paintponylvr
Well-Known Member
(and I still miss the like button!!)
As stated by several people there are different feeding protocols depending on the area of the country you are in and your herd management techniques.
Something no-one seems to be considering these past couple of years is the weather. All over the country, here in the USA, it's been "weird" according to everyone I've talked to in person, spoken with on the phone and emailed or forum talked, chat roomed with. The temps and storms have swung from one extreme to the other - throughout the growing season(s). This affects everything that is fed to our horses.
Hay (alfalfa, timothy, clover, orchard grass, meadow grass, coastal, bermuda, fescue, kentucky blue grass) AND pasture grass AND oats AND barley AND corn will all develop a higher sugar content when the temps drop below certain levels. It's one of the reasons some livestock owners have to be careful after a frost. Hay is generally not cut - after a hard frost, even if it is a decent "height" before that frost. It's a similar type of "lush" that the first spring grass is. I'm struggling to remember all the proper terms for this phenomenon - and I'm drawing blanks right now. When the weather cools off, growing crops go dormant. Some die (oats & corn) while others do a huge "sugar push" that will keep it "alive" during the cold season (grasses & hays).
Also, horses have changed over the years. I feel that it includes minis and shetlands as well as most, if not all, other breeds. You see (or maybe hear of?) many more metabolic problems now than you did years ago. Maybe the numbers are the same as in years past, but with all the media we just "see" and hear of more but I just don't think so. This is my OPINION - not supported by any studies that I'm aware of.
AND your description of your own three, AngC, is awesome. Very descriptive and ... hmmm... reminiscent of body types! A learning experience I'm sure and now you know. I'm sorry that you and Baby had to have such a harsh learning curve and I'm happy that you are discovering better ways to care for her - even if different from the other two.
Hip, HIp Hooray for learning horsemanship! or maybe it's called horse husbandry.
..........Edited to pull the vaccination "stuff" and put on AngC's other thread......
As stated by several people there are different feeding protocols depending on the area of the country you are in and your herd management techniques.
Something no-one seems to be considering these past couple of years is the weather. All over the country, here in the USA, it's been "weird" according to everyone I've talked to in person, spoken with on the phone and emailed or forum talked, chat roomed with. The temps and storms have swung from one extreme to the other - throughout the growing season(s). This affects everything that is fed to our horses.
Hay (alfalfa, timothy, clover, orchard grass, meadow grass, coastal, bermuda, fescue, kentucky blue grass) AND pasture grass AND oats AND barley AND corn will all develop a higher sugar content when the temps drop below certain levels. It's one of the reasons some livestock owners have to be careful after a frost. Hay is generally not cut - after a hard frost, even if it is a decent "height" before that frost. It's a similar type of "lush" that the first spring grass is. I'm struggling to remember all the proper terms for this phenomenon - and I'm drawing blanks right now. When the weather cools off, growing crops go dormant. Some die (oats & corn) while others do a huge "sugar push" that will keep it "alive" during the cold season (grasses & hays).
Also, horses have changed over the years. I feel that it includes minis and shetlands as well as most, if not all, other breeds. You see (or maybe hear of?) many more metabolic problems now than you did years ago. Maybe the numbers are the same as in years past, but with all the media we just "see" and hear of more but I just don't think so. This is my OPINION - not supported by any studies that I'm aware of.
AND your description of your own three, AngC, is awesome. Very descriptive and ... hmmm... reminiscent of body types! A learning experience I'm sure and now you know. I'm sorry that you and Baby had to have such a harsh learning curve and I'm happy that you are discovering better ways to care for her - even if different from the other two.
Hip, HIp Hooray for learning horsemanship! or maybe it's called horse husbandry.
..........Edited to pull the vaccination "stuff" and put on AngC's other thread......
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