
Your horses cannot be out 24/7 on the rich sugary grasses of middle Tennessee.
You’ve just moved into Founder Valley!
It freaked us out. Could grasses be that different?
Why?
What the heck was going on in middle Tennessee??
It was all prying at the edges of logic.
We were determined to have our horses live like God and Mother Nature intended. But what we were being told was scary, and didn’t make sense.
Images from Ginger Kathrens’ wonderful PBS documentary series about the wild stallion Cloud and his herd in the Pryor Mountains of Montana came to mind (I’ve watched Episode 3 maybe 25 times. It is singularly the best film I’ve ever seen about wild horses).
The images that were assaulting me were of the beautiful rich green meadow at the top of the mountain where the herds spend every waking hour from mid-Spring through mid-fall. So why aren’t those horses foundering, I kept asking myself. How is that meadow different from the pastures in middle Tennessee?
As it turns out it’s very different from the pastures in middle Tennessee. Astoundingly so.
Why?
Because of us!
Humans!
The entire last half of The Soul of a Horse Blogged – The Journey Continues and our new Horses Were Born To Be on Grass tells the whole story … but here’s the Sparks Notes version :).
What we discovered is that most of these gorgeous white-fenced pastures around us contain a single species of genetically modified cool season grass, planted like a thick carpet and fertilized like crazy. Nary a weed, or bush, or bramble, or berry. And if there’s a tree around, it’s always fenced.
So? I bet it’s beautiful.
To the human maybe. Not to the horses.
How come?
It turns out that choices are the single most important piece of the puzzle. When a horse has all the choices he or she might want or need their genetic makeup inherently knows how to balance itself. Like the wild horses do. And we now know that every horse on the planet, both wild and domestic, are genetically precisely the same.
But most of the pastures here in “Founder Valley” offer no choices.
None.
The horses’ only option is one species of cool season grass (like fescue, orchard, etc) which has way more sugar than warm season grasses (like Bermuda, Crab grass, etc) because cool season grasses generate fructan. Warm season grasses do not. A warm season grass will manufacture starch but when the gland storing the starch is full the process stops. Fructan in cool season grasses is manufactured indefinitely as long as there is sunshine.
Also pasture owners usually opt for a grass that has been genetically modified to grow earlier in the Spring and later in the fall to reduce the amount of hay fed during the winter. And according to researcher Katy Watts genetically modified grasses are always higher in sugar content than the same grass not genetically modified.
When the grass is tightly planted like a lawn the horses have to move substantially less to eat, and horses are genetically designed to move 8-20 miles a day. They need this movement for their body to function properly, both inside and out. In the wild horse meadows the grasses are patchy and scattered.
So far then the Tennessee horses are usually ingesting way more sugar with less movement than a wild horse on that meadow atop the Pryor Mountains in Montana who has many choices to balance his intake.
Then add the chemical fertilizers in Tennessee which of course don’t exist in the wild. When grass is stressed and needing water it sucks up potassium which acts as a magnet for attracting water. Potassium is the number one ingredient in most chemical fertilizers so during a period of stress on the grass a horse can wind up with up to 1000 times more potassium in his body than he needs. Not good.
And because there are no weeds, or brambles, or berries, or trees, or bushes in these Tennessee pastures, the horse has no choice but to eat what’s there, or go hungry.
Is it any wonder it’s called Founder Valley?
But we didn’t know any of this when we purchased our new place. Thankfully there is a God who takes care of us even when we don’t know we need taking care of.
As we peeled back the layers of research we discovered our new pasture contained at least seven different kinds of native grasses that are split fairly evenly between high-sugar cool season grasses and low-sugar warm-season grasses now that we’ve added a bit of Bermuda to the mix. There are plenty of weeds, brambles, bushes, berries, and trees. And there has been no chemical fertilizer on it for at least 14 years. And no chemical pesticides or herbicides (whatever the label says it’s still poison that, over time, will cause problems. Would you ingest it?).
With all these choices the horse’s genetics can function.
When ours have had enough cool season sugary grass they know to switch to Bermuda or Dallis grass. It’s built in. When they need a liver cleanout they eat thistle… Vitamin D, a few blackberries.
If a horse has all the choices he needs or wants he will not eat something that’s bad for him. If he has nothing but a genetically modified, high sugar, cool season grass … he’s going to eat it. And if it’s planted like a carpet, he’s going to move way less while doing so. More sugar per step. A double whammy.
The kind of pasture a horse needs is ugly. Patchy. Some grass here and some grass there. Not a thick carpet. And that ugly pasture needs lots and lots of choices. By the grace of God that’s exactly what we have and exactly how we left it …except for planting a few bags of additional warm season Bermuda grass.
And the big takeaway from all this? Pretty much the same as the rest of our amazing journey: Knowing that when something doesn’t seem logical it probably isn’t. If it doesn’t make sense, it’s probably not right. We need to always question everything. Be our own experts. Gather information and make decisions based upon our knowledge and wisdom that relates to us, our situation, and our horses.
That’s the mindset we started with back in California when we discovered that a horse’s hoof was supposed to flex to create blood circulation in the hoof and there was no flexing with a metal shoe nailed on.
We brought that mindset with us to middle Tennessee.
Our herd of six were virtually maintaining their own feet in their dusty rocky “paddock paradise” in California. Dani Lloyd trimmed every 8-9 weeks, usually doing little more than light maintenance. They were moving 8-9 miles a day on the kind of terrain they were genetically born to live on. The trimming schedule changed in middle Tennessee.
