The long-standing idea that horses should be blindfolded when being rescued from a burning building may no longer hold true.
University of Guelph
The University of Guelph's free Equine Industry Symposium will cover labour shortages, boosting efficiency and business fundamentals.
Vaccination is important but it does not make horses invincible to infectious disease, which is where management methods and hygiene come in.
The latest research and updates on the role of horses in human health and learning are now available to watch on YouTube.
A research study at the University of Guelph hopes to determine if being around and touched by distressed humans is unpleasant.
Do horses genuinely enjoy being touched, or do they simply tolerate us doing it? A study at the University of Guelph intends to find out.
A University of Guelph study found that 60% of the horses in the group had larger muscle measurements on the left side of their withers.
University of Guelph students are working with Dr. Katrina Merkies to provide helpful information for horse communities across Canada.
Almost 100 percent of University of Guelph survey participants agreed that there were welfare issues in the Canadian equine industry.
“Continuity and change in animal protection work and policy” was the topic presented by Dr. Kendra Coulter at the University of Guelph on January 22, 2020.
Researchers from U of Guelph conducted a survey at the 2019 Royal looking into the impact of painful incidents among children handling and riding horses.
How can you tell when a horse is feeling stressed? It’s all in the eyes and the way their eyelids twitch, University of Guelph researchers have discovered.
The University of Guelph has created the Guelph Equine Public Policy Group to develop a consensus on the community’s shared national priorities.
The University of Guelph’s Ontario Veterinary College has placed 1st in Canada, 3rd in North America and 7th globally in the 2019 World University Rankings.
Thanks to Esther the Wonder Pig, and the two men who rescued her, the Ontario Veterinary College will receive a life-saving large animal CT scanner.