T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
260.8 | Oats & Ponies | WHOARU::NAJJAR | | Thu Aug 21 1986 14:13 | 11 |
| This reply is in response to 118.4. When I saw the word
oats, and the word ponies, I thought I'd offer a suggestion.
Depending on how much the ponies are going to be worked,
they should have a diet of hay and grain in proportion to
the amount of work they do. Oats tend to make horses and
ponies 'hot' especially on a cool autumn day. I'd suggest
either a pelleted feed or sweet feed (either Blue Seal Trotter
or Charger are good and are complete feeds). Save the oats
only if the ponies are really going to need the energy!
Good Luck - (State Line has really good prices, and it may
be worth your while to stop by and check it out)
|
260.4 | A PERSONAL CONCERN/OPINION | COMET2::BRENNAN | Faith Brennan ERIN RANCH | Thu Jan 15 1987 13:26 | 19 |
| I just read your problem and some others in the CXO Horse Notes file.
I just had to bring up a growing concern. I operate a small boarding
stable here in the Black Forest. I've had tremendous luck over
the last five years doing this. My boarders come and go but I usually
have 8 to 10 horses boarded at any given time, plus an additional
2 of my own. I take care of all these without help. I have had
NO serious injuries or illnesses. My concern is the amount of grain
that folks are feeding. Most of my boarders are show horses and
the owners work them almost daily. I feed 2 to 6 lbs. of 4 Way
per horse per day. Six lbs for a horse being worked an hr. per
day and 2 lbs. for a horse not being worked. Given the experiences
I've seen with owners over-graining their horses, I don't allow
my boarders to supplement the grain ration unless they negotiate
with me and we agree. The single greatest cause of serious foot
problems is over-graining, I believe. The only time I feed more
than 6 lbs. of grain is to a pregnant mare in the last 6 wks. of
gestation. Then I increase it to 8 lbs. Just wanted to bring
this up because in all my readings in these horse files, I haven't
come across this particular concern.
|
260.5 | | PLANET::NICKERSON | Bob Nickerson DTN 282-1663 :^) | Fri Jan 16 1987 11:49 | 26 |
| RE: .3
I don't agree with your philosophy of how much to feed (six lbs
is enough for any horse). You have to consider each animal as an
individual and understand their metabolism, work, stresses,
environment, etc. For example, I have a stallion who is fed 11
to 12 lbs a day during breeding season and well into the show season.
In addition, I use suppliments when needed for different reasons.
On the other hand I have a pregnant mare who gets four lbs and is
doing just fine. I've always believed it is more important what
you feed than how much.
I do agree with the way you run your boarding business as it relates
to feed. We only board as an adjunct to sales (i.e. all my boarded
horses are ones that we sold to customers). Even so I manage the
feeding program as I do for my own horses. While I will entertain
inputs from the owners, I still have the final say. Any disputes
are settled by one of us moving out and I have yet to move away.
The condition of the horses in your barn are a reflection on you,
regardless of who is making the feeding decisions, so if you want
to have control over what impressions you make on people, you have
to run this way.
Bob
|
260.6 | They're individual, like us humans | COMET2::PAYNES | Payne Weber | Fri Jan 16 1987 16:25 | 12 |
| re: .4
I agree with you as in each horse has a different metabolism, work,
etc. as I also have my horse boarded out in Black Forest. Watching
the weight & additude of each horse is important in case you have
to relate it to your boarders.
It sounds like the horses are in shape anyway.
Steve
|
260.7 | HORSES ARE FOLKS TOO! | LAUREL::REMILLARD | | Fri Jan 16 1987 16:37 | 10 |
|
re: .4
I agree..... I have had one horse that I fed 12 lbs a day that
did nothing.... I have one now that in the summer, does 35
to 40 miles a week and he only gets 6 lbs (and some folks tell
me that he is alittle on the heavy side...)
Susan
|
260.1 | feeding schedule | ASD::WIMBERG | | Wed Jan 27 1988 10:05 | 24 |
|
Hi!
My aged quarter horse mare gets 6 quarts of pellets (2 qts, 3 times
a day) and 4-5 flakes of hay (2 flakes, 2 times a day). She is about
16 hands, 1100 pounds and VERY fit. She works 35-60 minutes four
times a week (under saddle) and jumps during our 1 hour lesson once
a week. She is considered a very easy keeper and will gain weight
if we don't watch it. In the warmer weather, her pellet ration goes
up. Twice a week the barn feeds a warm bran mash instead of pellets
for dinner. (You should hear 12 horses slurpping down mash at the
same time!) If the weather is really cold, like two weeks ago, they
feed barn mashes more often.
