T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1543.1 | Hay takes the edge off hunger | KALE::ROBERTS | | Tue Oct 29 1991 11:40 | 30 |
| Ive usee both methods (morning and evening) and each has it's benefits
and drawbacks. If I ride in the morning, I have more energy, but I
always feel rushed. Also, in the summer the mosquitoes are worse in
the morning, and the grass is wet and slippery. If I ride in the
evening I dont feel rushed, but I'm also tired after working all day.
(Gee, I'd like to win the lottery!) But in either case, it is a bit of
a problem taking a hungry horse and expecting him to keep his mind on
work. One solution is to feed lots of hay in a hay bag, so your horse
has something to munch on all day long and won't be quite so hungry.
Then, before you ride, give just a few handfuls of grain, to take of
the "hunger edge". With all the hay, I don't think your horse will
really be very hungry, but he might still feel deprived and resentful if
he gets no grain at all when he is expecting it. ANother thing to keep
in mind here is to be sure not to feed as soon as you bring your horse
into the barn. I'm not talking about the dangers of feeding a hot
horse, since I'm sure everyone is aware of that. But even after he's
cooled down, you want to be sure he doesn't make the association that
the end of a ride means getting dinner. This could make him barn sour
really fast.
Another strategy I've used in the past is to come in to work later, if
that is possible. I used to work 10 - 6:30 at my last job, and I left
home at 9:00. So I'd also do stalls in the morning before going to
work. I would feed first, then do stalls, which took about an hour.
By this time, the horse I was going to ride had had time to digest her
food, and I never had any problems. I was doing just basic schooling.
If you were going to be doing any really hard work, you'd probably have
to wait longer.
-ellie
|
1543.2 | my $.02 | TOMLIN::ROMBERG | some assembly required... | Tue Oct 29 1991 11:55 | 15 |
| I ride as soon as I leave work. I make a great circle every day - home to work
to barn to home. I'm usually out of the house about 13-14 hours a day. My
beast gets a 5:00pm meal and I get there shortly thereafter, usually by 5:30.
Even if he is still munching his grain, I figure that the time I spend grooming
and warming up is sufficient for his digestion. I usually ride for a little more
than an hour (medium work, unless it's a lesson - then it's harder). So far I
haven't had any problems. Amos gets 3 quarts of pellets at 5:00. He gets
another 3 at 8pm, usually very soon after he's back in his stall.
Since your riding seems quite light, if I were in your shoes (riding boots?),
something you might try is to feed your horse a *portion* of his evening grain
when you get to the barn, so he thinks he's eaten. He can digest that as you
get ready to ride. Then, when you're done, feed him the rest of his supper.
That way, he's not a jerk because he thinks you forgot to feed him, but he
gets *more* (in his eyes) after the ride.
|
1543.3 | If your number comes up, will you share with me? | CSLALL::LCOBURN | Spare a horse,ride a cowboy | Tue Oct 29 1991 12:18 | 20 |
| I ride after work, too. Ride in the MORNING?!? Gasp! I could never pull
myself out of bed before work. I'm one of those who readies the morning
feeding the night before, so I just toss hay and grain at them and beg
them to please remain in their respective paddocks for the day....
My horses don't expect to be fed supper until later in the evening, and
they both have free choice hay all day so I don't find them
particularly hungry or cranky about riding when I get home. I ride
first thing, (only one horse per night, the other hangs over the fence
and watches), then horse goes back out to the paddock to roll and cool
off while I do stalls and groom the other horse. By this time the one
I rode is cool and ready to go in for the night. The part I hate is
the time change, now that we've set the clocks back it's dark by the
time I get home. My ring is lighted, but it eliminates my preferred
relaxing method of wandering about the property a bit on a loose rein.
I can't wait for spring! The suggestion of feeding just a handful of
grain sounds like it may be helpful, too, although my gelding would
probably get cranky wondering where the rest of his supper is ! :-)
Good luck, horses and jobs don't always mix perfectly, keep buying
those mega-bucks tickets!
|
1543.4 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Tue Oct 29 1991 12:35 | 9 |
| I prefer to feed after I've ridden, making certain of course that he is
thoroughly cooled out. More time to digest = colic prevention and
better utilization of feed.
I'm lucky in that my gut is midway between work and home, so I get to
the barn shortly before they feed dinner. I ride, walk him for 20-30
minutes, groom him, leave him on cross-ties for a bit while I put away
tack and brushes, pick his stall and putz around a bit. That gives him
40 minutes minimum between end of work and grain.
|
1543.5 | A.M. works for me - | TFOR2::GOODNOW | | Tue Oct 29 1991 12:45 | 12 |
|
My guys get ridden first thing in the AM, then fed afterwards.
