What Makes a Horse a Performance Horse?

0618_04

By Standlee Premium Western Forage

Performance is loosely defined as any form of work or forced physical activity. Work or physical activity can include walking, trotting, cantering, running, jumping and turning. Therefore, a performance horse can include any horse that is actively ridden, trained or that may carry or pull a load. With this broad definition of performance, many of us have horses that are considered performance horses. Since the performance activities of horses vary in both duration and intensity, feeding systems to address the nutrient requirements of these horses must also vary.

Usually, we begin feeding performance horses by providing free-access to fresh, clean water. The next step is to provide adequate energy, but how do we determine how much energy they require? Energy is the only dietary factor that you can visually determine dietary adequacy. If you are feeding too much energy (too many calories), the horse gains weight or becomes fat. On the other hand, if you don’t feed enough energy (too few calories), the horse becomes thin or loses weight. You can’t simply look at horses and determine the status of other critical nutrients. Therefore, if your performance horse is too thin or too fat, it is your responsibility, since we have the ability to offer more or less feed, to properly balance energy requirements. To provide energy to the performance horse, we begin with feeding good, quality forage (pasture/hay) and add additional energy with the use of a combination of starch, fat and super-fibers.

Find out more information about what forage types will best fit your horse on our website.

More News

Back to all news

See All
FILES2f20152f042f0414_Tip.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Training Tip: Build Confidence With the One Rein Stop

The One Rein Stop is the first thing I teach every single rider in my clinics as soon as they…

Read More
FILES2f20152f102f1020_06.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Downunder Horsemanship Office will be Closed for the Ranch Rally

The Downunder Horsemanship office will be closed Wednesday, October 28th thru Friday, October 30th. Our team will be preparing for…

Read More
0622_03

5 years ago

Ritchie Celebrates 100 Years of Providing Fresh Water to Horses

By Ritchie Industries One hundred years ago, horses in the United States were primarily valued as beasts of burden for…

Read More
0206_02

2 years ago

Training Guide to Safely Ride Your Horse in a Group

While you are initially training your trail horse, Clinton recommends riding the horse outside the arena by yourself. That way…

Read More