There have been several discussions on feeding in the notes file,
so look around. Some people like feeding only hay, other grains
and a varity of supplements. My mare does get supplements, but I
don't keep really close track - the luxury of paying someone else
to decide those things.
Good luck
Nancy
|
260.2 | DEPENDS ON THE HORSE | MILVAX::NICKERSON | | Thu Jan 28 1988 08:57 | 15 |
| We have found that it depends on the horse as far as the quantity
goes. We have some (around 1000 pounds) that live on 3 lbs of pellets
and 1/2 pound of sweet crimped oats with free choice hay (she is
a broodmare who is out all day)....while we have a couple who weight
less and eat twice that amount with no exercise and three times
with exercise. One mare who weighs about 900 and was worked 60
minutes a day (stock horse) received no grain with alfalfa cubes
only.
In my opinion you need to be sure that the horse is getting the
right nutrients/supplements and the quantity depends on their
metabolism (KEEP A CLOSE EYE ON THEM).
Good luck...
|
260.3 | feeding notes | TOPDOC::NAJJAR | | Thu Jan 28 1988 15:28 | 28 |
| One thing you may want to keep an eye on with the Alfalfa cubes
is that the horse doesn't get bored (from not having a lot of food
in front of him to eat) and start developing bad habits
(ie. cribbing, windsucking, etc.) The cubes don't take as long
for the horse to eat, whereas hay takes them a while to chew and
finish - remember that, as grazing animals, they are used to eating
almost continually throughout the day. If they are only being used
to supplement the hay, this may not be a problem (and if your horse
is turned out during the day, that's even better).
There is a note (#217) on supplements - you might want to take a
look at it. The amount of feed your gelding requires depends on
his metabolism. Some horses that are the same age and size and
that are being worked the same amount require different amounts
of feed. For example, I know of a 16.2 gelding (approx 1,100 lbs)
who gets about 8 lbs of strider pellets & 6-8 flakes of good quality
hay/day when he's being worked an ave. of 45 min/day, 6 days/week.
Another horse in the same barn who is the same height and weight,
requires around 12 lbs of grain/day on the same work schedule, and
when he's not being worked at all he needs about 10 lbs/day just
to keep his weight up.
You should be able to feel the horse's ribs under the skin, you
don't necessarily have to see them, but you don't want a heavy layer
of fat on them either. If your horse seems to be putting on weight
with his current work schedule, cut his daily grain ration by about
1 lb and see how he does for the next week or so.
very different diets
|
260.10 | | DELNI::KEIRAN | | Fri Oct 23 1992 10:07 | 16 |
| Have you always fed her just crimped oats? It sounds to me like
she needs to have something else along with the oats. My 3 year
old, who I raised from a foal and is now in training only eats
4 quarts per day at the most, half pacer and half crimped oats.
All horses are different of course, but even as a foal she never
ate much grain and always stayed fat and healthy. I also believe
in giving a horse something to do during the day, so I feed a lot
of hay, and my hay is top quality so I am sure this helps.
I agree with Sherry on the vet, my vet is a harness horse vet, he
grew with them, owns and trains them, and knows exactly what I am
talking about when I describe either what is wrong with the horse
or what I am doing with her training. I wouldn't switch vets for
anything. I think you should ask around to some of your TWH friends
and find out who they use for a vet and hopefully you can find
someone familiar with the breed.
|
260.11 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Fri Oct 23 1992 10:09 | 15 |
| Every horse's metabolism is different -- what makes one horse fat as a
pig may only sustain another. 10 quarts of plain oats is not
necessarily all that much. You may want to add in a higher protein
grain mix, such as tiz wiz or a 12% sweet feed.
How much hay does she get? Does she clean it up? Is she bony?
Do her ribs stick out or do you really have to press down to find them?
Does her backbone stick out? Is her neck real thin? Do her hips stick
out? Or is it some combination of the above?
I ask because my horse, when not really muscled up, can look thin due
to his wide hips that stick out, but so long as he has a decent layer of
fat over his ribs and his neck doesn't get thin, I know he's fine.
