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 Little River, TX | Or I jumped to conclusion. Be that as it may, Badger has it correct about more mature forages for less sugars. Now I assume you are worried about foundering horses. Wish you would have said that to start with.
You are really growing the wrong forages if foundering animals is a problem. Cattle can also founder and do.
Tallgrass Neil should have the perfect answer for you. The perfect hay for a foundering equine is, after combining the seed off a range grass you bale it for that speciality market.
Unless you allow your grass and alfalfa both to mature to full seed, they will have more net energy than your customers need. What they need is Eastern Gammagrass or a Switch grass, and harvest it when it is ideal for the bio fuel market.
I assume your customer base's is calling the shots on your choice of forages. I have difficulty rationalizing a grass legume mix as it makes it a real challenge to have a consistent feed value product.
If you are in the Humid East and reasonably far north, timothy grass at full seed may be a sorry enough feed for a foundering animal.
As I understand foundering, the animal has just a little too much insulin. When the animals eat, and a horse will (has to) eat 18 hours a day. When some sugar gets into the blood stream their system dumps extra insulin into the blood stream. The extra insulin will cause the blood vessels co contract and restrict blood flow, especially in the extremities. As anyone who has had an arm or leg *Go to Sleep* knows when the blood starts circulating again it is painful. For this condition the discomfort persist for hours. An eventual effect is the blood supply for the hooves is inadequate and the hooves die. A real mess.
The problem with horses is they end up being family pets, they last with the owner for years and years and the horse industry is severely line breed. If your customers just like to feed horses have them only purchase mustangs. Mother Nature fairly well eliminates most inherited deformities. It would be callous of me to suggest they dispose of their animals with inherited deformities and to buy a $200 BLM animal for $750 and feed them anything that they have on hand.
As a friend of mine says, a donkey is the better half of a mule ! 
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