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RideCamp@endurance.net
Re: Feeding starved horses
On this site you will find that UCDavis is
also using or promoting this way of feeding. I am going to guess the reason they
use alfalfa is because a severely starved horse has muscle atrophy and the
protein in alfalfa helps rebuild muscle tissue. It is also higher in energy than
grass hay. I guess peanut hay would work as well, but I don't know. I have
been feeding strait alfalfa for 8 years. First of all, the quality is not always
there so neither is the protein. I have my hay analyzed and sometimes it is only
10-12 % protein. That is the same as a bag of sweet feed. The protein numbers
vary according to which cutting it is, and, or where it is from. The price is
always the same, expensive. So, if you don't want that "rich" alfalfa, find some
that is the 2nd or 3rd cutting. Let me offer this observation on feeding
alfalfa and horses getting the runs. If I change from alfalfa to coastal, my
horses get the runs. If I change from coastal to T&A, they can get the
runs. It's the change, not the hay. My horses also can have loose stools
at races. Is it the hay? I know runners who get the "trots" at races and they
don't even eat alfalfa. This past year, alfalfa in our area went up to $13 a
bale. So I feed alfalfa twice a day in the stall and throw coastal hay out in
the pasture for them to much all day. (We have had no rain for 4 months.) No
runs, no trots, no problems. My theory is that horses in the wild have to be
eating different types of grass all day, everyday. They have to be able to
utilize and digest all kinds of grass/hay. Works for me. Lisa Salas, The Odd
FArm
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