Mary
|
260.13 | not thin - just boneie | BRAT::FULTZ | DONNA FULTZ | Fri Oct 23 1992 11:46 | 26 |
|
Would a blood test show what she is missing..
What shelly looks like.. She is about 16.5 hands
and is 4 years old .. she still growing, and should
run about 17 hands when finished..
Any way..
She is about 1100 pds.. she's not ribby.. but her
back bone protrudes.. She has huge hips - with two
points on each side.
I like to see horses as round as apples. -
There should be away you can find out exactly what a horse
needs before spending all kind of money tring to find out
what works.
The vet who did the work on max told the new owner to
give her trotter plus, the crimped oats..
They get 2 to 3 flakes per feeding..
Would getting blood work help?
|
260.14 | Ventura calls it Formula 1400, BS calls it Trotter | BUSY::MANDILE | In god we trust. All others pay cash! | Fri Oct 23 1992 12:09 | 4 |
| I suggest adding a 14% pellet to her feed to go along with
the crimped oats.
L
|
260.15 | Teeth? | ISLNDS::ROSTANZO | | Fri Oct 23 1992 13:08 | 5 |
|
What about her teeth? don't babies at some young age get their
teeth floated........
N
|
260.16 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Fri Oct 23 1992 13:10 | 25 |
| At that age and size, 10 quarts of oats is not a huge amount. As I
recall, oats only weight about 3/4 pound per quart, so she's only
getting 7 3/4 pounds.
If her backbone sticks out then yes, she is underweight. You could add
12 or 14% pellet or sweet feed and also possibly replace some of the oats
with feed.
Increase the grain slowly. What I usually do is increase by 1/2 quart
and wait a couple weeks to see the effects. You can get "weight
tapes" at feedstores sometimes, that will give you something to check
against. If you don't find a difference after a couple weeks, add
another 1/2 quart and again, give it a couple of weeks. Sometimes it
takes time to kick in and sometimes it takes a lot of grain to get them
gaining, after which you can cut back a little so they don't gain too
fast.
For some reason, 25-30 pounds/month sticks in my head as safe. Anybody
else know anything about that?
Assuming you hay twice/day, a couple more flakes per day -- or even
"free hay" -- wouldn't hurt. My 15 hand arab vacuums up 5 flakes per day
plus gets 4 hours of pasture. Hay you can increase as much as you want
immediately without any negative health effects.
|
260.17 | Just a little corny | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Never burp when you're bent over! | Fri Oct 23 1992 14:07 | 15 |
| This topic has drifted a very long way from a fluttery heartbeat!
But, here's my $0.02...
Corn(maize to our UK/Irish noters) is one of the best grains to use in
putting weight on a horse. Corn is often overlooked by everybody except
competitve trail and endurance riders. Corn is very calorie dense because
it has a high fat content compared to other grains so you get more energy
per pound of corn. That's why corn gets/has a reputation of being a
"hot" feed. People feed it at the same number of pounds or scoops per
day as oats. And then they wonder why the horse has tons more energy...
It's best to used cracked or rolled corn because it's easier for the
horse to chew and digest that way.
John
|
260.18 | 12 to 14% | BRAT::FULTZ | DONNA FULTZ | Fri Oct 23 1992 14:09 | 10 |
|
She had her wolf's teeth pulled about 4 month ago..
She has put on weight since then so I know that was bothering her.
My husband ask me a question about 12 to 14% portien.
I really couldn't answer him - what does protein give a horse.
Donna
|
260.19 | questions | BRAT::FULTZ | DONNA FULTZ | Fri Oct 23 1992 14:12 | 13 |
|
Shelly is a very nervous horse to begin with, corn would put
her on the roof of the barn ... I could introduce some, but
it couldn't be her main suppliment.
Most of the time hay is left behind so i know there getting plenty.
I usally give corn in the winter since they are outside most of the
time..
questions questions questions
|
260.20 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Fri Oct 23 1992 14:25 | 19 |
| Protein is the main building block of all tissues. I believe plain
oats are something like 8% protein and am certain it is no more than
10%, so that is a bit low, especially for a growing youngster.
FWIW, I'm not sure that corn makes horses "hotter" in terms of energy.
Fat takes longer to metabolize and is more likely to be stored as fat.
