By Christine Skelly
Horse owners should be proactive during a hot and dry summer when it comes to pasture management and buying hay.

Some Michigan horse owners are beginning to see the effects of a hot and dry summer. As the top soil dries, short pastures are browning and forage growth is slowing down.
Over grazing dry pastures can permanently damage a plant stand. Horses will grasp plants down to their base, destroying leaves that would normally provide nutrition to the plant’s root system. Now is the time to practice good grazing management to ensure you have a productive pasture through the grazing season. Try incorporating some of the following pasture management strategies into you grazing system:
- Monitor your forage stands and make sure that you have at least 4 inches of uniform growth throughout your pasture.
- Practice rotational grazing to rest fields and let them grow back 6 – 8 inches before grazing.
- If pasture supply is low, limit grazing early and supplement your horse’s diet with hay.
- Create a sacrifice lot to limit your horse’s grazing during the dry season as well as the muddy season.