Manure analysis
Fecal Egg Count Testing
Smarter deworming, stronger horses, healthier pastures. We test the manure of every horse on our farm — and we offer the same service to horse owners across Abruzzo and beyond.
🔬 Why We Look At Manure
At L'altalena, every horse is a partner in our regenerative system — and every horse deserves care that is precise, evidence-based, and gentle on the land. That is why we no longer reach for dewormer tubes on a calendar schedule. Instead, we look first.
By examining a small sample of fresh manure under the microscope, we can count the number of parasite eggs per gram (EPG) that a horse is shedding. This tells us — accurately, individually, and without guesswork — which horses actually need treatment, which parasites they carry, and which ones are doing perfectly fine without any drugs at all.
⚠️ The Growing Problem of Dewormer Resistance
For decades, horse owners around the world dewormed their horses every few months, regardless of whether the animal needed it. That well-intentioned habit has created a serious problem: anthelmintic resistance. Many of the wormers that worked perfectly twenty years ago no longer kill the parasites they were designed for.
The science is now clear: blanket deworming is outdated and harmful. It accelerates resistance, exposes horses to unnecessary chemicals, and pours pharmaceutical residue into the very soil we are trying to bring back to life. Selective, test-based deworming is the modern standard — endorsed by veterinary parasitologists worldwide.
"You can't manage what you don't measure. Every dewormer given without a test is a guess — and every guess accelerates resistance."
🌱 Why It Matters For The Land
This is where mestonderzoek fits into the bigger picture of regenerative farming. Dewormer residues — especially ivermectin and moxidectin — are excreted in the manure and can kill dung beetles, earthworms and the entire soil micro-ecosystem that we rely on to recycle nutrients and build living pasture.
By testing first and treating only the horses that truly need it, we drastically reduce the amount of chemical entering our pastures. Healthier dung beetles mean healthier dung breakdown, which means healthier grass, healthier horses, healthier soil — and a real, measurable contribution to biodiversity.
🐴 What We Test For
A standard FEC (fecal egg count) using the McMaster method identifies and quantifies the most clinically relevant equine parasites:
📦 How It Works — For You
Whether you have one horse, a yard full, or a riding school, the process is simple. Most owners send us samples by post or drop them off when riding past.
Our Services & Pricing
| Service | What's included | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Single test | McMaster count, parasite identification, written advice | € 20 |
| Yard pack (4 horses) | Four FEC tests with combined report & herd advice | € 70 |
Recommended Testing Schedule
- Spring (March–April) — before the grazing season really starts
- Autumn (September–October) — at the end of the grazing season
- Foals & young horses — more frequent testing, typically every 2–3 months
- New arrivals — always test & quarantine before joining the herd
🐎 Trusted By Our Own Herd First
We don't recommend anything to other horse owners that we haven't tested first on the horses we love. Every horse at L'altalena — and every horse at our partner project Sorelle Horses — goes through this exact same protocol, twice a year, year after year. The results speak for themselves: healthier horses, fewer wormers, livelier pastures, and a soil that gets richer every season.
🔬 Ready To Test Your Horse?
Get in touch to book a fecal egg count — for a single horse, a whole yard, or a regular twice-yearly programme. We are happy to talk you through sample collection, posting, and the results.
Local owners can drop samples off at the farm; samples from further afield can be posted to us year-round.
Book a fecal egg count →