Therefore, it is more inclined to put on some body fat. Once stored as
body fat, it takes a long time to convert to energy. It's a heating
grain in that it gives a slow, steady supply of energy and adds body
fat which insulates against cold weather. That's why it's always been
popular to feed in the winter.
In fact, according to an old nutrition book that I have, if it weren't
for the concentration, it would be an ideal horse feed. Word of
warning, though. Because it is such a concentrated feed (as I recall,
it weighs about 1 1/2 pounds per quart) you should not feed corn by
itself. It shouldn't exceed 1/3 or so of the horse's total grain. Mix
it well with oats in ratios of 2 or, even better, 3 to 1.
|
260.21 | Get Feed Booklets from Your Dealer | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Fri Oct 23 1992 14:47 | 32 |
| re .-1
Yes, 10% protein is low for a growing horse.
Donna, if I were you, I would look at the literature available from
your feed dealer that explains the different purposes for the various
varieties of feed they carry. When I was raising youngsters, I found
that using a high enough protein feed made an enormous difference. Also,
with a couple that had trouble keeping weight on, I found that adding
some corn oil to their feed seemed to help. As for feeds, I had very
good results from Purina Horse Chow 300 and Omolene 300. In fact, I
once "rescued" a starving horse (two different ones, not that I think
of it) and the vet recommended Omolene 300 as being very good at putting
weight on a horse. And he was right...
Do you buy your feed at Agway in Chelmsford? I know they have booklets
available.
Do you get your feed at Agway in Chelmsford?
|
260.22 | | BUSY::MANDILE | In god we trust. All others pay cash! | Fri Oct 23 1992 16:40 | 21 |
| Cracked corn is at a good price now, about $10 for a 100 lb
bag. My vet has used corn to bring back starved horses with
excellent results.
He has also worked with me in getting serious excess weight off
of a horse I have. I used calf manna (25% protein) as a feed
substitute along with hay to keep the protein and vit/mins up,
but to cut out the calories. He lost the weight, safely and healthily.
BTW, Oats have 11% protein.
You need to feed a balanced ration/diet. The 14% pellet is usually
touted as a complete feed, that is, it can be fed without hay as
a supplement.
You could use a 12% sweetfeed plus a 14% pellet mix, or a 14% sweet
feed, and the hay, and do well.
If you are worried about her bouncing off the walls, then a 12% sweet
feed plus 14% pellets would be good.....(plus hay, of course....)
Lynne
|
260.9 | | KAHALA::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Fri Oct 23 1992 16:48 | 34 |
| I have copied a reply from note #1669 that asks about feeding. The next
several replies are answers to the original question. Please concentrate
on the feed aspect of the reply.
Ed..
moderator
<<< NOTED::DISK$NOTES1:[NOTES$LIBRARY_1OF5]EQUITATION.NOTE;3 >>>
-< Equine Notes Conference >-
================================================================================
Note 1669.7 Heart beat- Vet check 7 of 19
BRAT::FULTZ "DONNA FULTZ" 19 lines 23-OCT-1992 08:51
-< Vet >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
She asked up front if he knew how to vet a gaited horse.
I really want to feel great about the horse. She is so
special..
Another thing..
The vet wanted to know what she was getting for grain, I told
him she was getting 10 qts of crimped oats with a vitamin
suppliment every day. (he could'nt believe it) she was about
100 pds to thin. He checked for worms and she had none..
Shelly our other walker has the same problem.. but, Lady
is a blimp.
Is there somthing I can have the vet check to see if she
is low on anything????
|
260.12 | | KAHALA::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Fri Oct 23 1992 16:54 | 25 |
| <<< NOTED::DISK$NOTES1:[NOTES$LIBRARY_1OF5]EQUITATION.NOTE;3 >>>
-< Equine Notes Conference >-
================================================================================
Note 1669.10 Heart beat- Vet check 10 of 20
ESCROW::ROBERTS 18 lines 23-OCT-1992 09:46
-< "Gaited" has >1 definition >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
re .7
If she asked about vetting gaited horses, instead of specifically
saying a Tennesee Walker, this could have started the misunderstanding.
Many people think of Saddlebreds, or other horses trained for
saddleseat riding. I'm not saying this is correct, and the vet should
perhaps asked for a better explanation of what your buyer meant by
"gaited", since it means different things to different people.
