Sandstone1
Well-Known Member
Due to my horse having breathing issues have had to change bedding from wood pellets. I like Aubiose but its fairly expensive. Any other bedding recommendations? Horse is fairly wet but have rubber matting too.
Sheesh! Glad I stocked up in early Oct at £10.80 a bale!Thanks, I really like it but its over £13 a bale near me.
I used Aubiose for years, because I did not have space for a huge muck heap. Some beds were down a couple of years deep littered, I would take out the worst and it would dry out over to summer, as I never had to pay anyone to take the muck heap away, you could put it straight on the garden beds if needed, it worked out about the same cost as shavings.I’m a recent convert to aubiose, also due to respiratory issues. The bale price is expensive but I find running the bed quite economical if you follow their advice to semi deep litter. I did try it years ago but I took out the wet every day then and found it too expensive so if you do try it definitely semi-deep litter.
I skip out during the week and take up the wet patches at the weekend, with this routine I use 2 bales a week in the winter and it maintains as a nice deep bed. On cardboard bedding it was 3 bales a week and a thin bed. Same for bedmax which I’ve also tried. My horse is a 17hh gelding who is quite wet and messy, my friends 15hh mare only needed 1 bale in every couple of weeks running her bed like this, so obviously it varies depending on the horse.
Could you use wood pellets as a base and the Aubiose on top?Due to my horse having breathing issues have had to change bedding from wood pellets. I like Aubiose but its fairly expensive. Any other bedding recommendations? Horse is fairly wet but have rubber matting too.
Yes, maybe the answer is to mix it.Could you use wood pellets as a base and the Aubiose on top?
I've run my beds like this for 2 months now and am actually quite happy with it (I generally hate all bedding!).
The main things I disliked with wood pellets were the coldness of the surface, the dustiness, the smell, and the aesthetics of it, and with the Aubiose I disliked that it wasn't particularly absorbent, and the base never seemed to settle and compact much. The combination of the two seems to offer the best of both, with none of the downsides that I had on their own.
It was awful. The dustiest bedding I've ever seen. We had to leave at least 2hrs for the dust we could see to settle. Bought it specifically for the dust free claims they made.Has anyone used Burleybed?
Thanks, might not bother with that then!It was awful. The dustiest bedding I've ever seen. We had to leave at least 2hrs for the dust we could see to settle. Bought it specifically for the dust free claims they made.
Absolute bargepole bedding for anything, never mind horses with respiratory issues.
I moved to it when it 1st came out, was great stuff.... the next winter I recommended it to friends and on here too, really wish I hadn't. It had changed beyond all recognition and was exactly as TPO mentions. I took what I'd bought back to local feed store and exchanged it for good reliable Aubiose again.Has anyone used Burleybed?
Really dusty! I’d avoid it for horses with respiratory problems.Has anyone used Burleybed?
Has anyone used Burleybed?
Burly bed make a number of different products with miscanthus and rape and wheat straw.Has anyone used Burleybed?