We exercise on lunge line or long walks 2 times a week but can increase. I feel like less pellets wouldn't get him the nutrients he needs without grassCan you cut out all the pellets and give him some more exercise?
He is a very handsome guy!We exercise on lunge line or long walks 2 times a week but can increase. I feel like less pellets wouldn't get him the nutrients he needs without grass
He's my only mini and unfortunately my big guy tried to kill him so that's out for me.Is he your only mini? Mine is on grass 24/7, unlimited Tifton, Timothy pellets (about 1 quart each) and whatever his big brother drops at breakfast, (the TB gets 3 quarts Nutrens 12% pellet, Nutrina Topline Balancer, glucosamine, hoor supplement and Mare Magic) That being said the three of them, (mini horse, mini donkey and a 16.2 TB) play like kids at a theme park! They play tag and run almost full speed on average 2 hours a day. They play tug-of-war with a big dog rope, balls and traffic cones to the poi t thatmy wife cringes and thinks they are huting eachother. The 2 acres they are in has some very steep elevation changes and lots of obstacles. Have you had your vet do a complete lab workup? Mine get blood and urine labs every year and FEC every 3 months.
How did you measure his height? Remember miniatures are measured to the last hair of the mane, rather than top of the wither like all other equines. How did you measure his weight? Scale at the vet? Weight tape? mathematical calculation? In my experience weight tapes aren't terrible accurate for minis, but are useful for tracking gains and losses.He's 366 pounds per the vet and 36 inches tall at the shoulder so he's a bulkier build like a draft with a wide stance but I don't feel like he's huge. The vet said he's close to founder ?!?! But he said that with no exam other than looking at him. He didn't pick up his feet or do a body pinch etc. There's really no crest etc.
Thanks again everyone!!
Yes it was normal last timeIs he your only mini? Mine is on grass 24/7, unlimited Tifton, Timothy pellets (about 1 quart each) and whatever his big brother drops at breakfast, (the TB gets 3 quarts Nutrens 12% pellet, Nutrina Topline Balancer, glucosamine, hoor supplement and Mare Magic) That being said the three of them, (mini horse, mini donkey and a 16.2 TB) play like kids at a theme park! They play tag and run almost full speed on average 2 hours a day. They play tug-of-war with a big dog rope, balls and traffic cones to the poi t thatmy wife cringes and thinks they are huting eachother. The 2 acres they are in has some very steep elevation changes and lots of obstacles. Have you had your vet do a complete lab workup? Mine get blood and urine labs every year and FEC every 3 months.
The weight came from a horse scale at the vet. The height is the last hair like you said. I use the slow feed hay nets. I'll try to find a hanging scale thanks!How did you measure his height? Remember miniatures are measured to the last hair of the mane, rather than top of the wither like all other equines. How did you measure his weight? Scale at the vet? Weight tape? mathematical calculation? In my experience weight tapes aren't terrible accurate for minis, but are useful for tracking gains and losses.
I use a postal scale to weigh hard feed ("grain", hay pellets, beet pulp, etc). I haven't weighed hay in a very long time, but hanging scales, such as for luggage are useful; you can also just do a little math for a decent estimate; if you know the weight of the bales, count up the number of flakes in a bale and divide, then you know the average weight of a flake in the bale.
Most minis get 1/4-1/2# of a ration balancer daily, depending on the size of the mini and directions for the ration balancer you choose. Larger minis, usually 1/3# daily is sufficient.
Slow feeders are helpful to slow down forage consumption. [Hay nets with 1/2-1" openings.]
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