vis for roadside work) and consider protective legwear our riding helmets and horse boots & bandages collections cover the essentials.Where can I check how the market is segmenting similar horses?Browse UK classifieds that group by discipline, breeding and price, such as Horsemart, ehorses, and green listings on Pets4Homes. Then calibrate your ask against the horses current job and evidence, not potential alone. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. Shop Hi-Vis GearShop Riding HelmetsShop Boots & BandagesShop Turnout RugsShop Grooming Kit0 Comments 0 Shares 30 Views
-
Madrid in Motion Media DayStay up to date with all things GCL Follow us on social media: Instagram: @GCL_official TikTok: @GCL_official ...0 Comments 0 Shares 136 Views -
Madrid momentsStay up to date with the Longines Global Champions Tour across all our social channels for the latest highlights, ...0 Comments 0 Shares 140 Views -
WWW.JUSTHORSERIDERS.CO.UKStrangles Vaccine Timing: Strangvac 6 Weeks Pre-Travel10 min read Last updated: January 2026 Planning shows, clinics or a yard move and worried about strangles spreading in transit? Heres how to time Strangvac for real protectionstart at least six weeks before travel, boost every 612 months, and pair with simple biosecurityso you cut carrier risk and arrive sound, settled and show-ready. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Vaccine Timing What To Do: Start Strangvac at least six weeks before travel: Dose 1 now, Dose 2 at week 4, then travel from week 6. Why It Matters: Immunity builds two weeks after Dose 2, protecting your horse before exposure. Common Mistake: Beginning the course inside four weeks of a lorry date. Area: Booster Planning What To Do: Book boosters every 612 months; choose 6 months for frequent travellers. If the last dose was over two months ago before high risk, ask your vet about a top-up. Why It Matters: Maintains strong protection across busy seasons and trips. Common Mistake: Waiting until after show season to boost. Area: High-Risk Priorities What To Do: Prioritise vaccination for livery yards with frequent movements, horses travelling to competitions/clinics, studs and dealer yard movements; plan ahead of spring/summer peaks. Why It Matters: These horses face the greatest exposure and drive outbreaks. Common Mistake: Assuming home-based horses are safe despite yard traffic. Area: Isolation Protocol What To Do: Isolate new arrivals for 23 weeks, take daily temperatures, use dedicated kit, and handle them last; avoid mixing and shared water. Why It Matters: Breaks transmission chains before pathogens reach the main yard. Common Mistake: Cutting isolation short because a horse looks fine. Area: Transport Hygiene What To Do: Disinfect partitions, buckets and bits; dont share equipment; label water; maximise ventilation and avoid overcrowding or nose-to-nose tying. Why It Matters: Travel is a highrisk window for spread via air and contaminated kit. Common Mistake: Using communal water and poorly ventilated boxes. Area: Outbreak Actions What To Do: In an outbreak, vaccinate healthy, unexposed horses and consider boosters if the last dose was >2 months; pair with strict biosecurity. Do not vaccinate clinical cases or recent close contactsconsult your vet. Why It Matters: Rapid immunity plus hygiene helps limit transmission safely. Common Mistake: Vaccinating febrile or exposed horses without veterinary clearance. Area: Yard-Wide Strategy What To Do: Map risks, schedule the two-dose start (weeks 0 and 4), set booster windows, write a onepage biosecurity SOP, use DIVA blood tests when investigating signs, and keep owners updated. Why It Matters: Coordinated routines reduce costs, confusion and carrier risk. Common Mistake: Relying on ad hoc decisions with no documentation. Area: Post-Travel Monitoring What To Do: For 14 days post-travel, log temperatures twice daily (flag >38.5C), watch for nasal discharge or lymph node swelling, isolate early, and keep buckets/tack separate and disinfected. Why It Matters: Early detection prevents a single case becoming a yard shutdown. Common Mistake: Stopping temperature checks after a couple of normal days. In This Guide What is Strangvac and how well does it work? When should you vaccinate before transporting a horse? Who should prioritise strangles vaccination in the UK? Can you vaccinate during an outbreak or after exposure? What biosecurity steps should accompany vaccination for travel? How to plan a yard-wide approach thats practical and affordable What to watch for after vaccination and travel Travel checklist: simple kit to back up your biosecurity Strangles remains one of the most disruptive diseases in UK yards, and transport is a prime moment for it to spread. If youre planning shows, clinics or a move to livery, the Strangvac vaccine can dramatically cut your horses risk provided you time it right and layer it with sensible biosecurity.Key takeaway: Start Strangvac at least six weeks before travel, boost at 612 months, and combine vaccination with tight isolation, hygiene and daily temperature checks for the best protection.What is Strangvac and how well does it work?Strangvac reduces the clinical signs and abscess formation associated with strangles and is up to 94% effective at preventing or reducing infection in vaccinated horses. In controlled trials published in the journal Vaccine, 94% protection (15/16 ponies) was observed two weeks after the third vaccination, with 58% protection two months after the second dose (Vaccine, 2020).The University of Edinburghs Equine Clinical Team summarises its real-world value succinctly: fewer abscesses mean fewer carriers and fewer carriers mean fewer outbreaks. As they put it:The vaccine is effective at reducing the clinical signs of strangles... Crucially, the rate of abscesses developing is vastly reduced, which in turn means that horses are much less likely to become carriers of disease. Vaccination should be used alongside other biosecurity measures. (University of Edinburgh Equine Practice)Strangvac is a protein-based vaccine (no live bacteria), so it cannot cause strangles. Its licensed from five months of age, and importantly it has DIVA capability: blood tests can still differentiate naturally infected horses from vaccinated horses without interference (AAEP strangles vaccination guidance).The UK saw a steep rise in strangles cases in 2023 and, tellingly, nearly half of owners (45%) were unaware Strangvac was even available, while 59% had not discussed it with their vet (VetTimes/Dechra survey). If you travel or have regular yard movements, vaccination is now a practical, mainstream prevention step.When should you vaccinate before transporting a horse?Start the primary Strangvac course at least six weeks before travel; immunity begins two weeks after the second dose given four weeks after the first. Plan a booster every 612 months depending on risk (Dechra UK; University of Edinburgh).Heres how to time it for shows, clinics and moves:Primary course: Dose 1, then Dose 2 four weeks later.Onset of immunity: Two weeks after Dose 2.Boosters: Every 612 months based on your horses exposure (frequent travellers benefit from the 6-month interval).Pre-travel top-up: If your horse was vaccinated but the last dose was more than two months ago and youre heading into a high-risk situation, speak to your vet about boosting beforehand (Dechra UK).Quick tip: Working back from a planned lorry date, set a calendar reminder for Dose 1 six weeks out, Dose 2 two weeks before departure, and a second reminder for your booster window (612 months).Who should prioritise strangles vaccination in the UK?Horses on livery yards with frequent movements and those travelling to training, competitions or studs are high risk and should be vaccinated. That includes horses moving on or off dealer yards, attending camps, or sharing transport hubs (University of Edinburgh).UK seasonality matters. Spring and summer are busy show periods (more mingling and shared stabling), while wet winters push horses into enclosed spaces with higher respiratory risk. Plan vaccination ahead of these peaks, especially if your horse will be stabled at events or transported alongside unfamiliar horses.The AAEP Infectious Disease Committee, whose guidance is widely consulted in the UK, is clear:Vaccination against S. equi is recommended on premises where strangles is a persistent endemic problem or for horses that are expected to be at high risk of exposure. (AAEP)From a practical UK perspective, whole-yard vaccination is particularly useful where owners want to avoid the disruption and expense of repeated guttural pouch scoping to hunt down carriers. And remember, with Strangvacs DIVA compatibility, you can still run blood tests to assess natural exposure when needed.Can you vaccinate during an outbreak or after exposure?Yeshealthy, unexposed horses can be vaccinated during outbreaks, but do not vaccinate clinical cases or recent close contacts; speak to your vet first. Studies from Sweden found vaccinated healthy horses exposed