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Equine nutrition?


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Old 07-02-2009, 07:23 AM
Gloria Gloria is offline
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Default Equine nutrition?

Appreciate the two answers, here's a little more background, none of the North American grasses are conventional here in Panama, example Timothy, Alfalfa, Brome, Clover. Some grasses are being imported from Africa. As mentioned before we have high heat in 30 celsius range and also high levels of humidity. Also grains such as oats do not grow here, or sugar beets. Of course we have sugar cane,mangos, lots of corn and rice Prepackaged supplements that come out of Europe and North America are far and in between. But the prices on the ones I saw, are dictated by some extent to the oat content. I would like to put on about 100 to 150 pounds on four year old stallion, but safely. It seems that we have high incidences of colic here. Which I would like to investigate a little more closely.
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Old 07-02-2009, 07:23 AM
decade decade is offline
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Default Equine nutrition?

Can you get your hands on some rice bran? Rice bran is GREAT for putting weight on a horse. It has a higher fat content than any other feed, and you can feed it to them in bulk without having to worry about colic. It is about the only thing I've found that can put and keep weight on my 18 year old TB mare. For weight gain, I have to feed 6lbs of it a day mixed with 6lbs of Senior (a "complete feed" common in the USA).However, rice bran can have a mineral imbalance, so if you feed more than about 2 pounds of it, you should make sure a horse's diet is supplemented with a mineral block and/or a complete feed (if you can get your hands on one).I don't think the temperatures or humidity should be an issue when feeding rice bran. Sounds like your only problem could be finding some.I bet the high colic incidence is from two things: dehydration or feeds. Colic is much more common in the summer when horses don't consume enough water or ample water isn't available to them. Also feeding something iwth too many carbohydrates causes colic. "Hot" feeds like corn and oats will do this, and since that's what you have around there (the corn, anyway), I bet people just overfeed them.Good luck!
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Old 07-02-2009, 07:23 AM
Amenda Amenda is offline
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Default Equine nutrition?

Colic is most most often caused by incorrect diet. If a horse is getting proper feed in proper amounts and his system is not shocked by suddenly being on dry hay after green pasture etc then colic is not as likely. The high incidence of colic there is most likely due to the horses not eating properly. If a horse is recieving a good quality grass hay or is on good pasture then he doesn't necessarily need grain. Corn is NOT a good feed for horses, it can be used as a filler in some commercial feed mixes but should not be fed as a complete feed. Can you get Lucerne hay? It grows in Africa and from what I've heard is a very good hay. A horses diet should consist of lots of good hay or pasture, good clean water, grain is optional and not 100% necessary.
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Old 07-02-2009, 07:23 AM
click click is offline
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Default Equine nutrition?

Rice bran is exactly what it says "BRAN" and basically a laxative. For a colic preventative, I feed red wheat flakey bran twice a week and "knock on wood" haven't had a colic issue in nearly 40 years (Last colicy horse I had was in 1970.). I mix about 1.5 LBS of bran with enough hot water to allow it to swell with the barley corn.Okay, now you've got corn, that is a definate HEAT/weight feed. Can you get it in a rolled corn? I feed barley corn (rolled) so that it's easier to digest for the horse, whole kernels aren't. I also feed a 1/2 Cup of Corn Oil and Apple cider vinegar. The corn oil for coat and the vinegar to dissolve the minerals that horses pick up in water and I've been told it also helps with flies, but haven't really seen any difference myself.Oats are for ENERGY, NOT weight. I would start at a pound of rolled corn with the oil and vinegar, then gradually increase it to 3 lbs.
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Old 07-02-2009, 07:23 AM
Eric Eric is offline
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Default Equine nutrition?

what types of feed are availabe to you? Rice bran, beet pulp, soybean or corn oil, flaxseed (in oil or ground form) are all good weight gainers. you can find a lot of info online about equine nutrition, even on the feed sites (Triplecrown feeds, Purina, Nutrenaworld, etc) & try to work w/what you have available.
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Old 01-21-2011, 12:15 PM
robatcook1987 robatcook1987 is offline
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Equine nutrition is the feeding of horses, ponies, mules, donkeys and other equines. Correct and balanced nutrition is an essential part of good horse. Nutrition for horses, where they develop personalized nutrition and meal plans for the horses. grass hay are also good to feed alfalfa hay as a supplement. Timothy hay is the most expensive hay in California, but has the least amount of protein available.
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Old 03-28-2011, 09:22 PM
mainterpet mainterpet is offline
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Protein is an important part of the horse's diet, how he helps muscle development, especially for young horses. A big sign that the horse could not get enough protein coat is rough, hair. The nutrients are in each substance food that grows on land of young cattle. Although people usually associate proteins in meat and dairy products, the horse will receive its protein from plant sources.
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Old 12-28-2011, 01:58 AM
darvelldax darvelldax is offline
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To that end, they truly traditional feeding behavior and study equine supplementary rations based on the quality of their standards. Health and peak performance, an ideal feed ranking and good breeding, education and training. Horse supplement was created to meet the recommended daily allowance of vitamins and minerals with them, if you provide an appropriate balance between the correct dose.
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Old 12-28-2011, 05:07 AM
Davidswan Davidswan is offline
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Hay is the most important feeding program of a horse. Horses are natural foragers and are designed to eat junk food all day. Now, since we are the servants, we did remove them from their natural state.
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Old 02-11-2012, 12:50 PM
macjonny macjonny is offline
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Horses are non-ruminant herbivores (hind-gut fermentors). Their small stomach only has a capacity of 2 to 4 gallons for an average-sized 1000 lb. horse. An equine's stomach is a delicate balance of getting the right proteins, grains, hay, supplements, water intake and proper digestions of these substances.
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