Tip Top Equestrian Nutrition

Tip Top Equestrian Nutrition Independent Unbiased Science Backed Equine Nutrition Advisor

11/12/2025

News, News, something big is in the works for spring 2026!!!! My page will be changing a bit so stay tuned...
⏰🐴 🪣📣

11/07/2025

Did you know?
Digestion Starts With the Nervous System: How Massage Supports the Gut–Brain Connection in Horses

Most people think digestion begins in the mouth — when a horse takes the first bite of hay or grass.
But true digestion begins before a single chew.

It begins in the nervous system.

For the gut to function, the body must shift into the parasympathetic state — the “rest-and-digest” mode where physiology turns toward nourishment, repair, and balance.

The Gut–Brain Connection

Horses have one of the most sensitive nervous systems in the animal world. As prey animals, they constantly scan for safety — even when life appears calm.

If they sense tension, pain, insecurity, or discomfort, the nervous system transitions into sympathetic (“fight-or-flight”) mode, where survival takes priority over digestion.

In this state:
• Digestive motility slows
• Blood moves to muscles, not the GI tract
• Nutrient absorption decreases
• Microbiome balance may shift
• The body prepares to react, not digest

This is why horses who are:
• Tight through the poll and jaw
• Braced through the sternum and ribs
• Holding abdominal tension
• Managing chronic soreness or ulcers
• Anxious, watchful, or reactive

often show digestive challenges, fluctuating stool, gas, mild colic tendencies, or difficulty maintaining weight and topline.

Their systems are not failing — they are protecting.
But protection mode and digestion mode cannot run together.

When Calm Arrives, Digestion Activates

When a horse feels safe, supported, and able to soften into their body, the nervous system shifts.
Relaxation is the signal that unlocks the digestive system.

From there, the brain communicates through the vagus nerve and enteric nervous system to:
• Activate digestive enzymes
• Initiate peristalsis (gut movement)
• Increase blood flow to digestive organs
• Support hydration and nutrient exchange
• Prepare the body to heal and replenish

Digestion is not a mechanical event — it is a neurological permission state.

How Massage Supports Digestive Health

Massage and myofascial bodywork don’t “treat” digestion directly.
They create the internal environment digestion requires to function well.

Skilled touch influences:
• 🧠 Autonomic nervous system balance
• 🌬️ Breathing and rib mobility
• 🩸 Circulation and lymph flow
• 🪢 Fascial mobility and abdominal motion
• 🌱 Vagal tone and parasympathetic activation

When the nervous system feels safe, the body says:

“You can rest. You can digest. You can heal.”

Signs of Neuro-Digestive Release During Bodywork

Owners often notice:
• Gut gurgling
• Soft chewing and licking
• Yawning and stretching
• Deeper, slower breathing
• Passing gas
• Softening of topline and ribs
• A calmer, more connected demeanor afterward

These responses are the body shifting back into a physiologic state where digestion and repair can resume.

Why This Matters

Digestive health isn’t just about what goes into the bucket.
It is deeply tied to:
• Nervous system safety
• Comfort and movement
• Fascial freedom
• Breath and diaphragm function
• Emotional regulation

Massage is one of the few modalities that can influence all of these at once.

When a horse regularly accesses parasympathetic balance, we often see:
• Better nutrient absorption
• Improved weight and topline
• More consistent stool and gut comfort
• Softer behavior and focus
• Better immune function and recovery capacity

A relaxed horse digests better, learns better, and lives better.

The Takeaway

Digestion doesn’t start in the stomach — it starts in the brain and nervous system.

Through mindful touch and nervous-system-aware bodywork, we help horses:
• Release tension
• Breathe fully
• Settle their mind and body
• Enter the “rest-and-digest” mode
• Support natural digestive function

When a horse can digest life with ease,
they move better, feel better, behave better, and heal better.

Wow
10/28/2025

Wow

A horse's full intestines can weigh over 100 pounds (45 kg), with the large intestine alone potentially accounting for that entire weight when full of feed.

The total weight depends on the horse's size and what it has recently consumed.
Key components of the equine digestive tract include:
Total capacity: The entire gastrointestinal (GI) tract of a fed, mature horse can hold nearly 50 gallons (190 liters) of fluid and feed.
Hindgut weight: The hindgut (cecum and colon) accounts for approximately 64% of the empty weight of the GI tract. This is the area where fiber fermentation occurs.
Large intestine capacity: The large intestine is a significant contributor to the total weight of the full intestines.
It can hold 80 liters (21 gallons) or more of food and water.
When filled with feed, it can weigh up to 100 pounds (45 kg).
Cecum capacity: The cecum, a comma-shaped organ on the right side of the abdomen, can hold up to 30 liters (about 8 gallons) of food and water.

Another thing to consider in our horses is that the small intestines is suspended via the mesentry to the vertebral column of the lumbar. The lumbar is one of the last places to mature in horses and is susceptible to problems. Lumbar pain is a common site of dysfunction in horses I see for several reasons…..that is another post!

