Do you think feeding the entire shocks instead of
just shucked corn kernals allowed horses digetion to maintain itself without
starch overload?
Husband and I watched Hidalgo the other night and
while DeeDee is still ouchy we are discussing feed stuffs again. If
Arabian horses never had corn in Arabia, what food stuffs are better for them
from an evolutionary veiwpoint? The past thousands of years? I would
imagine heavy draft breeds do better on a different diet than say Icelandics,
Norwegian ponies, Chincotugue sp?, horses in Scotland, etc.
I train and board dogs and research the past 10 yrs
does show breed revelance pertaining to diet. ie Border collies, Westies,
do better on chicken, lamb and oats.
American dogs, Chesapeke Bay retrievers, American
pitts better on beef and beagles good on junk from Walmart!
I would be interested in learning what Arabians
natural diet looks like and I know corn isn't in there :-)
I don't feed corn to my horses either, now that I've become more educated
about nutrition and feed. However, for 15 years when I lived in northern
Wisconsin, we fed our horses corn. For years, we grew our own field corn. In
the fall, we harvested it by cutting the stalks and piling them up in a tent,
called a "shock." Throughout the long Wisconsin winters, we'd feed one or two
shocks a day to the horses (who lived outside) along with their hay. The
horses would eat the shocks, stalks, leaves, corn cobs and all. Those were
some darned healthy horses. I didn't know much then about all the things that
could go wrong with horses, but those guys lived their lives with no colics,
no heaves. They kept their weight well during winter and had shiny bright
coats and eyes and easy to work with personalities.
Both horses did founder AFTER we quit feeding them corn shocks and put
them on more "civilized" feed. I blamed the alfalfa pellets we fed one year
when hay was hard to come by.
One horse recovered and lived a good, healthy and useful lilfe to age 28.
The other battled chronic laminitis and he could not eat even a sprig of a
legume.. no hay or clover... or he'd get sore feet.
chris
Beth Gunn <happyhoofprints@xxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
I
am not happy with corn feeds for endurance horses either. My 19
yr mare,DeeDee, came up cronically? lame 2 years ago. Very ouchy in the
front end. I have no pasture, dry lots and mixed grass hays 24 7s. The
feed I was using had a lot of corn. Chiro/acupucture vet goet DeeDee
fixed up. Took 3 months, 6 visits, and close to a $1000.... She has
been sound since then until now. I mixed a few handfuls of Nutrena Safe
Choice with her regular Nutrena XTN and beet pulp, with the idea to
get her off the high energy food to Safe Choice which has vegetable oil
for energy. She came up lame the next day. Safe Choice first ingredient
is corn. And I bet the veg oil also si corn based. Anyway, stopped
feeding the SC and she is still lame a week later. Ugh! Starch dump
overload into the stomach is never a good idea. And that is what high
starch/low fiber corn is as compared to oats, which has good fiber ansd
decent protein levels. There is also the mycotoxin problem with corn. We
feed it to the deer around here. Beth Gunn SoCar. where Spring has
Sprung!!!
----- Original Message ----- From:
To: Cc:
Sent: Thursday, March 24, 2005 7:01
PM Subject: Re: [RC] Feeding Corn
> > >
> > > I friend of mine is getting a new horse tomorrow a very
large TWH 16.2 > > hands. This horse is being fed free choice grass
hay and 12 pounds of > > corn a day. > >
Yikes! > > > Corn is the one feed I have never see discussed
on this > > forum. So what are the good, bad and ugly facts about
feeding corn to a > > horse that is going to start conditioning for
CTR in a few days. > > Shannon > > It's a huge source
of starch, which breaks right down into simple carbs. > Corn was the
big culprit in work horses that used to get "Monday Morning >
Disease"--which was basically just tying up from being fed a high
corn > ration 7 days a week, and not working on Sunday. Corn would be
about my > LAST choice for a grain for an equine athlete--would far
rather feed oats > or something with some fiber in it. My thought
about this horse would be > to get him weaned OFF the corn BEFORE you
start to condition, and maybe > substitute a part of it with a
non-grain supplement like beet pulp, with > just a few handfuls of
grain in it for flavor. > > Heidi > >
Heidi > > > >
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= > >
Ridecamp is a service of Endurance Net, http://www.endurance.net. >
Information, Policy, Disclaimer: http://www.endurance.net/Ridecamp >
Subscribe/Unsubscribe
http://www.endurance.net/ridecamp/logon.asp > > Ride Long and
Ride Safe!! > >
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= > >
Ridecamp
is a service of Endurance Net, http://www.endurance.net. Information,
Policy, Disclaimer:
http://www.endurance.net/Ridecamp Subscribe/Unsubscribe
http://www.endurance.net/ridecamp/logon.asp