AngC
Well-Known Member
I've been reading the thread on how much hay to feed a mini. And I'll try not to be sensitive, because if I'm doing wrong I need to know; our Baby deserves better than my dumbness. So I have a couple photos and would like honest opinion if she's still too fat.
Last winter/early spring, we were trying to "free-feed" alfalfa hay as a treat in addition to an orchard grass mix (free-fed). Baby got laminitis. We've worked with vet hospital and farrier. The last farrier visit was a week or so ago, and he said there's no separation on the hoof (not too sure what that means, but I guess it's good.) The attached photos were within the last few weeks. That hay-feeding thread mentioned the topline. I think Baby still has a "divet" running down her back, and her belly is too fat, I think? I don't know. I don't want to show them or anything. I just want them all to be healthy.
I have a really hard time figuring out how a horse should look. Although Baby's sire is not registered, I believe he (Nicky) is an Orion Light Vant Huttenest grandson. That horse was built like a Shetland pony used to look. Nicky is built the same way: big head, short stocky neck, bulbous body. To my loving eyes, Nicky's body shape looks a lot like that German lady's dressage appaloosa (whose name I think is Lancelot.) ...well, ok, Nicky's mane doesn't quite have the same "Fabio" look. But Baby's dam and Baby also have that short stout fat big-headed look to them.
I don't mind the stout look that American breeders seem to want to breed out of minis the same way they bred it out of the Shetlands. (I love how a nice stocky pony looks!) And looking at photos of other people's mini horses that are shaved makes it harder for me to understand whether I'm doing wrong. The "refined" look that seems to be preferred, especially when their horse is shaved makes it hard for me to tell whether my hairy, unshaved horses are in good body condition.
I am worried that I might be killing our horses by overfeeding still. If they have hay bellies, I might be "stretching" their hind-gut??? Are the conflicting body condition scores I have received by vets meaningless? Anyway, I sure would appreciate comments on whether Baby looks too fat. Thank you.
(By the way, one of the photos shows the husband's legs as he heads out on a jog to get the two girls running. They love it. My only rule is that they can't get too sweaty. ...although it does kind of scare me when they get to flat-out running and slide/fall on the corners. Baby would have made one heck of a barrel racer if she had been born as a full-size horse. I do, however, think that running for 10-15 minutes a day is a good form of exercise that I could not provide by strolling around with them on a halter.)
Last winter/early spring, we were trying to "free-feed" alfalfa hay as a treat in addition to an orchard grass mix (free-fed). Baby got laminitis. We've worked with vet hospital and farrier. The last farrier visit was a week or so ago, and he said there's no separation on the hoof (not too sure what that means, but I guess it's good.) The attached photos were within the last few weeks. That hay-feeding thread mentioned the topline. I think Baby still has a "divet" running down her back, and her belly is too fat, I think? I don't know. I don't want to show them or anything. I just want them all to be healthy.
I have a really hard time figuring out how a horse should look. Although Baby's sire is not registered, I believe he (Nicky) is an Orion Light Vant Huttenest grandson. That horse was built like a Shetland pony used to look. Nicky is built the same way: big head, short stocky neck, bulbous body. To my loving eyes, Nicky's body shape looks a lot like that German lady's dressage appaloosa (whose name I think is Lancelot.) ...well, ok, Nicky's mane doesn't quite have the same "Fabio" look. But Baby's dam and Baby also have that short stout fat big-headed look to them.
I don't mind the stout look that American breeders seem to want to breed out of minis the same way they bred it out of the Shetlands. (I love how a nice stocky pony looks!) And looking at photos of other people's mini horses that are shaved makes it harder for me to understand whether I'm doing wrong. The "refined" look that seems to be preferred, especially when their horse is shaved makes it hard for me to tell whether my hairy, unshaved horses are in good body condition.
I am worried that I might be killing our horses by overfeeding still. If they have hay bellies, I might be "stretching" their hind-gut??? Are the conflicting body condition scores I have received by vets meaningless? Anyway, I sure would appreciate comments on whether Baby looks too fat. Thank you.
(By the way, one of the photos shows the husband's legs as he heads out on a jog to get the two girls running. They love it. My only rule is that they can't get too sweaty. ...although it does kind of scare me when they get to flat-out running and slide/fall on the corners. Baby would have made one heck of a barrel racer if she had been born as a full-size horse. I do, however, think that running for 10-15 minutes a day is a good form of exercise that I could not provide by strolling around with them on a halter.)
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