during outbreaks showed no clinical disease, despite over half showing serological evidence of exposure (VetClick 2024).Dechra and independent summaries report that rapid onset of immunity from Strangvac, combined with rigorous biosecurity, likely reduced transmission during these outbreaks. As equine vet Bex Glasgow notes:Strangles vaccination, alongside good biosecurity measures, are essential tools in disease prevention and recent studies have also demonstrated its protective effect during outbreak situations. (VetClick)If your yard is affected:Unvaccinated, healthy horses: Start the primary course; partial protection begins two weeks after Dose 2.Previously vaccinated horses: If the last dose was more than two months ago, a booster can be considered to maximise protection (Dechra UK).Do not vaccinate: Horses with clinical signs (fever, nasal discharge, swollen lymph nodes) or known close contacts of confirmed cases until cleared by your vet.Quote to remember from VetTimes review of the same Swedish data: New studies have demonstrated the effectiveness of vaccinating against equine strangles... The data suggest that rapid onset of immunity following vaccination, combined with biosecurity measures, likely reduced transmission. (VetTimes)What biosecurity steps should accompany vaccination for travel?Vaccination must be paired with 23 weeks isolation for new arrivals, daily temperature checks, and strict hygiene in the yard and during transport. This two-layer approach protects your horse and everyone they meet.Before transport:Isolate new horses for 23 weeks and monitor daily temperatures; a fever over 38.5C is an early warning sign.Keep groups stable; avoid last-minute mixing or shared water sources.Clean and disinfect buckets, bits and travel partitions; dont share equipment between yards.Use dedicated kit for isolation areas and handle isolated horses last.During transport:Ventilation first: open vents and windows safely; avoid overcrowding boxes.Plan separate load/unload areas where possible; dont tie nose-to-nose with unfamiliar horses.Use protective travel boots and bandages to prevent knocks that make horses reluctant to eat/drink on arrival.On arrival and for 14 days after:Daily temperature checks and quick isolation if fever or nasal discharge appears.Separate buckets and tack; disinfect after each use when visiting shared facilities.Keep a written log of temperatures, coughs, and appetite changes.Pro tip: A simple yard kit with a digital thermometer, disinfectant, and a health logbook makes monitoring effortless. Our first-aid and grooming essentials section is a good place to stock up before the season starts.How to plan a yard-wide approach thats practical and affordableWhole-yard vaccination with Strangvac can reduce reliance on costly guttural pouch scoping while keeping screening effective via DIVA-friendly blood tests. For busy UK liveries, this is often the most realistic way to cut risk quickly.A simple plan many yards follow:Risk mapping: List horses leaving the yard regularly (lessons, clinics, hunting, sales), recent arrivals, and any with a history of abscesses or abnormal serology.Vaccination schedule: Book a vet visit for Dose 1 (week 0) and Dose 2 (week 4), then set booster windows (612 months). Align with show calendars so most horses have strong immunity before spring/summer peaks.Testing strategy: Use DIVA-compatible blood tests to investigate suspicious signs or when clearing horses post-outbreak without confusing vaccine antibodies.Biosecurity SOP: Write a one-page protocol covering isolation (23 weeks), temperature logs, shared equipment rules, and visitor/transporter hygiene.Communication: Keep owners informed via a WhatsApp group; a quick reminder about temps and travel logs goes a long way.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend choosing a booster interval that reflects real-world yard traffic rather than best intentions. If your yard is a travel hub, the 6-month booster rhythm keeps protection reliably in the green.What to watch for after vaccination and travelMonitor for fever above 38.5C, nasal discharge and lymph node swelling for 14 days post-travel or any suspected exposure. Early detection and isolation are the difference between a contained blip and a yard-wide shutdown.About the vaccine itself:Safety: Strangvac contains no live S. equi, cannot cause strangles, and is licensed from five months old (Vaccine, 2020; Dechra UK).Reactions: As with any vaccination, mild local soreness or transient temperature changes can occur; report anything unusual to your vet.Overdue? If you slip past your booster window by more than a month, speak to your vet about the best way to restart protection ahead of travel.Quick tip: Keep a daily temperature log in the two weeks before and after a trip. Its the simplest, most sensitive early-warning tool you own.Travel checklist: simple kit to back up your biosecurityPack for comfort, hygiene and monitoring; your kit should make it easy to spot issues early and prevent cross-contamination.Protection in transit: Well-fitting travel boots and bandages to prevent knocks and boost confidence loading/unloading.Hygiene on the go: Disinfectant spray, disposable gloves, spare lead ropes and labelled water buckets; browse our grooming and yard essentials to top up before show season.Monitoring: Digital thermometer and a simple health logbook; check morning and evening temps (flag >38.5C).Comfort rugs: For cool, damp UK days at events, pack breathable layers; see our range of lightweight stable rugs for stabling at venues.Nutrition support: Hydration and recovery electrolytes are essential; consider immune-support and respiratory supplements as part of your high-risk season plan.Trusted brands: Many riders favour LeMieux travel kit for soft, secure protection and Weatherbeeta yard and travel gear for durable, easy-clean options.Show-day readiness: If youre stepping into the ring, double-check your hat standard and outfit; our curated competition clothing keeps you compliant and comfortable.Quick tip: Pre-pack two clearly labelled kits Isolation and Show Day so you never mix equipment between travel horses and home stables.At Just Horse Riders, our customers often tell us that a tidy, consistent routine (temps, tack cleaning, separate buckets) is what finally stopped the cycle of onoff coughs after busy weekends away. Simple works especially when its consistent.In summary, Strangvac wont make your horse bulletproof, but it will significantly reduce clinical disease and the chance of becoming a carrier and thats exactly what breaks outbreak chains. Pair timely vaccination with tight biosecurity and smart travel habits, and youll stack the odds firmly in your favour this season.FAQsIs Strangvac 100% effective at preventing strangles before transport?No. Strangvac is not 100% protective, but studies show up to 94% effectiveness at preventing or reducing infection and severity. That level of protection, combined with isolation, hygiene and temperature monitoring, is ideal for high-risk travel (University of Edinburgh).When exactly should I vaccinate before transporting my horse?Start at least six weeks before travel: Dose 1 at week 0, Dose 2 at week 4, and immunity building from week 6 (two weeks after the second dose). If your last dose was more than two months ago and youre travelling, discuss a booster with your vet (Dechra UK).Can I vaccinate during a strangles outbreak before a horse show?Yes, if your horse is healthy and not a recent close contact of a confirmed case. Swedish outbreak studies showed vaccinated horses remained clinically healthy despite exposure. Do not vaccinate horses with clinical signs; consult your vet first (VetClick 2024).How long does protection last for competition horses that travel often?Antibodies persist for at least 12 months; in practice, frequent travellers benefit from boosters every 612 months, leaning to 6 months for high-risk yards. If youre more than one month overdue, ask your vet about the best restart schedule (University of Edinburgh).Does Strangvac affect strangles blood testing?No. Strangvac is DIVA-compatible, meaning standard blood tests can still detect natural exposure in vaccinated horses without the vaccine masking infection (AAEP).Is Strangvac safe for young horses going into a lorry for the first time?Yes. Its licensed from five months old and contains no live bacteria, so it cannot cause strangles. Its a sensible choice for foals/yearlings entering busy UK show or sales environments (Dechra UK).What are the top three biosecurity actions to pair with vaccination?Isolate new arrivals for 23 weeks, take daily temperatures (flag >38.5C), and prevent kit sharing by using labelled, disinfected equipment at home and away. These simple steps, plus Strangvac, drastically reduce outbreak risk. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. Shop Boots & BandagesShop Grooming KitShop SupplementsShop Stable RugsShop WeatherBeeta0 Comments 0 Shares 175 Views
-