As for the weight, if you are feeding crimped oats, keep in mind that a
"scoop" of crimped oats weighs much less than a "scoop" of sweet feed
or pellets. My scoop, for instance, holds two pounds of pellets, but
the same scoop full of crimped oats would probably weigh only about 1
pound. So if you are counting by scoops, your horse may not be getting
as many pounds of grain as you think. (Perhaps you already know this,
but it's easy to forget...)
-ellie
|
260.23 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Mon Oct 26 1992 09:02 | 11 |
| Although many pellets are "complete" feeds, horses still need hay.
Pellets don't give them the bulk they need to keep their guts
full and working properly.
The amount of protein in a pellet doesn't determine whether or not
it's a complete feed -- the contents do. A complete feed pellet
includes some portion of hay or roughage products. For example, my
horse gets Purina horse chow 100 -- it's a complete feed pellet, 10%
protein, with 60% grain and 40% roughage.
Mary
|
260.24 | Feeding is tricky business | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Mon Oct 26 1992 10:23 | 30 |
| I suppose everyone has a different theory or opinion, we've gone by
what we were told by someone (vet, feed person???) years back when
trying to get weight on an older horse. They recommended BS Strider
at 11% protein because they claimed the higher protein levels require
more energy from the horse to digest it, hence less energy available
for adding weight. Maybe it's a load of bull, but it worked.
We also feed hay before grain on the basis that grain passes through
faster than hay, and the horse may not get all the nutrients from the
grain, where as hay takes much longer to digest - so it keeps the grain
in the system longer. Again it could be a load of bull. Who knows, it
works for us.
We also add supplements, Source and Calfmanna/Sunshine pellets.
We were advised against feeding corn in the winter because it increases
the chances of colic due to it's bulkiness and low moisture content.
The above plan is for a mature horse, I know the youngsters require
a higher protein level (but too much causes some sort of leg problem).
Good luck!
Michele
p.s.
Try telling an overweight Fjord that she really dosen't need any grain
when everyone else gets it.
|
260.25 | Hey, what about the Hay? | CSCMA::SMITH | | Mon Oct 26 1992 11:48 | 13 |
| With everyone touting the value and types of grain here I hate to butt
in and mention hay. Really good green high quality leafy hay is great
for putting on weight and not making a horse hot. It's also recently
touted as what keeps a horse warm in the winter, not grain. Just the
fact that the hay is left uneatten makes me suspect the quality of it.
It may be ok (not moldy or dusty) but it's probably not GREAT hay.
Feeding real good hay can Save a Lot of $$$ not having to make it up
with grain. In New England the price doesn't seem to have much to do
with the quality, you can pay a lot for junk or a little for great
hay.
Sharon
|
260.26 | Every horse is different... | CSLALL::LCOBURN | Plan B Farm | Mon Oct 26 1992 12:02 | 22 |
| A lot of people I know swear by hay as well. Im sure it depends on the
individual horse, but when we briefly boarded at 16.1 hand lanky TB
gelding at a place that fed him tons of hay and little grain, his
weight dropped dramatically. I brought him home to my house from there,
began feeding him 10 qts of grain daily (5 Trotter/5 Charger), included
and endless supply of hay at all times, and supplemented him with
Ration Plus.....his weight went right back up almost as fast as he'd
lost it. My brother kept asking the people to please give him at least
8 qts grain daily, but they refused, saying the hay would put weight on
him.....fortuneatly he didn't stay there long. :-)
Its quite possible the hay he was getting was not the best possible
quality, certainly I have had a hard time around the NH area finding
incredibly great stuff that I would consider adequate nutrition-wise
to sustain them properly.
On the other hand, my friend has a 15.2 hh Standardbred gelding who
is enormously fat and eats only 6 qts grain daily (and Id cut *that*
down personally, he's a whale!), plus free choice hay......I have
little doubt he'd maintain his weight just fine on superb quality hay
alone.
|
260.27 | exit | LEVADE::DAVIDSON | | Mon Oct 26 1992 12:06 | 5 |
|
re: cracked corn
An alternative is steamed, flaked corn...
|
260.28 | | BUSY::MANDILE | In god we trust. All others pay cash! | Mon Oct 26 1992 12:25 | 7 |
| Actually, it is recommended that you have each load of hay that
you get tested for protein content. Hay that looks absolutely
beautiful, i.e. green, well dried, clean, smells good, can actually
be of very poor nutritional value. Poor soil grows poor grass, but
it can still grow green....
