cascada27
Active Member
Hello 
So my boy is a 14.2 light cob who to my shock was weighed a few weeks ago at the vets and now weights a huge 547kg - which seems for his height to be hugely overweight. he does also look overweight although not horrendous.
The problem is that at the moment he cannot be ridden and cannot be kept in due to being diagnosed as an idiopathic headshaker a few months back.
To try and keep him comfortable while we are having treatment he has spent the last 4 months living out 24/7 in a large herd field with his horse friends as he has been unrideable and the only thing that seems to distract him from the headshaking is grazing.
Since having treatment he is not as bad as he was (still not well enough to be ridden/lunged or even walked in hand for any amount of time) so he is out in the herd field with grass during the day say 10 hours and in a restricted grazing paddock with a couple of slices of hay at night (barely any grass) He has a mouthful and I mean a mouthful of chaff as he is on a magnesium supplement for the headshaking.
Any ideas if this will be enough to start seeing some sort of weight loss? and how much hay should i be giving him - Ive been giving 2-3 slices overnight - should that be less?
I dont want him to be unhappy as when he is kept the stable he headshakes constantly, but i am worried that if he doesn't start loosing weight he will develop more problems!
Anyone had to cope with anything similar - weight loss for the non ridden horse and has any suggestions?
So my boy is a 14.2 light cob who to my shock was weighed a few weeks ago at the vets and now weights a huge 547kg - which seems for his height to be hugely overweight. he does also look overweight although not horrendous.
The problem is that at the moment he cannot be ridden and cannot be kept in due to being diagnosed as an idiopathic headshaker a few months back.
To try and keep him comfortable while we are having treatment he has spent the last 4 months living out 24/7 in a large herd field with his horse friends as he has been unrideable and the only thing that seems to distract him from the headshaking is grazing.
Since having treatment he is not as bad as he was (still not well enough to be ridden/lunged or even walked in hand for any amount of time) so he is out in the herd field with grass during the day say 10 hours and in a restricted grazing paddock with a couple of slices of hay at night (barely any grass) He has a mouthful and I mean a mouthful of chaff as he is on a magnesium supplement for the headshaking.
Any ideas if this will be enough to start seeing some sort of weight loss? and how much hay should i be giving him - Ive been giving 2-3 slices overnight - should that be less?
I dont want him to be unhappy as when he is kept the stable he headshakes constantly, but i am worried that if he doesn't start loosing weight he will develop more problems!
Anyone had to cope with anything similar - weight loss for the non ridden horse and has any suggestions?