WWW.JUSTHORSERIDERS.CO.UKCalming A Nervous Young Welsh Pony: 4-Week Winter Plan10 min read Last updated: January 2026 Got a brightbuttense threeyearold Welsh Section B who tightens in the indoor school or fizzes on the lead this winter? This 4week plan shows exactly how to calm and focus your pony with 812 hours turnout, a 2448hour calmer trial, and gentle Equine CSTso training stays safe, positive and progressive. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Turnout & Forage What To Do: Provide 812+ hours turnout daily, ad lib hay/haylage, and minimal starch. Use slow feeders and maintain social/visual contact. Why It Matters: Reduces excess energy, sugar spikes and isolation stress that fuel reactivity. Common Mistake: Overfeeding cereals or restricting hay, then blaming naughtiness. Area: Pain Check First What To Do: Ask your vet to assess teeth, saddle fit, feet and musculoskeletal comfort before adding calmers or therapy. Why It Matters: Prevents masking pain and protects confidence and learning. Common Mistake: Jumping straight to calmers and masking a saddle, dental or foot issue. Area: Equine CST What To Do: Book 34 Equine CST sessions (initial ~1h45, then ~1h weekly). Choose a gentle practitioner and observe relaxation signs. Why It Matters: Shifts the nervous system toward rest and digest without force or sedation. Common Mistake: Using CST instead of veterinary diagnostics for soreness or lameness. Area: Calmer Trial What To Do: Pick ONE permitted non-sedative (alpha-casozepine or magnesium/B1). Follow the label and assess change within 2448 hours. Why It Matters: Isolates what works while preserving balance and trainability. Common Mistake: Stacking multiple calmers so you cant tell what helped (or breached rules). Area: 4-Week Calm Plan What To Do: Weeks 12: tighten management and run a single calmer trial with a daily log. Weeks 34: add CST if needed and use micro-dose exposure to triggers. Why It Matters: A clear structure builds cumulative calm and reveals cause-effect patterns. Common Mistake: Changing several variables at once and skipping the diary. Area: Handling & Training What To Do: Keep sessions 1020 minutes with groundwork, clear boundaries and short indoor-school visits; end before tension rises. Add long, low walking hacks and reward head-lowering. Why It Matters: Predictable, bite-size asks replace fear with focus and safety. Common Mistake: Pushing past threshold or drilling until the pony is fatigued. Area: Clean Sport Rules What To Do: Check BEF/FEI databases and labels before competing; avoid valerian and hemp/CBD. Time any event-day products per rules. Why It Matters: Keeps you legal and avoids costly eliminations or positives. Common Mistake: Assuming herbal means show-legal or safe close to competition. Area: Budget & Scheduling What To Do: Budget 3050/month for calmers and 4080 per CST session; pulse spend around stressors. Book top-ups after growth spurts, saddle changes or winter confinement. Why It Matters: Directing spend to high-impact points prevents wasted money and lost training days. Common Mistake: Buying extras while skimping on forage, rugs or a consistent routine. In This Guide What does a nervous young pony need first? When to choose Equine CranioSacral Therapy (CST) Do calming supplements work for young ponies? How to build a 4week calm plan Choosing the right calmers for specific behaviours Handling and training tips for a nervous Welsh Section B Cost and value in the UK What to avoid and common mistakes Your three-year-old Welsh Section B is bright, quick and sensitive which is wonderful for the future, but often means big feelings in small ponies right now. If your youngster is tense in the indoor school or sharp to handle this winter, the right blend of management, non-sedative support and gentle bodywork can turn worry into workable focus.Key takeaway: Start with turnout, forage and a pain check; add a short supplement trial if needed; and use Equine CranioSacral Therapy (CST) to reset a nervous system stuck in fight or flight.What does a nervous young pony need first?Begin with the basics: maximise turnout, feed mostly forage with minimal starch, ensure social contact, and ask your vet to rule out pain before adding supplements or therapy. For young ponies, this foundation solves most mild anxiety and prevents training setbacks.For turnout, aim for 24/7 where possible or a consistent 812 hours daily. In UK autumn and winter, turnout can be tricky; use well-fitted winter turnout rugs and, on very wet or bitter days, rotate with cosy stable rugs so your pony stays warm and relaxed without excess energy. Keep the diet forage-first (ad lib hay/haylage) with low cereals; starch and sugar spikes amplify reactivity in sensitive Welsh ponies. Provide a stable buddy or at least visual contact; isolation is a major stressor for herd animals.Quick tip: Use slow feeders or small-hole nets to mimic grazing and reduce box-walking, wood-chewing and stressy vices during shorter winter days.Before you reach for a calmer, ask your vet to check teeth, saddle fit, feet, and musculoskeletal comfort. A sharp, nappy three-year-old is often a sore one ruling out pain prevents masking a problem and protects long-term confidence. If youre planning competition, remember British Equestrian Federation (BEF) and FEI Clean Sport rules apply to supplements as well as medicines.When to choose Equine CranioSacral Therapy (CST)Choose Equine CST when your pony is anxious, touch-sensitive or stuck in fight or flight; it uses light touch to increase parasympathetic (rest and digest) activity without force or sedation. CST is especially useful for young or reactive horses that dont tolerate stronger massage or mobilisation.Multiple UK practitioners note CSTs focus on the autonomic nervous system (ANS). The Chevington Clinic highlights that up to 80% of musculoskeletal restrictions may be influenced by the ANS exactly the system that drives tension, startle responses and shut down. Sessions are calm and unhurried: initial appointments typically last about 1 hour 45 minutes (including assessment) and follow-ups around 1 hour, according to Vale Cranial.CST allows your horse to adjust and release at their own pace. This non-invasive, calming and relaxing approach is extremely gentle and subtle and works at a deeper level than... massage or physiotherapy. Vale CranialA typical CST visit includes viewing your pony in walk and trot (and sometimes on the lunge), gentle palpation of the head and body, and then very light holds along the craniosacral system no manipulation, no force. As UK therapist Jessica Limpkin explains, the aim is simple:Increase the activity in the parasympathetic or rest and digest and decrease activity in the sympathetic or fight or flight. Jessica LimpkinMany owners notice visible relaxation immediately, with cumulative changes across 34 weekly sessions a rhythm echoed by UK providers such as Vale Cranial. Expect UK pricing in the region of 5080 for an initial 1.75-hour session and 4060 for follow-ups. Remember, CST complements but never replaces veterinary diagnostics for a nappy, spooky or sore three-year-old.By addressing physical, emotional, and energetic imbalances, Equine CST can significantly improve a horses overall well-being. Di LettsDo calming supplements work for young ponies?Yes non-herbal options like alphacasozepine, magnesium and thiamine (B1) can reduce anxiety without sedation or discoordination; trial them short-term and assess within 2448 hours. For trainingage ponies, prioritise nonsedative products to preserve learning and balance.Alpha-casozepine (a milk-derived peptide) is one of the better-researched calmers for horses and other species, with no unwanted effects like ataxia reported in the literature reviewed by Mad Barn; its also recommended in current buyers guides such as Chewy Education. Expect a relatively quick onset (often within 2448 hours). Thiamine (B1) is widely included for stress resilience, as noted by PetMD, while magnesium and B vitamins have mixed but longstanding practical support in equine management.How to trial safely: choose one product, follow label directions, and monitor behaviour for two days. As a benchmark, PetMD cites short-term paste protocols such as 30 mL twice daily with a prestress top-up three hours before the trigger; always check your chosen products specific dosing. For everyday use, pellets or powders are tidier and easier to taper.Competition rules matter. UK riders should check BEF and FEI Clean Sport guidelines; many herbal calmers (notably valerian) are prohibited in competition. For a quick overview, see Heritage Equines guide to show-legal choices: What calming supplement should I use? When in doubt, ask your vet and verify ingredients against the FEI Prohibited Substances List.At Just Horse Riders, we stock a broad range of daily and event-day calming supplements so you can match the formulation to your ponys needs and your competition calendar.How to build a 4week calm planUse a simple 4week structure: spend 2 weeks tightening up management and trialling one calmer, then