J & S Trailer Service, Inc.

J & S Trailer Service, Inc. Full service repair and maintenance of horse and living quarter trailers in North Central Florida.

Conveniently located in Williston, FL., J & S Trailer Service offers full service repairs and maintenance on all types of bumper pull and goose-neck trailers.

11/19/2025

Tracey will be returning to J & S Trailer Service, effective immediately.

06/23/2025

This is notification that Tracey Roberts no longer works at J & S Trailer Service. Please direct all inquiries to Shayne LaMont at the office number: 352-529-0460.

10/11/2024

We would like to thank our customers for their patience during the hurricanes that have come through recently. J & S Trailer Service weathered Milton surprisingly well. We are open today and would like anyone that had a trailer here...They are all fine! If you need help please feel free to contact us at 352-529-0460.

09/27/2024

With the power being out in much of levy county and our employees needing some much needed rest. J & S will remain closed. We will reopen Monday, September 30. Thank you for your understanding.

09/25/2024

We want to notify our customers that J & S Trailer Service will be closing early on September 25th, to allow our employees to prep for Hurricane Helene. We will be closed all day on September 26th and are playing Friday, September 27th by ear. We pray you all stay safe with minimal to no damage.

03/22/2024

FOR SALE: BW 5th hitch, puck system for 2022 Dodge Ram .... nice unit slider call: 352-843-4104 $1,000.00 obo

08/28/2023

Well, it is that time of year again! With hurricane Idalia planning on making landfall pretty close to us and along the central and northern gulf borders...at this point we are looking at possibly being closed on Tuesday, August 29th. We will definitely be closed Wednesday, August 30th and will play it by ear after that.

08/11/2023

for sale: Reese 20K 5th hitch $800.00 You will need to purchase the rails elsewhere.

05/25/2023

J & S Trailer Service will be closed on Monday, May 29, 2023 in observance of Memorial Day. We will reopen on Tuesday, May 30, 2023.

12/07/2022

Fascinating Facts About Horse Digestion

Many people anthropomorphize horses. We think they should be clean. We think they should wear nice, warm blankets when it’s cold, and we think they should eat two or three meals a day.

Horses are horses–not humans. They should be treated like horses. They like to get dirty. They can regulate their own body temperature in most cases. They have a unique digestive system that is very different from the human digestive tract.

Understanding horse digestion should be a top priority. It sometimes seems that the horse’s digestive system is quite delicate, but many of the common digestive problems are due to the unnatural way horses are fed. When a horse is out in the wild with thousands of acres of free-roam grazing, and the only external demand is to maintain itself and occasionally run from predators, this configuration serves it quite well, most of the time.

A minimum of 10 acres is required per horse to make enough forage for consumption, allow adequate movement, and to minimize parasitism. This is difficult to achieve in the modern world for most people. Riding or lunging must suffice for exercise, and the horse is much more reliant upon hay. Dewormers, of course, rid them of parasites- at least most of them, there are exceptions.

Here are some fascinating (and good-to-know) facts about horse digestion:

1. The horse is a non-ruminant herbivore. The digestive system share features with dogs and cats (and humans) which are monogastric, as well as the ruminant in which there are 3-4 gastric compartments. (Camelids have three).

2. As forage (the horse’s natural food) is chewed by the horse, the salivary glands produce up to 10 gallons of saliva (per day). Saliva is crucial for neutralizing stomach acids and reducing the risk of gastric ulcers. Horses do not make as much saliva when eating grain-type feeds.

3. The esophagus, which empties into the stomach, only works in one direction for the horse. Food cannot be regurgitated or vomited.

4. Gastric capacity is 8-10 liters, which is quite small compared to other parts of the digestive system.

5. Water only remains in the horse’s stomach for about 15 minutes before moving on to the small intestine. Food retention varies depending upon the type- grass, hay, or grain.

6. When the stomach is empty, acid can attack the squamous cells in the stomach lining, often resulting in ulcers. Therefore, small frequent meals, access to a slow feeder, or access to pasture are important.

7. Most of the digestion and absorption of sugars, starches, proteins, and fats occurs in the small intestine.

8. Horses do not have a gall bladder. Instead, the small intestine aids in the digestion of fats.

9. More than 1g/kg of sugars and starches spill into the colon, potentially causing colitis and diarrhea. Horses should be fed primarily forage and only small amounts of a low carbohydrate concentrate.

10. The cecum is homologous to the human appendix.

11. The colon is shaped like a stacked horse shoe, with varying dimensions to allow proper food mixing and digestion.

12. Food enters and exits the cecum at the top. This is a common site for impaction colic, which is often due to lack of water intake.

13. The cecum and other parts of the large intestine contain active populations of bacteria and yeast, which help break food down in a process called fermentation. This results in the formation of free fatty acids, from which the horse derives most of its energy. It also results in a large amount of gas, as a by-product.

14. The bacterial and microbe populations become specific in fermenting the type of food the horse normally eats. When a new food is introduced suddenly, the bacteria/ microbes cannot ferment it effectively and the result is often colic. (Therefore, all feed changes should be made very gradually.)

15. Borborygmic sounds or ‘Gut sounds’ indicated that food is moving through the digestive tract. An absence of gut sounds likely means there is some digestive upset or obstruction.

16. A horse requires a minimum of 1.5% of his body weight daily of long-stemmed roughage (grass/ hay) for normal digestive tract activity; this is 15 pounds of roughage for a 1000 lb. horse.

17. The entire digestion process, from oral to aboral, takes about 36-72 hours.

18. If it were to be stretched from end to end, the horse’s digestive tract would be about 115 feet long, from mouth to a**s.

Fox Run Equine Center

www.foxrunequine.com

Address

1779 SW 18th Street
Williston, FL
32696

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 8am - 5pm

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