RE: [RC] Mash Ingredients/How Much (was VC 100 and choking horses) - Maryben Stover
I am always confused by the "cup" measurement. I see that a lot. To me that is an 8 oz. cup that I measure my dog's food with. I measure beet pulp and grain by the can full, usually 2 lb. coffee cans........mb
From: raneller@xxxxxxx To: vnicoson@xxxxxxxxx; ridecamp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: RE: [RC] Mash Ingredients/How Much (was VC 100 and choking horses) Date: Fri, 25 Sep 2009 16:34:28 -0700
Val,
Being a Dynamite believer, and a beet pulp user, here is what I personally use:
Approx. 2c dry (then soaked) shredded beet pulp Approx 1c. Pelleted Grain Ration (Dynamite product) At a ride: 1oz Dynaspark
soak with as much water as it will absorb-the PGR absorbs alot of water too!
This is a standard amt for a vet check or after a long training ride.
Courage is being scared to death, but saddling up anyway. ~ John Wayne
Date: Fri, 25 Sep 2009 18:30:13 -0500 Subject: Mash Ingredients/How Much (was VC 100 and choking horses) From: vnicoson@xxxxxxxxx To: raneller@xxxxxxx; ridecamp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Am curious how much mash folks prepare for their horses and the ingredients in such as well.
During warmer months my horses don't get much of a mash at all but come winter they get quite a bit more. Also I generally double what they get when we attend a ride as they're working alot more.
Mine get BP and Strategy or BP and Nutrena's Lite Choice for the fat lady <g>.
Val
On Fri, Sep 25, 2009 at 12:07 PM, Ranelle Rubin <raneller@xxxxxxx> wrote:
My solution to the dehydrated-potential for choking (and I teach my horses to eat this after a long training ride):
Have a mash soaking in the bottom of a 5 gal bucket. Let them eat some sloppy mash of whatever you like to feed. When they have finished about half of it, fill the bucket with hay and water. They will eat the hay out of the water voraciously as it tastes like their favorite mash..and get lots of water at the same time..
Try it on your next training ride..it really works! The last thing I do before leaving on a long training ride is soak a bucket of mash so it is ready when I get back. My horse look forward to it..they know it will be there..:) My spoiled horse, I know...
Courage is being scared to death, but saddling up anyway. ~ John Wayne
Our son-in-law was cheated out of a Tevis finish several years ago when the Tevis crews offered Steve's horse dry alfalfa. The vets could not solve the choke without treatment, so his horse was DQ'd. Moral of story...wet down the hay thoroughly and this is less likely to happen. And perhaps, feed small amounts gradually, so the horse doesn't gobble too fast.
Just finished Karen Chaton's VC 100 story (exciting read as always!)
Reading about Tigger's choke episode along with a couple of others at the ride had me curious. Is having 3 horses choke at a ride a bit odd (is the number high or not uncommon at a 100 mile ride for horses to choke?). If it's a rare thing, any theories as to why it happened to a few horses there? Is it because of being in the desert, being dehydrated and gobbling up food to fast?
Would be interested in any theories from teh vets/crews from the ride. I"m a chronic worrier and need to have solutions to all the 'what-if's' out there, lol.
thanks cindy
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