add 23 CST sessions if emotional/structural tension persists. Keep daily handling short, consistent and positive to consolidate new calm habits.Week 12: Management + supplement trialTurnout: commit to 812 hours minimum; adjust rugs to keep warm-and-dry without overheating (sweat can spike irritability). Rotate turnout rugs and stable rugs to suit the weather front by front.Forage: feed ad lib hay/haylage; reduce or remove cereal mixes. Add a balancer so vitamins/minerals arent short-changed.Routine: introduce a predictable schedule same times, same people. Nervous ponies thrive on sameness.Supplement: pick ONE non-sedative calmer (e.g., alphacasozepine, or a magnesium/B1 blend) and track changes for 2448 hours, then across two weeks.Handling: 1015 minutes of quiet groundwork daily halt-walk transitions, yielding shoulders/hindquarters, head-lowering cue.Week 34: Add CST if needed + progressive exposureBook Equine CST: schedule an initial 1 hour 45 minutes assessment with a UK practitioner; then 12 one-hour follow-ups spaced a week apart.Progressive exposure: introduce the indoor school or scary corner in micro-doses (25 minutes), ending before tension spikes.Comfort checks: groom with intention to relax longer strokes, gentle curry on big muscles, finishing with soft brushing to the head/ears if tolerated. Our grooming range makes daily relaxation rituals easy and consistent.Pro tip: Keep a calm diary. Note weather, turnout hours, feed, supplement dose, work done, and behaviour (010 scale). Patterns reveal triggers and wins.Choosing the right calmers for specific behavioursMatch the calmer to the behaviour: chamomile can soothe gutlinked worry, hops can help headbusy distraction, valerian targets muscular tension, and vervain can settle skintwitchy overarousal but check show rules before using herbs. For competition pathways, prioritise alphacasozepine, magnesium and Bvitamin blends.Use this quick guide when narrowing options (adapted from SmartPaks decision framework):Gut-led anxiety (loose droppings in new places, mild colicky worry): look to chamomile-based blends and robust digestive support.Head-focused distraction (high head carriage, scanning): hops-containing formulas can promote quieter attention.Muscle-tight, teeth-grindy tension: valerian is traditionally used but its a banned substance for competition, so avoid if youre riding under BEF/FEI rules.Skin-twitch, over-reactive startle: vervain may help moderate tactile over-arousal in sensitive coats.Show-legal baseline: alphacasozepine, magnesium and thiamine blends are typically permitted, but always verify ingredients close to competition.Our customers often start with a permitted daily blend, then add event-day support only if needed. Browse permitted options from trusted names like NAF, and remember to phase in changes one at a time so you can tell whats working.Handling and training tips for a nervous Welsh Section BKeep sessions short and consistent (1020 minutes), use progressive exposure, and avoid sedative strategies that dull balance or learning. Reward seek-and-relax behaviours head-lowering, breathing out, softer eyes to replace tension with curiosity.Practical pointers for sharp, clever ponies:Groundwork first: in-hand halt-walks, serpentines and soft yield and release build body awareness and reduce bracing. Protect delicate legs with well-fitted horse boots or bandages as you add poles or raised cavalletti.The two-minute win: introduce the indoor school at quiet times for ultra-short visits walk a lap, breathe, leave. Stack successes before you ask for more.Energy bleed without fizz: long, low walking hacks on soft ground between schools, using clear visibility aids and a well-fitted riding helmet for safety.Boundaries = safety: clear, calm stop/go rules, consistent leading position and personal-space cues reduce anxiety by making you predictable.End on neutral: finish each session when your pony is listening but not tired. Overrunning into fatigue creates next-day dread.Quick tip: The first five minutes decide the next twenty. If your pony arrives tight, reset with hand-walk and breathing rather than pushing on.Cost and value in the UKBudget 3050 per month for permitted daily calmers and 4080 per Equine CST session; many owners see immediate post-session relaxation with cumulative gains over 34 treatments. Over a season, thats often cheaper than lost training days or confidence dips.Typical annual outlay for a young pony in light training might be:Supplements: 360600 (if used year-round; many owners pulse around known stressors to reduce cost).CST: 160320 for 46 sessions across the year, with top-ups after growth spurts, saddle changes or winter confinement.Management extras: quality forage and suitable rugs keep your pony comfortable reducing the need for behaviour firefighting. Explore our durable turnout options for wet weeks and warmer stable layers for cold snaps.At Just Horse Riders, we help you build a plan thats kinder to your pony and your pocket, directing spend to the highest-impact changes first.What to avoid and common mistakesAvoid masking pain, stacking multiple calmers at once, or using banned herbs before shows; always check BEF/FEI Clean Sport and confirm ingredients with your vet. Dont rely on sedatives for training ataxia risks learning and safety in young ponies.Common pitfalls to sidestep:Skipping the pain check: sharpness, napping and overreactive spooks often start with back, dental or saddle issues.Over-supplementing: trial one product; if you add a second, you wont know what worked (or what clashed).Banned substances: valerian and hemp/CBD may trigger positives; see Heritage Equines overview of show-legal choices here.Inconsistent routines: nervous ponies need sameness same handler, same sequence, same expectations.Pushing past threshold: end while your pony is thinking, not fleeing or freezing. Tomorrows brain starts with todays finish.Pro tip: If youre prepping for affiliated classes, organise your kit and attire in advance to reduce handler stress (horses read us). Our womens competition clothing collection keeps show days smooth and professional.FAQsAre calming supplements safe for a young Welsh Section B in training?Yes, when you choose non-herbal, non-sedative options such as alphacasozepine, magnesium and thiamine. Reviews summarised by Mad Barn, Chewy Education and PetMD support these ingredients. Avoid valerian near competition due to FEI bans.How soon does Equine CST work for nervousness?Many ponies show visible relaxation immediately after the first session, with deeper changes building over 34 weekly treatments, as outlined by UK practitioners like Vale Cranial. CST is gentle enough for sensitive youngsters.Should I try supplements or therapy first for mild anxiety?Start with management (turnout, forage, routine). For mild cases, add a short supplement trial and track results; if anxiety feels whole body or touch-sensitive, introduce CST to balance the nervous system.Can CST replace a vet check for a nappy three-year-old?No. Rule out pain or illness with your vet first; CST complements veterinary care by reducing sympathetic overdrive and helping the body release protective tension, as emphasised by Jessica Limpkin.Whats a showlegal calmer for affiliated classes?Alphacasozepine, magnesium and Bvitamins are generally permitted, but always confirm on the BEF/FEI databases and read labels carefully. Avoid valerian and hemp/CBD; for guidance, see Heritage Equines Clean Sport overview.What does a typical CST session include and cost?Expect an initial 1 hour 45 minutes appointment with assessment in walk/trot, gentle palpation and light-touch holds; follow-ups run ~1 hour. UK prices commonly range from 5080 initially and 4060 thereafter, per providers such as Vale Cranial and Di Letts.How do I stay safe when handling a sharp youngster?Use a well-fitted riding helmet, keep sessions short, set clear boundaries, and use protective boots/bandages for groundwork and poles. Consistency and calm body language are your best tools. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. Shop SupplementsShop Turnout RugsShop Stable RugsShop Grooming KitShop Boots & Bandages0 Comments 0 Shares 232 Views
-
