top of page


Healthy Horse Pastures Webinar
A free 1-hour online workshop for horse owners in Ontario Is your pasture getting thin, weedy, muddy, or forcing you to feed more hay than you'd like? Join Pfisterer Ag and Speare Seeds for a practical evening webinar built specifically for horse owners, hobby farms, and boarding barns. This session will walk through the simple steps to improve pasture health, reduce weed pressure, and get more grazing from your acreage. What you'll learn in our Horse Pasture Webinar Why hors


7 Signs Your Horse Pasture Needs Overseeding
If your horse pasture looks thin, patchy, muddy, or full of weeds by early spring or late summer, overseeding is often the fastest way to restore density without starting over. In Southern Ontario horse paddocks, hoof traffic, winterkill, and repeated close grazing are the biggest reasons productive grasses disappear. According to Ontario horse pasture guidance, once plant density drops and bare soil increases, weeds and mud quickly follow. For horse owners in Southern Ontari


Complete Horse Pasture Improvement Guide for Southern Ontario
If your horse pasture is turning into bare soil, weed pressure, mud, and uneven grazing, the solution is rarely just “more seed.” In Grey, Wellington, and Dufferin counties, long winters, spring hoof damage, summer drought, and continuous grazing all combine to thin productive forage stands. The fastest way to improve horse pasture in Southern Ontario is to follow a seed-first system built on soil testing, grazing recovery, species selection, and rotational management. This g
bottom of page