Trailblazing Horse Care

Trailblazing Horse Care Rethinking how horses live
Track System-
•Education
•Consultation
•Workshops
Talk: A Podcast on Horse Track Systems

06/06/2026

Horses Are Not Grazing Animals… They’re Specialist Browsers

This might be one of the biggest misconceptions in horse management.

We often describe horses as grazing animals, standing with their heads down eating grass all day. While they certainly graze, their natural feeding behaviour is actually far more complex than that.

Wild and feral horses spend huge portions of their day browsing. They don’t just eat grass. They seek out hedgerows, shrubs, leaves, bark, herbs, flowers, seed heads, weeds and even certain tree species. They constantly move across the landscape, selecting different plants to meet different nutritional and behavioural needs.

Think about a horse turned into a field with a healthy hedge line. How often do you see them reaching through the hedge for hawthorn, blackberry, rosehips or fresh leaves rather than standing in the middle eating grass?

That isn’t boredom. It’s natural behaviour.

The irony is that many of our modern horse paddocks bear very little resemblance to the environment horses evolved to live in. Vast areas of single-species grass provide plenty of calories but very little variety.

Much of the UK’s improved pasture has been heavily selected for agricultural productivity, particularly for cattle production. Ryegrass has become a dominant species because it produces high yields and supports milk and meat production extremely efficiently. The problem is that what works brilliantly for a dairy cow doesn’t necessarily work brilliantly for a horse.

Many improved ryegrass pastures contain significantly higher levels of readily available sugars than the diverse meadow systems horses would naturally encounter. Yet we continue to place animals designed to browse a wide variety of plants onto fields dominated by a single, energy-dense grass species.

Then we scratch our heads and wonder why we are seeing increasing numbers of horses struggling with obesity, insulin dysregulation, laminitis and other metabolic disorders.

Of course, metabolic disease is multifactorial. Genetics, exercise, management and overall diet all play a role. But it does raise an interesting question:

Are we feeding horses in a way that matches millions of years of evolution?

Browsing provides:

🌿 Nutritional diversity
🌿 Natural enrichment
🌿 Increased movement
🌿 Mental stimulation
🌿 Opportunities for self-selection of plant material
🌿 Access to a wide range of plant compounds not found in monoculture grass systems

Perhaps the question shouldn’t be “How much grass does my horse need?”

Perhaps it should be “How much variety does my horse need?”

Because when given the choice, many horses don’t behave like lawnmowers.

They behave exactly as nature intended — as specialist browsers.

05/06/2026

Well .... If you have seen my stories you know what's up 😅 Kids turned the fence off and my horses broke into the grass middle for a little snackysnack.

One thing I often read in the comments about forage, bucket feeds, rugs, stabling, movement, grass, social interaction, ...
04/06/2026

One thing I often read in the comments about forage, bucket feeds, rugs, stabling, movement, grass, social interaction, and other horse care topics is:
BUT MY HORSE....
NOT IF....

Of course there are individual horses with individual circumstances. Age, health conditions, workload, climate, injuries, management limitations, and many other factors can influence what a particular horse needs.

But this page is primarily about species-appropriate horse keeping.

That means I am talking about what horses, as a species, evolved to do and need in order to thrive.

When I say horses need plenty of forage, I’m talking about horses as a species.

When I talk about movement, social interaction, or the need for roughage, I’m talking about horses as a species.

It’s simply impossible to address every individual horse, every medical condition, every climate, and every management situation in a single social media post.

General principles will always have exceptions I feel horse guardians first need to know these general principles in order to adapt them to their situations?!
Exceptions don’t change the rule.

My goal is to help people understand the horse first, and then adapt those principles to the individual in front of them.
Individual needs matter and species needs matter too!!

01/06/2026

And at a random park, forest or botanic gardens 😅
Only a little bit obsessed with track systems

Bit of a sucker for those ai trends 😅 Glad to see my chatgpt doesn't know me too well 😅 I do love the dirty clothes thou...
01/06/2026

Bit of a sucker for those ai trends 😅
Glad to see my chatgpt doesn't know me too well 😅 I do love the dirty clothes though haha

Love seeing my colouring book being enjoyed all over the world 🥰You can get one on Amazon in your country just search fo...
01/06/2026

Love seeing my colouring book being enjoyed all over the world 🥰
You can get one on Amazon in your country just search for Natural Horses Colouring and get colouring in ✏️❤️🫶

If you can't get enough of tracks you can now subscribe to this amazingly inspiring Track system for content behind the ...
31/05/2026

If you can't get enough of tracks you can now subscribe to this amazingly inspiring Track system for content behind the scenes PLUS heaps of great savings with lots of different businesses related to Tracks from around the world 🙌

31/05/2026

Regular hoof care is your responsibility. The trimmer who comes every 4-6 weeks can't trim away the care that you aren't providing. So, regular picking out feet and in muddy weather spraying with antibacterial spray/ cream/ powder what ever floats your boat is a must. Using a wire brush helps exfoliate and stimulate the sole while doing a great job getting every little rock out of any little crevices. 🙌
What does your hoof care routine look like ?

Address

Yandina, QLD

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Trailblazing Horse Care posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share