WWW.JUSTHORSERIDERS.CO.UKWinter Mud Management For Horses: UK Yard And Field Tips10 min read Last updated: January 2026 Battling boot-sucking mud, soggy legs and stop-start riding as the British winter bites? This guide shows how to keep fields usable and horses comfortable with proven, yard-ready stepspoo pick twice weekly, rest paddocks for 1-2 months, reinforce gateways 3-5 mplus smart leg care, hoof protection, rug checks and freeze-proof water routines, so you can ride safely through to spring. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Reduce Field Mud What To Do: Poo pick at least twice weekly. Rotate turnout and rest paddocks for 12 months; fence off poached areas and move hay feeders regularly. Why It Matters: Reduces mud formation, protects grazing and lowers worm challenge. Common Mistake: Overcrowding and funnelling horses through one gate or track all winter. Area: Reinforce Gateways What To Do: Dig out the area, lay geotextile membrane, and top with rolled limestone hardcore with a slight camber. Extend hardstanding 35 metres inside the field to cover queuing and turning. Why It Matters: Gateways take the most traffic, so reinforcement prevents deep poaching and foot damage. Common Mistake: Dumping stone straight onto mud without a membrane or shaping for drainage. Area: Prevent Mud Fever What To Do: Wash muddy legs only when needed with tepid water, then towel dry thoroughly. Apply a barrier cream or powder to clean, dry skin before turnout and avoid stiff brushing on wet legs. Why It Matters: Keeping skin clean, dry and protected reduces bacterial access and irritation. Common Mistake: Scrubbing or leaving legs damp under boots or feathers. Area: Wet Weather Hooves What To Do: Pick out feet daily and minimise sharp wetdry cycles. Use a breathable hoof dressing and provide a dry standing strip at the stable entrance. Why It Matters: Protects the white line from softening and helps prevent infection and lameness. Common Mistake: Using heavy oils that seal moisture in or ignoring sudden, localised lameness. Area: Smart Winter Rugging What To Do: Rug only thin, clipped, elderly or cold horses; choose the right weight and check under rugs daily. Adjust layers to the days weather and your horses condition. Why It Matters: Prevents overheating while keeping those who need it warm and dry. Common Mistake: Rugging by the calendar instead of the horse in front of you. Area: Keep Water Flowing What To Do: Top up with warm water daily and use a floating salt bottle or insulated buckets to delay ice. Add salt to feed as advised and check troughs twice daily in freezes. Why It Matters: Encourages drinking and lowers the risk of dehydration and impaction colic. Common Mistake: Letting troughs freeze solid or sit in muddy approaches horses avoid. Area: Winter Riding Safety What To Do: Grit icy yards and approaches. Avoid riding on frozen or very hard ground or in poor visibility; stick to walk-only or rest on unsafe days. Why It Matters: Prevents slips and protects tendons, joints and soles from concussion. Common Mistake: Pushing on with fast work on frosty tracks or half-thawed arenas. Area: Transition to Winter What To Do: Shift from summer grass to stabling, hay and new routines over 1014 days. Gradually alter turnout time, hard feed and workload, and build daily condition checks. Why It Matters: Supports gut stability and smoother adaptation to winter management. Common Mistake: Making abrupt changes to feed, housing or exercise. In This Guide How do you actually reduce mud this winter? Whats the best fix for muddy gateways? How do you prevent mud fever in wet UK fields? How should you look after hooves in relentless mud? When should you rug a horse in UK winter? How do you keep water from freezing and your horse drinking? How do you keep yards and exercise safe in frost and storms? Whats the right way to transition to a winter routine? British winters mean mud, rain, and short days a tough combination for horses and turnout. With a few smart changes now, you can keep your fields usable, protect skin and hooves, and ride safely right through to spring.Key takeaway: Tackle mud at the source (poo pick, rest paddocks, reinforce gateways), keep legs clean-and-dry with barrier protection, and make winter comfort decisions (rugs, water, footing) based on daily checks not dates on a calendar.How do you actually reduce mud this winter?Poo pick at least twice a week, rest overused paddocks for 12 months each year, and fence off poached areas to let the ground recover. These simple steps, endorsed by the British Horse Society (BHS), cut mud formation and protect your grazing through the wettest months.Start with turnout numbers. Overcrowding accelerates mud, so rotate horses and give each area an annual break of one to two months without grazing. The BHS stresses this planned rest as the single biggest gain you can make in winter (BHS mud management).Field hygiene matters too. Picking up droppings at least twice weekly reduces worm challenge and stops manure from breaking down into a slick that softens the surface further (BHS guidance). Move hay feeders regularly or use rings on hardstanding so youre not creating a swampy feeding station.Prioritise drainage in your winter paddocks. Choose higher, free-draining ground for turnout and fence off low-lying gateways and worn tracks until you can fix them (see the next section). If you plan French drains, geotextile pads, or all-weather surfaces such as woodchip or mats, check local planning rules first permissions can apply in some areas (BHS planning note).Quick tip: Put temporary electric fencing to create alternate entrances and narrow lanes to troughs and shelters. Spreading footfall along two or three paths, rather than one, reduces deep poaching dramatically.Whats the best fix for muddy gateways?Dig out the worst area, lay a membrane (geotextile), and top with a thick layer of limestone hardcore, rolled level to form a high-traffic pad. This reinforces the ground where the most hooves land, prevents poaching, and protects feet.Gateways carry the highest traffic, so soil gets compressed, water cant drain, and you get boot-sucking mud. The quickest win is a proper base. As equine expert Gil explains for Petplan Equine:To improve footing [in gateways], dig the whole area out before laying down a membrane and a thick layer of limestone hardcore on top. Once rolled, this will protect your horses feet from damage. (Petplan Equine)If budgets or permissions limit you, mud-control mats can help, or temporarily move the gate to a drier section of hedge. Whatever route you choose, add a slight camber so water sheds off the pad, not onto it.Pro tip: Extend hardstanding further inside the field (35 metres), not just at the actual gate. Horses pause, turn, and queue there which is where the worst poaching happens.How do you prevent mud fever in wet UK fields?Keep skin clean and dry, apply a barrier cream or powder to pasterns, and avoid abrasive brushing on wet, muddy legs. Mud fever (pastern dermatitis) thrives when constant wetting strips the skins natural oils, so focus on gentle cleaning plus a water-repellent barrier.UK wet winters set the stage for bacterial skin infection. Horses turned out in mud are particularly vulnerable because prolonged dampness undermines the skins protective layer (Petplan Equine). When legs do need washing, use tepid water and then towel dry thoroughly:Cleaning muddy legs with tepid water is best, as a dry brush with stiff bristles could scratch the skin and allow bacterial access. Once clean, towel the legs dry. Gil, equine expert (Petplan Equine)On drier days, let mud dry naturally and brush it off gently to avoid micro-abrasions. Before turnout, apply a non-stick barrier cream or powder over clean, dry skin to reduce mud adhesion and moisture contact (BHS advice). Monitor heels and pasterns daily for heat, scabs, or soreness, and act early. Improving field drainage and reinforcing gateways (above) are key long-term preventions.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend keeping a dedicated winter grooming kit with clean towels and soft brushes, so youre not reintroducing bacteria between horses.How should you look after hooves in relentless mud?Pick out feet daily, minimise wetdry cycles, and apply a non-suffocating hoof dressing to protect the white line. Prolonged wet softens horn and allows bacteria to enter, sometimes leading to pus in the foot that requires farrier attention.Wet conditions soften the white line, letting bacteria gain access; pockets of infection can form and create sudden lameness, which your farrier can relieve by paring and draining (Petplan Equine). Check the frog for peeling or a sour smell and keep an eye on shoe clenches and nail holes. Avoid frequent sharp transitions from saturated fields to very dry stables, as repeated swelling and shrinking weakens the hoof capsule further.A targeted dressing helps. Choose breathable, non-suffocating products rather than heavy oils that seal moisture in. For a practical, yard-friendly option, many riders like farrier-approved solutions such as NAF Profeet Farrier Solution (typically 1015). Browse our NAF hoof care range to find the right formulation for your horses feet.Quick tip: Create a dry standing strip at the stable entrance with rubber mats or hardcore so horses can pause on a firm surface before you pick out feet its easier on you and kinder on their soles.When should you rug a horse in UK winter?Only rug if your horse is thin, clipped, elderly, or struggling to stay warm most grow a waterproof winter coat and dont need rugs. If you do rug, choose an appropriate weight and check daily for overheating or rubs.The BHS confirms that horses produce a thick winter coat for insulation, so rugging isnt a default requirement. If you leave horses unrugged, dont overgroom those natural oils are part