T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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436.1 | Try soaking in sweet lime and water | PLANET::NICKERSON | Bob Nickerson DTN 282-1663 :^) | Wed Sep 16 1987 19:27 | 10 |
| We did have a horse which tended to heave when it was dusty. We
used an old farmers trick of soaking hay in sweet lime and water
before feeding. It did the trick and there was no coughing until
we thought he was all better. We weren't so lucky though because
we had to continue with the hay treatment whenever conditions got
dusty or with lots of pollen. I don't know if the lime had anything
to do with whether it worked or not but he did seem to be better
when we used it.
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436.2 | Shipping Hives? | MIST::BACKSTROM | | Wed Sep 16 1987 20:24 | 13 |
| I had my mare shipped from southern California to Washington a couple
of months ago. Everything seem fine for the first few days, then
I noticed small bumps appearing all over her. I though it was caused
by bug bites. After a few days of fly wipeing the bumps just got
bigger! After a week, some of the bumps openned, but they only bled
blood. I though it might be something that burrows like a tic.
I found nothing! A week later, No bumps!
She looks great now. I think it was some kind of nervous hives from
shipping because she never itched or it could have been an allergic
reaction from the Washington hay, well water or soil.
Larry.
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436.3 | Protien bumps? | PLANET::NICKERSON | Bob Nickerson DTN 282-1663 :^) | Thu Sep 17 1987 13:39 | 8 |
| Re: .2
Those bumps sound like protien bumps. They are usually due to a
change in feed especially from a pelleted feed to sweet feed. They
usually go away after the horse gets acclimated to the new feed.
Bob
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436.4 | | MIST::BACKSTROM | | Thu Sep 17 1987 15:16 | 15 |
| Re: .3
In California she was fed 1 flake of hay in the morning and pellets
at night, both being supplemented with Pure-Pride 100 and 1 ounce
of Red cell.
In Washington, she went off her feed for about 1 week. The things
that are different are the hay and pellets, by this I mean that
the alfalfa hay and pellets come from eastern Washington. The quantity
is the same. Could it be that the protien amount is higher in
Washington hay? At the time I was feeding 3rd cut hay, but I'm
back to 2nd cut. If would be nice if hay bales had guaranteed analysis
tags on them.
Larry.
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436.5 | what is sweet feed? | IMAGIN::KOLBE | Stuck in the middle again | Thu Sep 17 1987 16:16 | 5 |
|
What do you mean by the terms 'sweet feed' and 'pelleted feed'?
I'm guessing pellets means something like alfalfa cubes but sweet
feed has me stumped. Also, is there a benefit over hay by using
cubes or pellets? liesl
|
436.6 | | MIST::BACKSTROM | | Thu Sep 17 1987 18:28 | 23 |
| re: .5
Sweet Feed: would be like A&M which stand for Alfalfa and Molasses.
The molasses makes the food more palatable (it taste good). Molasses
is offten added to grain (3-way & 4-way) and is sometimes called
a "Hot Feed" because your horse is loaded with calories (energy).
Hay cubes are compressed alfalfa chuncks. One thing bad about cubes
is that you don't know what your getting. I bought a ton of cubes
once, and my horse would not eat them. I found out later from friends
who also bought the same cubes, that they had green die added to
make it look good (it did). The taste wasn't.
Pellets are also compressed alfalfa, but they are bound together
with corn or wheat, etc. In addition, if you purchase them in bags,
they usually have a guaranteed analisis tag so you know what your
getting.
Horses need bulk, the way my horse gets it is by hay. If you feed
just cubes or pellets, they'll still be hungry. If you wan't a
1200 pound termite, just feed cubes or pellets!
Larry.
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436.7 | How about pasture weeds? | MAMTS2::AIKEN | Crabbet Arabians! DTN 378-6706 | Fri Sep 18 1987 14:13 | 14 |
| Did your horse go out into a pasture with tall weeds? Or those
prickly little things that stick to your clothes?
Many of my pasture horses have masses of small hive-like bumps over
the neck, along the sides of the belly, underneath. Once before,
when this happened, my vet said they had an allergic reaction to
these weeds. My pasture was mowed two weeks ago, so -- in this
drought -- there aren't many tall weeds now. Their forelocks are
full of the little prickers, though.
