Weightapes are good for keeping track of what they gain and lose but they aren't actually accurate on current weight and they can vary quite a lot from a weighbridge.
Erm, sorry OP, but he's still obese. Waay to go.
Weightapes are good for keeping track of what they gain and lose but they aren't actually accurate on current weight and they can vary quite a lot from a weighbridge.
Sorry but that won’t be enough, he needs muzzling or putting on a dry lot with well soaked hayI agree he’s too fat. I’m relieved that he’s lost some over winter and yes smaller herd that just got smaller in large field. We discussed today reducing the size of the field as they are all rather too well. Most are retired too. Think we can cut it nearly in half hopefully soon before any further damage is done!
You are so correct, my 17hh warmblood weighed in at 550kgs on a weight tape which I knew couldn't be right. A week later a feed rep was doing a demo and had a weigh bridge so I took him along, he weighed in at 650kg, so a
massive difference. Also important if you are measuring drug dosage etc. This is the horse.
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This, hes weigh taped to keep an eye on how much he goes up/down but they are incredibly inaccurateWeightapes are good for keeping track of what they gain and lose but they aren't actually accurate on current weight and they can vary quite a lot from a weighbridge.
I made a decision that many would criticise me for, that quality of life was more important than the length at this point. He had been broken to drive at 2, competed in a 4 in hand team, spent many years at working livery at a riding school and been a busy R&D before he came to me to slow down at 17. He could be happy living out with no restrictions in a herd and at the first sign of lami, he would be PTS. He lasted another 5 years or so and was PTS for something else altogether. The welshie was there for over 10 years and was PTS when even with bute, his arthritis meant that he couldn't comfortably stand for the farrier. Neither of them ever showed the slightest sign of laminitis, no raised pulses or warm feet, no abscesses, nothing in that time although looking at them, they really should have. In all that time, they only lami case I saw was a pony, who with hindsight had EMS, got acute lami the first spring he was there.
I don't regret my decision and was quite prepared to PTS on diagnosis if need be.
I have a weigh bridge and am often shocked by how wrong people have their horses weights when using a tape. Generally add 100kg to a tape and that’s your accurate weight.
I would be wary of giving such specific advice about how much a weightape is out by as they vary so much. I had one which over estimated. My current tape consistently comes out between 30kg to 50 kg under compared to the weighbridge at vet college. That's on tbs, warmbloods and cobs.
So i would always say just use it to track changes or check your own against a weighbridge but don't make assumptions about how inaccurate it is or even whether it's under or over.