of the waterproofing (BHS winter care). For horses that need help in cold, wet storms, opt for a waterproof turnout rug in the 200400g range, adjusted to your horses condition and the days weather. If your horse is in regular work, clipping helps prevent sweat and chills just match the clip to workload and be ready with appropriate layers and cool-down routines.Check underneath daily: feel behind the elbow and under the neck for dampness or sweat, and look for shoulder rubs and mane loss. Swap or remove rugs in milder spells to prevent overheating. For quality, storm-ready options, explore our curated winter turnout rugs and shop trusted brands like WeatherBeeta turnouts that balance waterproofing with breathability. For stabled horses, consider layering with a breathable base and a suitable stable rug to keep them comfortable overnight.How do you keep water from freezing and your horse drinking?Top up with warm water daily, use a floating salt bottle or insulated buckets to delay ice, and add salt to feed to encourage drinking. Water intake drops in cold weather, increasing the risk of dehydration and impaction colic.The BHS recommends adding warm water to buckets and troughs because horses drink more readily when it isnt ice-cold (BHS winter hydration). A simple trick is to float a sealed bottle containing salty water so movement discourages a hard freeze. Check and refresh water at least twice daily in sub-zero spells and situate troughs away from muddy gateways so horses can approach confidently.Pro tip: A small daily salt allowance (as advised for your horse) in feed or a salt lick boosts thirst and supports electrolyte balance in cold weather. If you use heated or insulated containers, protect cables and place them safely clear of inquisitive hooves.How do you keep yards and exercise safe in frost and storms?Grit concrete and yard approaches, avoid riding on frozen or very hard ground and in poor visibility, and switch to walk-only or rest days when conditions are unsafe. Choosing the right surface and speed protects tendons, joints, and your horses confidence.Ice brings real slip risks. Under your duty of care (Animal Welfare Act 2006) and common sense, grit icy yards and walkways to prevent falls. The BHS advises against riding on hard, frozen ground which can bruise soles and strain tendons; opt for softer arenas if truly thawed and, in storms or low visibility, skip fast work or dont ride (BHS safety advice). If you do hack in low light, make yourself and your horse unmistakable to drivers.At Just Horse Riders, were big on being seen: add reflective bands and a bright tabard from our hivis rider collection. Underfoot, choose grippy yard and riding footwear from our horse riding boots range good tread is your friend on frosty mornings.Whats the right way to transition to a winter routine?Shift from summer grass to stabling and hay over 1014 days to protect gut health and reduce the risk of colic. Make gradual changes to turnout time, hard feed, and workload as daylight shortens.The BHS recommends a measured, twoweek transition so the hindgut adapts to forage and management changes without upset (BHS feeding transition). Align this with your pasture plan: rest the wettest fields, rotate use of higher, welldrained paddocks, and avoid overcrowding as winter sets in (BHS pasture planning). Build in extra time for daily checks coat condition, weight, feet, and water intake so you can tweak rugs, feed, and turnout promptly.Quick tip: Keep a simple winter yard checklist on your phone (water checked twice daily, feet picked, legs dried, rugs checked, poo picked on schedule). Small, consistent tasks prevent big, muddy problems.Ready to winterproof your routine? Start with your mud hotspots, set your hydration plan for freezing nights, and review rugs now so you can react to each days weather rather than chasing it.FAQsWhen should I rug my horse in UK winter?Rug only if your horse is thin, clipped, elderly, or otherwise struggling to keep warm; most grow a waterproof winter coat. If you do rug, choose an appropriate weight (often 200400g for wet, cold spells) and check daily for overheating or rubs (BHS). See our turnout rugs for weatherproof options.How do I stop mud fever in wet fields?Clean with tepid water only when necessary, towel dry thoroughly, and use a barrier cream or powder before turnout. Improve field drainage, poo pick at least twice weekly, and reinforce gateways to reduce constant wetting (Petplan Equine, BHS).What causes muddy gateways and how do I fix them?Concentrated hoof traffic compacts soil and traps water. The fix is to dig out, lay geotextile membrane, and top with rolled limestone hardcore to make a durable hightraffic pad; mudcontrol mats and moving gates can also help (Petplan Equine, BHS).How do I keep water from freezing?Add warm water daily, use a floating salt bottle or insulated buckets, and check troughs twice a day in icy weather. Encourage drinking by adding salt to feed and keeping access mudfree (BHS).Is clipping safe in winter storms?Yes, for horses in regular work, clipping helps prevent sweat and postexercise chills. Just adjust rugs appropriately and use an exercise sheet in wet or very cold conditions (BHS).What are signs of hoof issues from mud?Watch for a softened white line, foul smell, frog peeling, tenderness, or sudden lameness. Pick out feet daily and call your farrier if you suspect pus in the foot; paring can relieve pressure (Petplan Equine).Whats the simplest routine to cut mud on a small yard?Poo pick twice weekly, rotate turnout and rest a paddock for 12 months, fence off gateways, and lay a small hardcore pad where horses queue. Keep a clean towel and barrier cream by the stable door for quick leg care before and after turnout. For everyday essentials, browse our grooming and winterready WeatherBeeta ranges. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. Shop Turnout RugsShop Grooming KitShop NAF SupplementsShop Hi-Vis GearShop Riding Boots0 Comments 0 Shares 242 Views
-
NOELLEFLOYD.COMThe richest version of riding is not the whole storyChildren of billionaires. Seven-figure horses. Private planes. Wellington gated communities. Champagne sponsors. Showgrounds built like temporary kingdoms.This is the vocabulary mainstream media reaches for when it decides to write about the horse world.And to be fair, the vocabulary did not appear out of nowhere.There is a version of equestrian sport where horses are flown like executives, bought like art, insured like real estate, and discussed with the cool detachment usually reserved for automobile assets. There is a version of the horse world where the barns look like boutique hotels, where a season in Florida is treated as a given, where the cost of admission is not just talent or work ethic, but proximity to capital.That version exists.But here is the problem: horses are not assets.Not in the way the financial world wants them to be. Not in the way glossy magazines photograph them. Not in the way billionaire-backed league decks may need them to be.A horse is not a speculative object whose value can be separated from its body, mind, soundness, fear, trust, appetite, history, and willingness to keep showing up for us.And the more the outside world is invited to see equestrian sport through the lens of wealth, the more the horse world becomes alienated from the very people who actually keep it alive: the boarders, lesson kids, working students, backyard owners, farriers, grooms, volunteers, 4-H families, Pony Club parents, small barn trainers, adult amateurs, adult re-riders, and barn owners quietly trying to make the numbers work.The horse world already lives in two realities.In one, there are elite show grounds, global leagues, luxury barns, paid riders, branded hospitality tents, and horses whose prices sound like real estate listings.In the other, there are people stretching one more season out of a pair of boots, hauling themselves to the barn before work, splitting vet calls, crying over board increases, negotiating with hay shortages, trying to leave toxic trainers, and loving horses with a devotion that has very little to do with status and everything to do with survival.These days, it would not be much of a stretch to compare the horse world to The Hunger Games: the Capital gleaming under lights, the districts keeping the whole thing fed, shod, mucked, taught, patched up, and emotionally alive.And yet, when the cameras come, they almost always go to the Capital.Vanity Fairs recent Wellington feature is a perfect example of what happens when mainstream culture discovers the horse world through wealth first.The piece describes Wellington as a gilded equestrian enclave, with mansions, elite stables, polo fields, and horses that can cost up to seven figures. It also reports that the Winter Equestrian Festival draws more than 300,000 spectators, more than 4,400 competitors from 55 countries, and produces a $536.2 million economic impact. In other words, this is not an imaginary elite ecosystem. It is real. It is enormous. And it photographs beautifully. (Vanity Fair)The Financial Times piece on Frank McCourts Premier Jumping League offered another version of the same story: horses as sport, horses as entertainment property, horses as the next possible global content play. McCourt has promised $300 million over three years, including $100 million in prize money in year one, for a new showjumping league built around 16 teams and 14 global events. The article also notes that many existing showjumping events function partly as shop windows for valuable horses and rely heavily on wealthy amateurs paying to compete alongside professionals. (McCourt Global, Inc)That last part matters.Because when the outside world looks at showjumping and sees a marketplace with jumps in the middle, can we really pretend to be shocked?The mistake mainstream media makes is not that it notices the money.The money is real.The seven-figure horses are real.The private clients are real.The billionaire-backed leagues are real.The mistake is treating that world as if it explains the horse world.It does not.It explains one wing of the mansion.It does not explain the farm...Continue Reading Noelles full Part 1 essay on her substack0 Comments 0 Shares 233 Views