Anyway, the treatment of choice was none! The bumps don't seem
to itch. If they did, I guess Aloedine shampoo would help.
Merrie
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436.8 | Bedding? | MIST::BACKSTROM | | Fri Sep 18 1987 15:20 | 11 |
| re: .7
I did turn her loose in a 1/2 acre corral, there were small alder
tree shoots comming up. But she wasn't eating much of anything
at the time. I did shampoo her several time during the couple of weeks
she had the bumps. This brings up one other possiblity, the bedding
for the first few weeks was a mix of pine and cedar shavings. Maybe
this was it? I now am using only cedar shavings.
Larry.
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436.9 | Bedding or Medicine? | SQM::MURPHY | Is it Friday yet? | Fri Sep 18 1987 15:25 | 23 |
| A couple of years ago my mare came down with bumps all over her -
her skin resembled the skin of an alligator. She didn't act like
they bothered her (no itching) but she sure looked strange. She
was supposed to go to a show that weekend but, of course, we had
to keep her home. No change in her feed or hay but we found out
her bedding was different - hardwood bedding.
A few months after that, she had the same thing happen up at the
Cheshire Fair horse show but fortunately we spotted the early stages
of the bumps and immediately removed all the bedding (supplied by
the fairgrounds) from her stall and left just the bare ground under
her. By the time her first class came up, the bumps had gone down
enough not to notice. Found out that the bedding used by the
fairgrounds that day was also from hardwood.
Haven't had the problem since and in the future when we didn't know
what kind of bedding would be used at the overnight shows, we brought
our own.
Wanted to ask .0 also if their horse was given any medication for
transporting him? Horses can be allergic to some medicines I know.
|
436.10 | Could be the shavings? | TOPDOC::NAJJAR | | Fri Sep 18 1987 15:50 | 20 |
| re: .5 - Sweet feed that I am familiar with is something
like Blue Seal's 'Charger' or 'Pacer' feeds, usually they are a
combination of oats, and corn, and coated with molasses to
make them 'sweet' and tastier for the horse - they are usually
higher in calories and the more oats, the more 'hot' the feed.
The pellets look like the stuff you feed rabbits and are
just compressed forms of grain, usually with some sort of
alfalfa mixed in.
I prefer to feed hay as opposed to 'cubes' because it keeps
the horse occupied for longer periods of time, as well as
making it seem to the horse like they have eaten something.
The cubes may be good for horses that tend to cough when
fed regular hay.
I know a horse who is allergic to many things and breaks
out in hives when bedded in Pine shavings or when ridden
in an indoor ring that has just been oiled down. They are
now bedding him on straw to see if that helps.
|
436.11 | Surprised at reactions to pine bedding | NOWIMP::DADDAMIO | Testing proves testing works | Mon Sep 21 1987 13:21 | 13 |
| We have used pine shavings and pine sawdust. In fact this is the
first time I've heard of anyone having reactions to pine bedding.
It's usually what you get when you get shavings or sawdust (at least
in New England). We have also used oak sawdust when we couldn't
get pine. The horses developed some small scabs on the backs of
their pasterns when we first started with the oak, but we had no
problems other than that.
The only hardwood bedding that I've heard really bad things about
is walnut. If you have any in your bedding, your horse can develop
laminitis from it. There was a big story a few years ago about
some dressage competition having walnut bedding which made the horses
sick. I seem to remember that several died, but I'm not quite sure.
|
436.12 | | PLANET::NICKERSON | Bob Nickerson DTN 282-1663 :^) | Mon Sep 21 1987 13:40 | 22 |
| The sweet feed that I meant was any feed which uses molasses as
a binder (something to keep the grain together without creating
dust). You can get many different combinations of grains or even
a single grain. For example, we feed sweet crimped oats in the
winter months. It is a crimped oat with molasses added. The molasses
adds heat and a sweet taste.
Pelleted feeds are feeds which have been watered and mixed into
a mash. They are then dried by heat as they pass through an extrusion
device much the same as spaghetti is made. Then end result is a
form that looks like rabbit food. You can get pelleted feeds from
pure alfalfa to a complete feed.
My experience with protien bumps comes from horses which showed
up grossly underfed who had been given lots of high protien feed
to "build them up". We also had a mare who could not eat molasses
or she would break out in very similar bumps.
Regards,
Bob
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