The Horse spotlights five management steps for stronger hooves: full analysis
The Horse this week published “5 Secrets to Stronger Hooves,” a sponsored article from EQUUS that packages core hoof-care advice into five takeaways for horse-focused readers: better nutrition, regular farrier care, more exercise, selective use of supplements, and vigilance for thrush. The article was posted May 11, 2026, and positions hoof quality as something influenced by genetics, but still responsive to management. (thehorse.com)
That framing is consistent with longer-running equine veterinary guidance. Hoof health has long been understood as the product of nutrition, environment, biomechanics, and preventive care, not breeding alone. The Horse’s recent background reporting on hoof nutrition notes that hoof horn grows slowly, roughly one-third of an inch per month, and that meaningful changes may take months to appear because new horn has to grow down from the coronary band. In some cases, nutrition consultants report waiting more than 18 months to see the full effect of diet changes. (thehorse.com)
The new article’s five recommendations are straightforward. It advises feeding a commercially appropriate ration or, when forage quality is inconsistent, discussing a ration balancer with a veterinarian; keeping horses on a roughly six-week shoeing schedule; increasing movement through riding or turnout; using hoof supplements thoughtfully, especially those containing biotin; and checking feet daily for early signs of thrush. It also stresses that regular farrier visits can catch developing issues before they become more serious. (thehorse.com)
Additional context from The Horse and other professional resources supports much of that advice, while adding nuance. The Horse’s nutrition coverage says balanced intake of energy, protein, amino acids, minerals, and vitamins matters most for hoof integrity, and warns that excesses can be counterproductive. For example, too much nonstructural carbohydrate can increase laminitis risk, while excessive zinc can interfere with copper and iron metabolism, and too much selenium can compromise horn quality. The same report says independent scientific support for supplements is strongest for biotin and methionine, particularly in horses with brittle feet or hoof cracks, but not as a universal fix. (thehorse.com)
Professional hoof-care sources also reinforce the management side of the equation. AAEP care materials and Merck Veterinary Manual guidance both describe hoof care as essential to mobility and comfort, and note that problems such as cracks and thrush are best addressed early. University of Minnesota Extension likewise advises regular trimming or shoeing schedules coordinated with both the farrier and veterinarian, while recognizing that interval needs vary by horse, season, and growth rate. (aaep.org)
There doesn’t appear to be a formal press release or regulatory filing tied to this item, and the article is clearly labeled sponsored content rather than original research or a clinical announcement. That matters when interpreting its recommendations. The guidance is broadly in line with accepted hoof-care principles, but the format is educational marketing, not a peer-reviewed update. For veterinary professionals, that distinction is important when pet parents arrive with simplified takeaways, especially around supplements. (thehorse.com)
Why it matters: For equine practitioners, the article is a useful snapshot of what clients are likely to read and repeat. It may help open conversations about realistic timelines for hoof improvement, the limits of over-the-counter supplements, the need to balance trace minerals rather than chase a single ingredient, and the value of coordinated veterinarian-farrier management. It also highlights an enduring clinical challenge: many hoof complaints presented as “bad feet” may actually reflect broader issues such as diet imbalance, metabolic risk, environment, or insufficient movement. (thehorse.com)
What to watch: The next development to watch isn’t likely a regulatory event, but continued client demand for actionable hoof-health advice, especially nutrition guidance that can be translated into individualized feeding plans, farrier intervals, and earlier intervention for thrush, cracks, and laminitis risk. (thehorse.com)