-
WWW.JUSTHORSERIDERS.CO.UKSpeedi-Beet: Low-Sugar Fibre That Soaks In Minutes11 min read Last updated: January 2026 Struggling to keep fibre, sugar and hydration right for your horse this UK winter? You'll learn exactly how to feed Speedi-Beet for safer energy and faster hydration, including the quick cold-soak that's ready in 5-10 minutes, plus simple dry-weight measures and red-flag checks so you can feed with confidence. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Choose Unmolassed Beet What To Do: Pick Speedi-Beet or PuraBeet (about 5-6% sugar) and avoid molassed shreds for laminitis-prone or good-doer horses. Why It Matters: Keeps non-structural carbohydrates lower and reduces glycaemic load. Common Mistake: Assuming all beet pulp is low sugar and safe for sensitive horses. Area: Fast Cold-Soak What To Do: Soak Speedi-Beet 5-10 minutes in cold water at roughly 5-6 parts water to 1 part beet by weight until fully soft. Why It Matters: Rapid water uptake supports hydration and saves time on busy yards. Common Mistake: Under-soaking or using too little water, leaving hard bits in the mash. Area: Weigh Dry First What To Do: Weigh beet pulp dry to your target amount, then add water; never measure by soaked volume. Why It Matters: Soaked volume varies widely and can distort calorie and nutrient intake. Common Mistake: Swapping a scoop of soaked beet for a scoop of cereals or other dry feeds. Area: Set Feeding Rates What To Do: Start at ~100 g per 100 kg bodyweight (dry) and adjust; keep within 500 g per 100 kg (BHF) or 6 g/kg (Equiglo) and under 50% of the diet. Why It Matters: Controls energy intake and supports safe digestion. Common Mistake:-strong> Increasing too fast without tracking weight, droppings and appetite. Area: Balance the Ration What To Do: Feed ad-lib forage, add protein via alfalfa/chaff if needed, and include a vitaminmineral balancer. Why It Matters: Beet pulp is low in protein and micronutrients and cannot meet needs alone. Common Mistake: Using beet pulp as the main or sole fibre without a balancer. Area: Monitor Colic Risk What To Do: Introduce gradually, keep beet to 50% or less of the ration, and watch for early colic signs; consult your vet if theres a torsion history. Why It Matters: Sugar beet has been associated with a higher large colon torsion risk. Common Mistake: Assuming unmolassed beet carries no risk and skipping monitoring during diet changes. Area: Switch from Shreds What To Do: Replace 2 units of soaked molassed shreds with 1.5 units of soaked Speedi-Beet; reassess condition for 10-14 days. Why It Matters: Preserves energy intake while cutting sugar. Common Mistake: Swapping 1:1 by soaked volume and overfeeding calories. Area: Store Soaked Beet What To Do: Use fresh, discard after 24 hours or if it smells of wine/vinegar, and cool hot-soaked feeds before serving. Why It Matters: Prevents spoilage, choke and gut upset. Common Mistake: Leaving mash to sit in warm weather or feeding while still warm. In This Guide What is Speedi-Beet and why it matters Speedi-Beet vs molassed shreds: the hard numbers Energy, digestibility and gut health Who should feed unmolassed beet and who shouldnt? How to feed and soak correctly Switching from shreds to Speedi-Beet Cost, yield and UK yard practicalities Balancing the ration around beet pulp Choosing the right beet pulp can transform your horses diet, hydration and hindgut health especially through a UK winter yard routine. If you want low sugar, fast soaking and proven digestibility, Speedi-Beet stands out but you still need to feed it right.Key takeaway: For UK horses needing low-sugar fibre that soaks in minutes, Speedi-Beet (56% sugar) offers quick hydration and university-backed digestibility; feed it as part of a balanced ration, weigh it dry, and monitor for colic signs.What is Speedi-Beet and why it mattersSpeedi-Beet is an unmolassed sugar beet pulp with only 56% sugar that cold-soaks in 510 minutes to around 56 times its weight. That makes it a safe, low-sugar fibre for laminitis-prone horses and a practical option on busy UK livery yards.Unlike traditional molassed beet shreds, Speedi-Beet is designed to deliver fibre-derived energy without the sugar spike. According to British Horse Feeds, Speedi-Beet has a guaranteed sugar limit of 5%, compared to up to 18% in molassed shreds. It also absorbs water rapidly: in cold water, it reaches five times its weight in 5 minutes and over six times in 10 minutes, helping you get soaked feeds done fast even without hot water.For owners comparing options, PuraBeet is also unmolassed and low in sugar (around 56%), with sugar removed at the factory stage. Both are suitable for low-sugar diets; Speedi-Beets edge is its rapid cold soak. See our overview of the differences in our own guide: Speedi-Beet vs PuraBeet (10-minute or overnight soak) on the Just Horse Riders blog.Speedi-Beet vs molassed shreds: the hard numbersSpeedi-Beet caps sugar at 5% versus up to 18% in molassed shreds and absorbs over six times its weight in cold water within 10 minutes (compared with roughly three times for shreds). Over 24 hours, Speedi-Beet can absorb around nine times its weight.Those numbers matter in day-to-day yard life. A lower sugar content gives you more flexibility to build a diet with a lower glycaemic index, while the superior soak and water-holding capacity support hydration handy in winter when horses often drink less. The rapid soak also suits livery yards with limited hot water: you can safely soak a fresh, soft mash in the time it takes to fetch rugs or bring in from the field. British Horse Feeds confirms these figures in their head-to-head comparison of Speedi-Beet and shreds (source).Quick tip: Always weigh the dry product before soaking; volume changes dramatically with water and a scoop of soaked beet never equals a scoop of a dry cereal like oats (Equiglo).Energy, digestibility and gut healthUniversity of Glasgow research shows Speedi-Beet ferments 10% more than standard beet pulp and is up to 25% more digestible than hay and lucerne. That extra fermentability delivers energy on par with the missing sugar from molassed shreds, but as slow-release hindgut fuel.British Horse Feeds summarises the Glasgow work clearly:"Work conducted at Glasgow University shows, using hindgut bacteria, that fermentation of Speedi-Beet is 10% greater than standard beet pulp, giving an energy lift that could equate to the extra sugar in shreds."They also note:"University of Glasgow has proven Speedi-Beet to be up to 25% more digestible than other fibres such as hay and lucerne, meaning the horse can absorb more fibre and nutrients."Unmolassed beet pulp is almost starch-free and contains approximately 57% sugar. It also has a naturally high calcium to phosphorus ratio (about 6:1), making it useful for balancing higher-phosphorus feeds like oats (Equiglo). Combined with its water-holding capacity, a soaked beet mash can help maintain gut fill and fibre flow factors widely valued for digestive comfort and consistent performance.