Yew, hemlock, wilted maple leaves, cherry, nightshade, and bracken fern are pasture plants that can poison horses.
A green field can look calm and still hide a problem after drought, mowing, frost, or a storm. Spotting plants toxic to horses in pasture helps you pull horses before a bite turns into colic, weakness, breathing trouble, or sudden collapse.
Call an equine veterinarian right away if a horse may have eaten an unknown plant and shows trembling, dark red or brown urine, severe drooling, labored breathing, weakness, seizures, refusing feed, or going down. Do not wait to see if the horse improves, and do not feed hay from the same field until the plant source is checked.
Toxic Pasture Plants: What Changes The Risk
Toxic pasture plants become more dangerous when good forage is short, horses are hungry, or cut weeds end up in hay. Poisoning risk also rises after storms, fall leaf drop, herbicide work, nitrogen fertilizing, and moves into a new field.
Horses usually avoid many bitter or rough weeds when grass is plentiful. Trouble starts when the pasture is grazed low, a fence line gives access to ornamental shrubs, or dried plant pieces become mixed into hay where the horse cannot sort them out.
- Walk fence lines after wind, trimming, and frost.
- Check wet spots for hemlock, horsetail, and other problem plants.
- Keep horses off sprayed areas until the herbicide label says grazing can resume.
- Offer enough grass or hay before turnout so hungry horses do not sample weeds.
Which Pasture Plants Need Fast Action?
Fast action matters most with plants that affect the heart, blood oxygen, nervous system, or breathing. Remove horses from the area first, then collect a plant sample or clear photos for the veterinarian or local extension office.
Common names can confuse the job. Eastern hemlock is a tree, but poison hemlock and water hemlock are dangerous weeds; red maple, boxelder, and other maple species also need separate attention because wilted leaves are the usual hazard.
| Plant Or Plant Group | Dangerous Pasture Situation | Warning Signs Or Concern |
|---|---|---|
| Japanese yew | Clippings, wreaths, or shrubs near fences | Sudden death can occur before treatment is possible |
| Poison hemlock and water hemlock | Wet areas, stream banks, ditches, or uprooted roots | Tremors, weakness, salivation, seizures, collapse |
| Wilted maple leaves | Fall leaf drop, storm damage, cut branches, frost | Dark red or brown urine, depression, refusing feed |
| Chokecherry and wild cherry | Wilted leaves or broken branches after storms | Rapid breathing, tremors, weakness, possible cyanide poisoning |
| Nightshade family | Fence rows, gardens, waste areas, green berries | Dilated pupils, trembling, weakness, digestive upset |
| Bracken fern and horsetail | Overgrown fields, wooded edges, damp soil, hay contamination | Staggering, muscle twitching, neurologic signs after repeated intake |
| Hoary alyssum | Pasture or hay with heavy weed content | Swollen lower legs, fever, founder risk in severe cases |
| Oaks and acorns | Heavy acorn drop, young leaves, hungry horses under trees | Loss of appetite, constipation, bloody diarrhea, kidney stress |
The University of Minnesota Extension says poisoning concern rises when forage is sparse, animals move to new pasture, herbicides were used, nitrogen fertilizer was applied, or a new forage source has been fed. Its plants poisonous to livestock resource also lists horse-specific risks such as wilted maple leaves, hoary alyssum, and white snakeroot.
Pasture Plant Problems By Season
Pasture plant risk changes through the year, so a single spring walk is not enough. A field can pass inspection in May and still become risky after August drought, September leaf drop, or a tree limb falls into the fence line.
Spring brings tender weeds and fast growth. Summer brings drought stress, overgrazing, and nitrate buildup in some plants. Fall brings wilted leaves, acorns, and late-season weeds in hay fields.
- Spring: inspect wet corners, new rosettes, and fence lines before turnout.
- Summer: rotate before grass is cropped short and check drought-stressed weeds.
- Fall: remove horses from areas with wilted maple leaves, heavy acorns, or storm debris.
- Hay season: reject bales with unknown weeds, fern, horsetail, or heavy hoary alyssum.
Maple deserves special care because wilted leaves are the danger point for horses. A related plain-English note on maple leaf risks around horses can help when tree species around the field are hard to sort.
Removing A Suspect Plant Without Raising Risk
Removing a suspect plant is useful only when horses cannot reach the cut or wilted material afterward. Mowing, spraying, or trimming can make a plant easier to eat if pieces are left where horses graze.
Use gloves for unknown weeds, bag pulled plants, and keep horses out while debris dries, wilts, or is hauled away. For shrubs and trees, cut branches outside the field whenever possible so clippings never land inside the fence.
Herbicides can help with some weeds, but the label controls the grazing interval. If the label is unclear for horses, call the manufacturer, a local extension office, or the veterinarian before turnout.
| Field Situation | Better Move | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Unknown weed in a grazed area | Fence off the patch and photograph the whole plant | Identification is easier before leaves, flowers, or roots are damaged |
| Storm-dropped branches | Remove horses until leaves and limbs are cleared | Wilted cherry and maple leaves are higher-risk than many fresh leaves |
| Pasture grazed to the dirt | Add hay and rest the field | Hungry horses are more likely to sample weeds |
| Hay with strange stems or seed heads | Stop feeding that bale and save a sample | Dried toxic plants can be harder for horses to avoid |
| Wet corner with hollow-stem weeds | Fence it out until plants are identified | Hemlock species often grow near water and ditches |
| Ornamental shrubs beside the fence | Move the fence or remove the shrub | Yew, oleander, rhododendron, and azalea do not belong within reach |
| Recent herbicide treatment | Follow the grazing restriction on the product label | Sprayed weeds may remain tempting or toxic after treatment |
What Should Happen Before Horses Graze Again?
A pasture re-entry plan should confirm the plant is identified, the source is removed, and every horse is eating, drinking, and acting normally. If any horse shows illness, the veterinarian’s plan overrides the turnout schedule.
Before the gate opens again, do a slow walk from the horse’s eye level. Check low rosettes, leaf piles, ditch edges, broken branches, fence-line shrubs, and hay left from the same area.
- Remove horses from the suspect field and offer clean hay and water.
- Photograph the plant with leaves, stem, flowers, fruit, roots if visible, and the growing site.
- Call an equine veterinarian for any symptoms or known eating of yew, hemlock, wilted maple, cherry, oleander, or rhododendron.
- Confirm plant identity with a local extension office, weed specialist, or veterinarian.
- Clear pulled plants, clippings, leaf piles, and contaminated hay before turnout.
- Rest overgrazed pasture so horses are not pushed toward weeds.
The most useful habit is a repeated field walk after weather changes, not a once-a-year weed check. Horses stay better protected when forage is available, risky plants are fenced out early, and strange symptoms are treated as a veterinary call instead of a wait-and-see problem.
References & Sources
- University of Minnesota Extension. “Plants poisonous to livestock” Supports the pasture-risk triggers, horse-specific plant concerns, and plant poisoning signs used in this article.
