23/09/2018
Why do you feed what you feed??? There are so many products on the market that "target" your particular equine friend. Whether that would be a native who requires a low calorie or anti-laminitic option, or your "typical" thoroughbred that doesn't do well in the winter so needs extra help. Alongside these base feeds you also come up against the supplement gang... these can also range from calmers, to joints, to muscle builders and balancers. It's such a mind field for you horse owners out there only ever wanting to do the best for your precious pony. The only true advice I can give you is to KEEP THINGS SIMPLE. Equine digestive system is designed with one basic need... FIBRE. This will keep the gut functioning correctly and prevent acid corrosion on stomach lining. Not only is fibre an essential for digestive purposes, it benefits the horse mentally too. A happy horse is one that has no limit on how often it chews long stemmed fibre material.. I.e. Hay. Feeding hay ad lib is an easy and effective method for keeping the horse happy and healthy. Now I'm not saying you can do this in the same way with a laminitic.. soaking the hay and double netting or using a trickle net will slow down consumption but will not stop him chewing and digesting. This is still ad lib π just slowed down. Keeping it simple is the same for your bucket feed. Fibre again is the biggest help, a simple chaff with no molasses or added flavours (avoid molichaff or Apple chop) is a good basis to add your quality balancer and salt. Now if your horse needs help with weight over the winter I would question gut function to begin with, asses it and then see if a detox or gut balancer is required. Micronised linseed is a great option to help add weight without the additional need for sugar and starch. Avoid feeding large meals once or twice per day, the stomach can't digest hard feed as effectively as hay. It takes longer to process and can sometimes be bypassed together causing potential gut problems such as colic and leaky gut syndrome. Prevention is better than cure, feed what the horse is designed to digest, make sure they are receiving the right amounts of vitamins and minerals and don't forget your salt!