Below is just the intestinal tract from a 15hh horse, in a dissection it takes 4 people to comfortably carry this all out on a tarpaulin.

Below is a link to whole collection of videos on the intestinal tract.

https://www.patreon.com/collection/1804697t

This article was written by my mentor dr Racheal Mottet of Legacy Equine Nutrition, I am sharing it with her gracous  pe...
10/27/2025

This article was written by my mentor dr Racheal Mottet of Legacy Equine Nutrition, I am sharing it with her gracous permission. Very interesting and well written as are all of her works Enjoy!

It is starting to get cold out there – even overnight here in north Florida! A silent and frequently unknown risk for horses that have pasture access – slowed cellular respiration and the first killing frost. 🥶🥶

If cellular respiration is sounding unfamiliar, this is the process that happens after photosynthesis (photosynthesis refresh: where plants use the sun to create energy in the form of sugar and oxygen) where the plant utilizes the stored sugar (glucose) for cellular energy.

When temperatures drop below 40 º F, cellular respiration slows significantly leading to slower utilization of stored sugar (specifically non-structural carbohydrates - NSC). As a result, the plant can potentially have higher than normal NSC levels when your horse goes out to graze. While the plant will still utilize the stored sugar for energy, the process is slower than normal in cold temps below 40.

Perhaps, however, a more significant event would be considered a hard freeze (below 28º F for at least several hours) which halts cellular respiration entirely and signals the end of the grass growing season. This is called a “killing frost” and results in elevated NSC for a period post-freeze (due to denaturation of the enzymes involved in cellular respiration). How long the NSC level stays elevated is still being explored, but it is ideal to keep horses with high NSC sensitivities off pasture after a killing frost for 1 week.

In both cases, as the temperatures drops pasture can be risky for horses with metabolic challenges that involve insulin dysregulation and/or obesity, etc. Other conditions may contribute to NSC sensitivity, please connect with your veterinarian or a nutritionist to determine if your horse is at risk.

As a takeaway, take care as the temperature drops and keep an eye on those horses most affected by sugar and starch issues. Your “average” metabolically healthy horse should be just fine without making adjustments, but keep in mind what’s happening within the plant as temps start dropping.

-Dr. Rachel Mottet, Legacy Equine Nutrition

[www.legacyequine.com](http://www.legacyequine.com)

Equine nutritionist offering programs, consulting, and courses. Learn more about Legacy Equine today!

One of my most favourite feed!  So well formulated and balanced!
10/17/2025

One of my most favourite feed! So well formulated and balanced!

09/24/2025

Contest Time 📣

Want a chance to win a free bag of grain of your choice ?

Here’s how to get in the draw !
🐴 Share Our Post ( publically ) and let us know if youll be shopping at our East or West location
🐴Like or Follow our page

* bonus entry * tag three friends in the comments

Winner will be selected opening weekend at each location, we will never message asking for personal information or send any links please be aware of scammers , No Cash Value , not affiliated with Facebook or Meta Partners .

BROOKS!, BUCKEYE!  PURINA! all the good stuff!
09/24/2025

BROOKS!, BUCKEYE! PURINA! all the good stuff!

Contest Time 📣

Want a chance to win a free bag of grain of your choice ?

Here’s how to get in the draw !
🐴 Share Our Post ( publically ) and let us know if youll be shopping at our East or West location
🐴Like or Follow our page

* bonus entry * tag three friends in the comments

Winner will be selected opening weekend at each location, we will never message asking for personal information or send any links please be aware of scammers , No Cash Value , not affiliated with Facebook or Meta Partners .

09/05/2025
is feeding oil to horses truly dangerous?
09/02/2025

is feeding oil to horses truly dangerous?

Helping your horses lungs during fire season
08/18/2025

Helping your horses lungs during fire season

08/17/2025

The 42,000-year-old filly that can walk again

In the frozen lands of Siberia, under layers of ancient permafrost, a small foal was hidden for 42,000 years.
When scientists discovered it, they found something extraordinary – not just bones, but a nearly perfectly preserved body.

Her skin was intact.
Her dark brown mane is still soft
Your internal organs untouched by time.
And inside her little heart- liquid blood.

🔹 Species: An extinct type of Lena horse
🔹 Age: Only 1-2 weeks old when he died
🔹 Condition: So immaculate, it looked like she had just fallen asleep

The foal probably drowned in a muddy hollow, instantly sealed by ice. What followed was silence - and preservation. For more than four ice ages.

Now scientists are trying to do the unthinkable:
Extract viable cells.
And bring that old bloodline back.

The goal? A clone.
A living echo of a species lost in time.

It's not science fiction anymore - it's science, standing on the edge of memory.

And maybe soon, something that once walked the Ice Age
gonna walk again 🐎❄️

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