L
|
260.29 | Where to get hay analyzed? | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Mon Oct 26 1992 12:36 | 8 |
| Yes, I've thought of doing this, but I heard that it takes 2 - 3 weeks
to get the results of such an analysis. By that time, most of my hay
would have been gone. I wonder, too, how you pick a representative bale?
Course, now that I have my own fields, I might consider doing this,
maybe analyzing several samples from different fields. Anybody know
where to get this sort of analysis?
-ellie
|
260.30 | ex | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Never burp when you're bent over! | Mon Oct 26 1992 14:27 | 21 |
| Re Hay analysis - call your county agent. They should be able to tell
you where to get hay analysed. In lots of places they even provide the
service through the local state univ.
Re feeding hay versus grain for weight gain. Yeah, every horse is
different and the sort of diet that is right to KEEP weight on may not be
the right choice to PUT weight back on a horse that lost some.
For example, our gelding(Ben) who fractured his coffin bone last
year(He's fin now BTW)... The vet recommended that we keep him from
gaining weight while he was recuperating. So, we didn't increase his
feed much last winter. His "standard" diet is about 25 pounds of top
quality timothy hay a day plus about 1.5 quarts of a grain & bran mash
with 2-3 hours of grass. He's an easy keeper and stays a bit on the chubby
side on that diet. He was already about 50-75 pounds heavier than I
really wanted him so I didn't worry when he lost about 125 pounds over
the winter. When the vet declared him fit for riding last spring, I tried
to put weight on him by increasing his hay to 35 pounds a day. He gained
but VERY slowly. After we had the vet give him a quick health check(teeth,
worms, etc), we increased his grain by 1 quart a day and he started to put
on weight. I told ya he was an easy keeper!
|
260.31 | Thank You Ronnie | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Mon Oct 26 1992 14:59 | 8 |
| Hi John --
Calling the county agent used to be an option before the cuts by the
Federal government over the past decade. I they are a "skeleton" crew
at best in these times. Last time I tried (2 years ago?) the agent in
question had ceased to exist.
-ellie
|
260.32 | | BUSY::MANDILE | In god we trust. All others pay cash! | Mon Oct 26 1992 15:06 | 4 |
| Give Jay Mele a call. He was the one I had the hay testing talk
with, and I'm sure he will tell you who does their testing.....
L
|
260.33 | Who is Jay Mele? | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Tue Oct 27 1992 07:28 | 4 |
| re .-1
Can't do that unless you tell me his phone number, and possibly who and
where he is????
|
260.34 | Soy bean | BRAT::FULTZ | DONNA FULTZ | Tue Oct 27 1992 08:07 | 15 |
|
Hay,
Most of the time she does finish it and lately we got
hay from TOP of the HILL farm which has alot of timothy in
it.
? How do you free feed hay.. ?
Though them a bale ?
I don't think it's the hay lady is a whale.. (she mostly gets hay)
My trainer suggested Soy bean meal... (anyone try that)?
|
260.35 | What's Been Tried Already? | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Tue Oct 27 1992 08:48 | 21 |
| Donna,
What have you already tried in your efforts to get this horse to gain
weight? What different feeds have you already tried? Have you tried
increasing the grain? As mentioned before ( by Mary, I think?), 10
quarts of crimped oats is not a lot of grain for a growing horse the
size of yours. A "rule of thumb" I've seen is to allow 2 - 2.5 lbs of
feed per 100 lbs of body weight per day. You've mentioned that your
horse weighs 1100 lbs. This would mean that your horse should be
getting between 22 and 27.5 lbs of feed per day. And this rule of
thumb is for a mature horse. If your horse is getting 10 quarts of
crimped oats, this probably comes out to about 6 - 7 lbs, which would
mean you would have to make up the rest with about 20 lbs of hay. This
ratio, though, would probably end up to be too low protein (figuring 7
lbs of oats at 10% and 20 lbs of hay at 6% comes out to about 7% protein
overall).
Has the horse just recently lost weight? I could be that it's just a
growth spurt, which happend with growing horses. They all of a sudden
get a bit taller and longer, and the weight just has to catch up.
|
260.36 | skinny from beginning | BRAT::FULTZ | DONNA FULTZ | Tue Oct 27 1992 12:24 | 16 |
|
She was really skinny when we first got her, but she has
put on weight since we have had her about 300 pds.. id say
We pulled her wolf teeth she started to put on weight, but
has not pugged out yet.. I don't want to experiment with foods
I really want to know what she needs...