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend using Speedi-Beet as part of a fibre-first ration, topped up with a broad-spectrum vitaminmineral balancer from our curated range of horse supplements and balancers to fill any gaps.Who should feed unmolassed beet and who shouldnt?Choose unmolassed beet for laminitis-prone, good-doer or metabolically sensitive horses, and be cautious with molassed shreds due to their higher sugar. However, monitor for colic: a Liverpool University study linked all sugar beet (molassed and unmolassed) to a higher risk of large colon torsion.For native ponies, Cushings/PPID cases, or horses on spring/autumn grass flushes, unmolassed products like Speedi-Beet or PuraBeet keep non-structural carbohydrate intake lower, aligning with a BHS-style, low-sugar approach. Our customers often use an unmolassed beet mash to carry supplements, to soften feeds for veterans, or to boost fibre and hydration after work or travel.That said, an important red flag comes from peer-reviewed work at Liverpool University (Joanna Mary Suthers, 2012), as summarised by Horse & Hound:"Peer-reviewed research carried out at Liverpool University (Joanna Mary Suthers: September 2012) highlighted a surprising relationship between feeding sugar beet and the likelihood of a horse suffering from large colon torsion (twisted gut)... Further research is needed to determine whether unmolassed sugar beet is less of a risk factor."What to do with this information:Introduce beet pulp gradually and monitor gut comfort, particularly around the spring grass surge when colic incidence tends to rise in the UK.Keep total beet pulp to 50% or less of the diet and maintain ad-lib forage where appropriate.Watch for early colic signs (reduced appetite, pawing, flank-watching, unsettled behaviour) and contact your vet promptly if concerned.If your horse is sharp on sugar or laminitis-prone, stick to unmolassed beet; if you have any history of colic or torsion in your horse, discuss beet inclusion with your vet and adjust your fibre sources accordingly.How to feed and soak correctlyWeigh beet pulp dry, then soak Speedi-Beet for 510 minutes in cold water at roughly 56 parts water to 1 part beet (by weight), or use at least a 2:1 water-to-pulp ratio for shreds and leave 15 minutes or until fully soft. Using hot water speeds up soaking, but feeds must be cool before serving.Practical steps:Weigh the dry beet first to meet your planned nutrient target; never substitute by volume as soaked beet expands greatly (Equiglo).For Speedi-Beet, allow 5 minutes for roughly 5x water uptake and around 10 minutes for 6x; shreds require longer and take in less water overall (British Horse Feeds).Storage: in warm weather, soaked beet can spoil quickly; discard anything that smells of wine or vinegar and do not keep soaked feeds longer than 24 hours (Horse & Hound).Choke/impaction note: soaking isnt strictly required to prevent impaction, but its strongly recommended for hydration, dentition and palatability benefits (Horse & Hound).Feeding rates and limits:General guideline: 100 g per 100 kg bodyweight (dry weight) as a baseline.Upper guidance per British Horse Feeds: up to 500 g per 100 kg bodyweight per day (e.g., up to 2.5 kg dry for a 500 kg horse) (BHF Feeding FAQs).Additional guidance from Equiglo: up to 6 g/kg bodyweight/day (max ~3 kg dry for a 500 kg horse) or a maximum of 50% of the total diet (Equiglo).Because beet pulp is relatively low in protein (around 810%) and lacks key vitamins/minerals, it must not be your horses sole fibre source. Pair it with good-quality hay or haylage and add a balancer or appropriate vitaminmineral supplement to complete the ration.Switching from shreds to Speedi-BeetTo swap, replace 2 units of soaked molassed shreds with 1.5 units of soaked Speedi-Beet and adjust to your horses condition. A rapid changeover is acceptable because nutrient profiles are similar, minus the added sugar.British Horse Feeds recommend this simple substitution ratio to maintain energy intake while cutting sugar (source). Monitor your horses weight, droppings and appetite over the first 1014 days and tweak the volume as needed to keep condition steady.Pro tip: If your horse tends to drop weight in winter, consider using Speedi-Beet as a carrier for oil or a higher-protein chop (or try Fibre-Beet, which blends Speedi-Beet with alfalfa) to raise calorie density without resorting to high-starch cereals.Cost, yield and UK yard practicalitiesA 20 kg bag of Speedi-Beet costs about 18.7920.79 in the UK and yields roughly 125 Stubbs scoops once soaked; Equibeet sits around 13/20 kg. Budget for Speedi-Beets convenience and low sugar, and expect excellent soak-to-yield efficiency for yard routines.Numbers to know:Speedi-Beet price examples: 18.7920.79 per 20 kg (UK), with one bag producing about 125 Stubbs scoops when soaked (British Horse Feeds).Equibeet example: approximately 13 for 20 kg (Horse & Hound Forum).Soak speed and water uptake: Speedi-Beet reaches 5x water in 5 minutes and 6x in 10 minutes; shreds only about 3x and need longer soaking (British Horse Feeds).For UK winters, the quick cold-soak is a real advantage when taps are icy or hot water is limited. A warm beet mash can also tempt fussy drinkers after a frosty hack. If youre riding after work in low light, stay safe and seen with our curated rider hi-vis essentials. And to keep weight steady through temperature dips, pair smart feeding with the right rugs browse winter turnout rugs for the field and cosy stable rugs for nights in.Balancing the ration around beet pulpKeep beet pulp to 50% or less of the total diet and pair it with forage, protein and a vitaminmineral balancer. Use the high calcium content (about 6:1 Ca:P) to advantage alongside higher-phosphorus cereals if used, and add micronutrients your horse wont get from beet alone.Simple framework to build a balanced ration around Speedi-Beet:Forage first: ad-lib hay/haylage for good-doers as appropriate; beet pulp can replace a portion of forage but never all of it.Protein and topline: add alfalfa or a quality chaff if your horse needs more amino acids (Fibre-Beet is a convenient blend of Speedi-Beet and alfalfa for veterans or poor dentition).Micronutrients: finish with a balancer or targeted vitaminmineral supplement to cover selenium, vitamin E, copper, zinc and others that beet doesnt supply in sufficient amounts.Special cases: for laminitis-prone horses, stick to unmolassed beet and consider vetted laminitis management supplements from trusted brands like NAF as part of a broader management plan.Body condition scoring every 24 weeks and a regular curry with a good grooming kit will help you spot changes early (coat feel, fat pads, topline). In cold snaps, prevent unnecessary calorie burn with the right rugging choices and consistent routines. This BHS-aligned, fibre-first, low-sugar approach keeps many UK natives and good-doers on an even keel through spring grass flushes and winter lulls alike.FAQsIs Speedi-Beet safe for laminitis-prone ponies?Yes. As an unmolassed beet pulp, Speedi-Beet contains only about 56% sugar, making it far safer than molassed shreds, which can reach up to 18% sugar (British Horse Feeds). Its widely used for laminitis-prone and good-doer horses when fed as part of a balanced, low-sugar diet.Do I need to soak beet pulp before feeding?It isnt strictly required to prevent impaction, but soaking is recommended for hydration, dentition and palatability. For Speedi-Beet, cold-soak for 510 minutes (56x water uptake); for shreds, use at least a 2:1 water-to-pulp ratio and soak 15 minutes or until soft (Horse & Hound, BHF).Whats the difference between PuraBeet, Speedi-Beet and regular sugar beet?PuraBeet and Speedi-Beet are both unmolassed, low-sugar options (around 56%). Regular sugar beet is often molassed and can be up to 18% sugar. Speedi-Beets main advantage is its very fast cold soak (H&H Forum, Just Horse Riders blog guidance).Can I feed beet pulp as the only forage?No. Keep beet pulp to 50% or less of the total diet. Its low in protein (around 810%) and short of key vitamins and minerals, so it must be paired with hay/haylage and a balancer or appropriate supplement (Equiglo).How much Speedi-Beet should I feed a 500 kg horse?Typical ranges are 2.53.0 kg dry weight per day for a 500 kg horse, depending on workload and condition. British Horse Feeds advises up to 500 g per 100 kg bodyweight (2.5 kg/day), while Equiglo quotes up to 6 g/kg (3.0 kg/day) always weigh dry, then soak (BHF Feeding FAQs, Equiglo).Does sugar beet increase the risk of colic (twisted gut)?A Liverpool University study found a statistically significant association between feeding sugar beet (both molassed and unmolassed) and large colon torsion risk, although more research is needed to clarify risk in unmolassed beet specifically (Horse & Hound). Introduce gradually, keep total beet to 50% or less of the ration, and monitor for colic signs.How do I switch from molassed shreds to Speedi-Beet?Replace 2 units of soaked shreds with 1.5 units of soaked Speedi-Beet, then adjust to maintain condition. A quick switch is acceptable because the main difference is the removed sugar, not the underlying fibre (British Horse Feeds).Need help fine-tuning your horses fibre plan? Speak to your vet or nutritionist, then build your shopping list with high-quality fibre, a suitable balancer from our supplements collection, and season-appropriate rugs from turnout to stable to keep condition consistent. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. Shop SupplementsShop NAF SupplementsShop Turnout RugsShop Stable RugsShop Hi-Vis Gear0 Comments 0 Shares 292 Views
-
You lose some you win someSubscribe to our YouTube channel & hit the bell! http://go.fei.org/YouTube?d Exclusive videos on #FEItv: ...0 Comments 0 Shares 250 Views
More Stories
Sponsored