Sebastian
Well-Known Member
Nearly every day I see people asking for advice regarding laminitis and grass. In all of these threads people post what they have been lead to believe, but it is not always correct and I do wonder about where these misconceptions come from. One of my neighbours is a riding instructor and she told me the other day that she is not going to cut her tall and very overgrown fields, because she is worried about laminitis in short grass! I decided not to argue, but there must be a reason why so many believe these "old tales".
Myth: Short grass is stressed, and trying to grow - therefore the sugar levels are far higher than long stalky grass. Leafy and "lush" short grass is the biggest cause of laminitis and must be avoided.
Fact: Actively growing and fertilised grass has the lowest levels of sugars.
Myth: Fertilised grass has higher sugar levels and causes laminitis
Fact: Fertiliser applied when grass is growing lowers the levels of sugars. Nutrient deficiency causes sugars to accumulate.
Myth: Grass should be left to grow long and not mowed. Leafy and "lush" short grass is the biggest cause of laminitis and must be avoided.
Fact: Grass contains the most sugars when it develops seed heads, which contain very high concentrations of sugars. Leafy regrowth has the lowest sugar levels.
Source: all over the place, but this is the best and most concise one I can find
http://www.safergrass.org/pdf/VCNApreprint.pdf
For those too lazy to read the whole thing
Edit: NSC = nonstructural carbohydrates, i.e sugar, starch and fructan
Myth: Short grass is stressed, and trying to grow - therefore the sugar levels are far higher than long stalky grass. Leafy and "lush" short grass is the biggest cause of laminitis and must be avoided.
Fact: Actively growing and fertilised grass has the lowest levels of sugars.
Myth: Fertilised grass has higher sugar levels and causes laminitis
Fact: Fertiliser applied when grass is growing lowers the levels of sugars. Nutrient deficiency causes sugars to accumulate.
Myth: Grass should be left to grow long and not mowed. Leafy and "lush" short grass is the biggest cause of laminitis and must be avoided.
Fact: Grass contains the most sugars when it develops seed heads, which contain very high concentrations of sugars. Leafy regrowth has the lowest sugar levels.
Source: all over the place, but this is the best and most concise one I can find
http://www.safergrass.org/pdf/VCNApreprint.pdf
For those too lazy to read the whole thing
Edit: NSC = nonstructural carbohydrates, i.e sugar, starch and fructan
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