They never seem to mind being ridden on an empty stomach (I'm usually
hungry too!) but they're both TB's and maybe they are used to this routine
from the racetrack.
Evening riding never works that well for me - I'm usually tired and
work can put me in a bad mood occasionally (believe it or not...).
Amy
|
1543.6 | | MPO::ROBINSON | now, what was I doing...? | Tue Oct 29 1991 13:23 | 9 |
|
My horse gets fed at 5:30, he only gets 1/4 of a coffee can
of pellets anyways, (which means he's done with his grain by
5:32), so I've ridden him as soon as 6-6:15. I could never get
myself to ride before work, but somehow I have managed to ride
at 6 AM on a saturday.... :)
Sherry
|
1543.7 | Tried both; Sometimes still do both | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | | Tue Oct 29 1991 17:18 | 19 |
| We've tried riding before and after work. What works best for us is the
morning routine.
When we are conditioning for competition, each horse gets an hour of
work 5 days a week, plus warm up and cool down time. Then, unsaddling
and clean-up grooming to remove sweat marks, etc...So about 20-30
minutes after they finish work, they get fed.
Sometimes due to schedule conflicts, we have to get 3 horses worked
on the same day. If that's a weekday, that means one of us rides after
work. We are usually tired,( more like "brain dead"?) etc so the evening
workout is likely to be an hour of trail work at 6 to 10 MPH(i.e. little
or no walking) rather than a schooling session. Similar routine after
riding and they just get fed a bit later than if we don't ride.
I remember sveral years ago when EQUUS magazine had a questions column,
somebody wrote and asked whether it was better to feed before or after
a workout. As I remember it, EQUUS gave a one word answer...followed by
3 paragraphs of backup. The answer was, "afterwards".
|
1543.8 | noon-time | TOOHOT::BENNETT | | Wed Oct 30 1991 09:12 | 4 |
| Two years ago I had my horse boarded 5 minutes away from work. I rode
at noon-time, the site had shower facilities and my manager allowed me
to make up extra lunch time taken at the end of the day. It worked out
well since no one was ever at the barn or using the arena.
|
1543.9 | after | REGENT::WIMBERG | | Wed Oct 30 1991 13:24 | 13 |
|
I board my horse about 10 minutes from work. I ride after work. Every
time I ride in the morning, I'm late for work. The barn opens at 8:00,
so riding ealier is not an option. As for being too tired or brain dead
after work - I am until I pull in the barn parking lot - then all the
work stuff just gets left on the street. Wether I'm working hard or
hacking lightly, riding soothes the work worries.
Based on the previous replies, I'd say you are going to have to try
both ways until you find what works for you.
Nancy
|
1543.10 | Thanks for the suggestions | CSCMA::SMITH | | Wed Oct 30 1991 16:53 | 6 |
| Wow, what great response!
It's been a great help, (also nice to know your not alone
doing the juggling of work, family and horse)
Thanks,
Sharon
|
1543.11 | | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Thu Oct 31 1991 08:40 | 12 |
| I arranged to get to work earlier so I can leave earlier, although
it dosen't much matter these days when it's dark so early. But I
usually get to the barn at 5, groom and tack up and am out by 5:30.
Ride for an hour and goom and putz more till about 7pm. I feed the
grain at 7 (or I'll wait longer if my horse is still too hot). They
are in around 5pm and get their hay first.
I wish I could ride in the morning, but I get up early enough in the
morning as it is.....the after work ride always seems to put me in a
good mood no matter how bad the day has been.
|
1543.12 | getting poetic | CSCMA::SMITH | | Fri Nov 01 1991 16:08 | 43 |
|
Well, I rolled myself out of bed every morning this week. I think the
secret is to position the alarm clock far enough away that you have
to get out of bed to shut it off. The air was cold and crisp and so
was the horse. I think we both enjoyed it.
On the long drive to work I was still thinking about how nice it was and
as some thoughts came into my head I wrote them down and made a poem.
(my car is the self driving kind.)
At the risk of being laughed at I showed my masterpiece to my adoring
family. Behind their snickers they let me know that in their view poems
ALWAYS rhyme, and, "well mom, yours doesn't". :^}
They'll all get E.E.Cummings books from me this Christmas! (and coal)
At any rate the 'poem' made me feel good and I thought some of you might
relate, so at the risk of being corny, I thought I'd share it with you. :^)
A Crisp Horse
Give me a crisp horse.
One that crackles and sparks at my leg.
A CRISP horse.
One that unfurls and curls into my hand
like a new sail in a steady wind.
Crisp...
enough to make you wary,
like a
TarT
apple.
Let me hold a crisp horse on a cold morning
to scrape my senses.
S. Smith
|
1543.13 | I love it... | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Fri Nov 01 1991 16:10 | 4 |
| Great!!!! poem!