Mark Taylor is now trimming every six weeks and the hoof walls are always a bit long by trim day (except in the winter months). We find ways to ensure a lot of movement but the terrain just doesn’t provide the wear and tear that they are genetically designed to get. It takes 5,000 to 10,000 years to even begin to change the base genetics of any species so Mother Nature has no way of knowing our guys are not on Great Basin-like terrain. She is still growing that hoof as if they were. So we have to help them along with the trim, with movement, and with quite a bit of pea gravel in their well-traveled areas like the barn breezeway, the round pen, and around the pond where they drink. And even three to four weeks after a trim, our 28 hooves (now) look for the world like they looked when forged on the southern California high-desert type of terrain.
We were handed yet another lesson our second Spring because like so many humans who are hung up with human concepts we brought the herd through the winter at their normal weight, upping rice bran portions to be sure they didn’t get too “skinny and look unhealthy”. The problem with that contorted logic is that horses in the wild will naturally thin down as winter wears on because the forage is more sparse. And they evolved to do so because bursting into Spring lean and mean so to speak sets them up to better handle those “rich Spring grasses” without gaining too much weight.
We didn’t see this issue the first Spring because the horses had only been here about six months and were apparently still adjusting to the move. But, their second year, when the Spring grasses began to emerge – cool season higher sugar grasses always emerge before the warm season grasses containing less sugar – the horses all blimped up quite a bit. We missed it in the beginning because we are with them every day so I’m really thankful that Mark Taylor, our hoof specialist, was coming every six weeks. He spotted the extra weight immediately.
Whoa! Why are the horses so fat?
Ooops!
We slowly but methodically cut way back on the rice bran (which is the only weight maintenance supplement they receive).
The next fall we let them go into winter with a good weight but at some point we cut back on the rice bran – watching and judging as we went – so they’d hit the Spring grass season nice and lean and be able to handle the higher sugars with less effort. Just like in the wild.
So here we are, not long ago marking the five-year anniversary of our guys and gals being out 24/7 on the “rich grasses of middle Tennessee.” Founder Valley as they say. Our herd is a happy, healthy bunch and Kathleen and I are mighty proud parents.
When I gave Cash the choice of choice and he chose to trust me he left me with no alternative. No longer could it be what I wanted, but rather what he needed. What fifty-two million years of genetics demanded for his long, healthy, and happy life.
So here we are now with seven happy, healthy horses, all very well adjusted and loving their natural life as we continue to receive our life lessons from each and every one. We are replenished daily, hourly, by scenes like the ones above and below. On a recent evening Kathleen and I sat on the porch with a glass of wine watching the herd, and talking. “I know in my heart that the philosophy is correct,” she said. “That our horses are living the life they should be living, and because of that they should be able to take care of themselves.” She paused for a moment, then added, “But it surely feels good to see five years of proof.” I smiled, teared up a bit, and said simply, “Thank you God.”
——
The story of our journey with horses (to date) is told in the two books that follow: the national best seller The Soul of a Horse – Life Lessons from the Herd and its sequel Born Wild – The Soul of a Horse.
And what a story it is as two novices without a clue stumble and bumble their way through the learning process so that hopefully you won’t have to. If you haven’t read both of these books already please do because with that reading, we believe, will come not just the knowledge of discovery but the passion and the excitement to cause you to commit to your journey with horses, to do for the horse without waiver so that your relationship and experience will be with loving, happy and healthy horses who are willing partners and who never stop trying for you. Horses like ours.
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[…] Five Year Anniversary in “Founder Valley” […]
Hi Joe, Great article ! Common sense tells me there is a correlation between forage availability and water intake, especially during winter months and particularly for mustangs that dwell in the higher elevations, with snow and where the water sources are frozen. Would you please share your insight and knowledge in this regard. Thanks, Lyn
High Noon… I don’t really have any information on the correlation of water intake to forage availability. We supply free choice pasture or grass hay 24/7 all year so our herd is never without availability. I do know that horses in the wild eat a lot of snow (for water) when other sources are frozen. And forage is usually available if it’s not too deep to get to it. In which case they’ll usually go to lower elevations. – Joe
We’re fencing additional pasture and it’s talllll grass (early summer). I’m wondering if you cut/mowed first…especially if it was buggy. Speaking of bugs, I’d love to hear your take on the study that concluded anemia in horses fed garlic. Thanks!
I love that picture of Founder Valley. In fact I even put it on my Debit Card! Everytime I see use it I say a quick prayer for Joe Camp and the family! God bless….angie
Hi,
I stumbled across your website and blog today as I research feed for my horses. I am extremely intrigued by your findings! Can you tell me if there needs to be a transition period for the switch to the Safe Starch? Also, you keep mentioning rice bran – I’m only seeing rice bran oil. What is your source for this and do you men the actual bran or the oil?
Thanks so much for your thoughts. It looks beautiful where you are in TN!
Kim
Hi Kim… we went straight away from Strategy to Safe Starch. Depeding upon what you’re feeding you might mix a little for a few days but it wasn’t really necessary for us. If your current feed is high in NSC I would get off it as soon as possible :)
The Rice Brand we use is Legends. It comes in pellets. It’s a regional brand in the east (southeast for us… don’t know how far they stretch). I’ve seen rice bran as sort of a powder or fine granule as well. Do your research though on how they process it. It is sort of like flax in that it’s difficult to stabilize and some companies don’t pay attention to the processing and mutate it (like “polyunsaturated” veggie oils… not good).
But done right it’s the cleanest weight supplement we’ve found with the least bad stuff or potentially bad stuff. And, at the moment the most any of our six get is a little over a cup a day, divided morning and night. Some about half that. One almost none. I suspect that will ramp up a bit in the dead of winter, but then we’ll be pulling back in late January so they’ll go into Spring and the “rich spring grasses” lean and mean so to speak.
Welcome to passion and paranoia :). Hope you’ll read the books.
Joe