YOU ARE OBSERVING
Wood Chewing or Eating
Summary
Wood chewing is a completely different behavior than cribbing. Wood chewing is actually the consumption of wood, whereas cribbing is strictly a behavior where a horse bites down on a solid object without ingesting any material.
Wood chewing may be dietary in origin, as horses eating low fiber (roughage) diets tend to chew wood more often. Horses on very green lush pasture may chew bark more than on other pasture types. This may be due to reduced roughage content in that pasture. Wood chewing may also be a result of management. Like cribbing, wood chewing is more common in horses that are provided with limited exercise and turnout, high grain diets and limited roughage.
Horses generally tolerate some consumption of some wood without it causing them health problems. However, some trees, wood types, and wood stains and paints can be toxic to horses. Excessive intake of chewed wood can result in intestinal impaction and abdominal pain (colic).
-
Code Green
Contact Your Vet to Obtain Useful Advice & Resources- To discuss your equine's general health and management.
your role
What To Do
Try to solve this problem with improvements or changes in husbandry. Provide long stem grass hay in larger quantities. Feed more frequently, provide consistent exercise, and maximize turnout with other horses. Use metal panels, use chew-stop formulas and make other management changes to prevent destruction of your wooden facilities. You can protect wood ledge and corners by installing angle iron or other metal edging. Cribbing collars will not prevent wood chewing.If your horse is showing any sign of illness or abnormalities, contact your vet to discuss your findings and concerns.
Skills you may need
Procedures that you may need to perform on your horse.
your vet's role
- Do the horses have adequate turnout and get adequate exercise?
- How is the horse fed?
- How is the horse managed?
- What is the horse's age, sex, breed and history?
- Does the horse have a normal appetite?
- Does the horse have a normal attitude?
- What have you tried to prevent the behavior?
Diagnostics Your Vet May Perform
Figuring out the cause of the problem. These are tests or procedures used by your vet to determine what’s wrong.
Diagnoses Your Vet May Consider
The cause of the problem. These are conditions or ailments that are the cause of the observations you make.
Treatments Your Vet May Recommend
A way to resolve the condition or diagnosis. Resolving the underlying cause or treating the signs of disease (symptomatic treatment)
Related References:
McGreevy P. Equine Behavior, A Guide for Veterinarians & Equine Scientists. Edinburgh: Saunders, 2004.