Thanks :-) :-) :-)
Mary
|
1543.14 | great! | MMONRO::JOHNSON_M | | Fri Nov 01 1991 16:29 | 3 |
| I enjoyed it too, especially since I know the horse that inspired it!
Melinda
|
1543.15 | Terrific Poem! | KALE::ROBERTS | | Mon Nov 04 1991 08:01 | 5 |
| Your poem is GREAT!! The imagery is perfect -- the crisp-and-crackling
theme carrying through to the tart apple and the image of scraping.
Send it to the Chronicle -- it's better than most that they get!
-ellie
|
1543.16 | crispy-critters! | LEVADE::DAVIDSON | | Mon Nov 04 1991 08:44 | 6 |
|
I loved your poem!! Crisp and cracking is wonderful imagery! Thanks
for sharing it!
-Caroline
|
1543.17 | Ahhh! I'm There... | DEMON::RHODAN::DIROCCO | | Mon Nov 04 1991 09:17 | 6 |
| I too thought your poem just wonderful, I could just hear the
crackling and feel the feelings you so beautifully and simply
conveyed!
Thanks!
Deb
|
1543.18 | very nice !! | CSC32::M_POTTER | | Mon Nov 04 1991 10:59 | 5 |
| Wow!! Loved your poem!
Thanks for daring to share with us!
Marci
|
1543.19 | Get Published! | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | | Mon Nov 04 1991 14:44 | 10 |
| I really enjoyed your poem. It conjured up memories of similar
situations with my own. It's absolutely amazing what a crisp morning
will do for their attitude!
If you're going to compete with e e cummings, shouldn't you sign
your poems as "s smith" ? Naw, to "copy-cattish". How about a rubber
stamp with your name embossed in the rim of a pair of horseshoes?
Thanks again
John
|
1543.20 | feeding schedule? | WEORG::ACKERMAN | DBS Tech Writer | Mon Mar 15 1993 16:28 | 14 |
| What is a reasonable amount of time to expect a horse to go between
feedings? If I'm feeding hay and grain twice a day, should the
feedings be spaced equally? I know most people feed early in the
morning and again early in the evening. Is it possible to have a horse
on a schedule where he's fed mid-morning (around 9:00) and then fed
around 8:00 at night?
Also, how much can you vary your schedule from day-to-day? I'd assume
that a consistent schedule is the best thing, but on days when you
absolutely can't stick to that schedule, how far from it can you
deviate?
|
1543.21 | | DELNI::MANDILE | with an e | Tue Mar 16 1993 10:15 | 7 |
|
Since my move to a site 77 miles from home, the horses get fed
on a 12 hour schedule. Between 6am-7am, and 6pm-7pm.
They each get grain & hay in the am & pm feedings, and then hay
when I bring them in at night 10pm-11pm. No problems have
occured if I have to bump them an hour either way....Unless
you consider an indignant horse a problem! (8
|
1543.22 | | CSLALL::LCOBURN | Plan B Farm | Tue Mar 16 1993 10:18 | 8 |
| During the week, I feed at 5 am and again at 7 at night. In summer, on
evenings I ride, the nite feed is closer to 8. On weekends I sleep
later and feed at around 7 am and again at 7 pm. They do have hay all
day, I make sure they have enough in the morning that they can munch
all day (I learned how much will go all day by simple trial and
error, my two horses eat about 3 flakes between them during the day).
I've never had the least bit of trouble with this system.
|
1543.23 | late feed in AM? | WEORG::ACKERMAN | DBS Tech Writer | Tue Mar 16 1993 11:19 | 7 |
| So twelve to fourteen hours between feedings is OK, especially if they
have hay to munch all day. Do you think that not feeding until later
in the morning (as late as 9:00 am) is a problem if they've been fed
the night before around 8:00? I do understand that if the horse if
used to being fed early in the morning you'd have to move slowly
towards a new schedule.
|
1543.24 | | CSLALL::LCOBURN | Plan B Farm | Tue Mar 16 1993 11:33 | 14 |
| I would think that schedule would be fine.....the key thing to
remember is consistency (within an hour or two of the same times
daily) and also to adjust your riding schedule accordingly, so that
they are not worked within at least an hour before and after the
feeding time (this for grain feedings). And you're right, you need
to adjust them to a new schedule gradually, sudden changes in diet
can upset their disgestives. Talk to your vet, too, to be sure that
the schedule you set up is appropriate for your individual horse and
his needs and that the quantities of hay/grain you offer will maintain
weight but not overdo....my horses have always done wonderfully on
free-choice hay, but my friends gelding is fed hay almost exclusively
and is a real porker (but then, he gets only a limited amount of
exercise, too).
|