I called the vet and he said blood work would help to see
what she is missing..
I am going to increase her portien by the soy meal and see if
that helps. and they will start to corn in next couple of
weeks..
Donna
|
260.37 | We feed our Arab soy bean meal | COLRDO::PORTER | | Tue Oct 27 1992 18:52 | 22 |
|
on the advice of our vet.
It does add the weight, but we were warned by him that this weight is hard to
get off once on. You might ask your own vet about this before you start
feeding it to your pony(ies).
We really like it. It doesn't make him 'hot', although he has never had this
problem anyway.
His weight problem was due to his 'nerves' at competitions. We really started
feeding him soy bean meal to keep his weight consistent, to smooth out his
'highs and lows'.
We feed him about a cup two times a day mixed in his grain, and we only add
it before/during/after competitions or when he looks like he needs it. Soy
bean meal isn't like grain that you need to increase/decrease gradually.
This is only a 15.0 Arab gelding, BTW, but he does get his butt worked off.
-Reedy
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260.38 | | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Wed Oct 28 1992 08:38 | 6 |
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Something that my vet told us: Don't bother feeding more than 4
lbs of grain a serving, it just gets wasted.
M
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260.39 | Bran | BRAT::FULTZ | DONNA FULTZ | Wed Jul 14 1993 11:38 | 9 |
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Question.
Does any one know if if bran is bad for a horse?
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260.40 | | POWDML::MANDILE | Copper Penny Farm | Wed Jul 14 1993 12:20 | 9 |
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Bran is good for horses.....
High fiber, 6% protein. It is what most vets recommend when
a horse is recovering from a bout of colic., a few days of
bran mash meals...
However, as you can see, the nutritional value (6% protein)
is minimal, so it is not to be fed exclusively over a long period.
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260.41 | Bran is good! | DELNI::KEIRAN | | Wed Jul 14 1993 13:38 | 5 |
| I have always fed my horses a bran mash at least once a week,
sometimes more if its extremely hot or cold. I also feed it
after they have had a hard training trip or when they get back
from racing. Knock on wood, none of my horses that have been
fed this way have ever had colic!
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260.42 | Bran | BRAT::FULTZ | DONNA FULTZ | Wed Jul 14 1993 14:06 | 15 |
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That's what I thought, I have never had any colic (knock on wood)
I increase the amount in the summer about 1/4 cup to 5 quarts of grain.
But, a girl at the barn said it was bad, so I wanted to check.
My horses have the shinniest coats, they also get a mineral
supplement, (pemwood).
Thanks..
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260.43 | 2 cautions | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Seattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31 | Wed Jul 14 1993 14:54 | 17 |
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Actually, we feed a daily bran mash(water, bran, oats, sweet feed, chopped
carrots and mineral supplements) 9 or 10 months of the year. We have been
doing that for at least 5 years and have had no problems.
However, there are 2 cautions I have heard about bran. Both are fairly
minor.
1) It absorbs water. So, you should mix your mash with enough water
to wet all the bran and let it stand for 5 minutes before feeding. If
large amounts of bran are fed dry, it can cause constipation and
compaction type colic.
2) Like all grains and grain by-products, it is high in phosphorous
and low in calcium. If fed in large quantities for a long period of
time, it can cause a mineral imbalance *IF* you don't provide enough
calcium in other feeds/supplements to balance out the phosphorous
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260.44 | on feeding bran | TOLKIN::BENNETT | | Wed Jul 14 1993 16:16 | 12 |
| I had my thinking changed about feeding bran a few months back while
reading an Equus article on the subject. Basically the article
describes the effects of bran on the intestinal system and suggests
that small daily feedings of bran will not induce the laxative effect
you are feeding for. Infrequent feedings of large quantities do put
the system on overload and can be laxative, but you have to calculate
in the added concentrate (I'm boarding a chow hound that colics and gains
easily - so we feed him a small amount only once a week). The
recommendation for preventing colic is: water. Lots of it. Keep the
buckets/troughs crystal clean and the fresh water available at all
times. So far (knock on particleboard) no colic.
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