In the winter my 2 x TBs get through a sack each a week. I always believed feeding succulents was important and I didn't know some horses weren't meant to have them. Interesting!
I feed loads. We have a farmer next door who gets them by the crateload so either comes round with his digger bucket full or we go and collect them by the wheelbarrow full. I used to feed about a barrow a day between 3 of them and wondered why they were all nutters so they dont get as many now.
My horses would sulk if they didnt have carrots in their feeds and one actually kicks the bucket all over the floor if there are no carrots on top. Maybe I have made her a brat!!
Thats interesting you should say it's an old wives tale - I was given that information from The Laminitis Trust 4 years ago when one of mine went down with it.
Eaglestone, Dengie have just brought out a new food approved by the laminitus trust that is supposed to be better than Happy Hoof, sorry can't remember the name though, would that be worth looking at?
Pidge gets through a big sack once a week during the winter and then goes on rations in the summer (tesco value carrots
) he gets them in his tea, and when I first had him he would tip his feed over and fish out the carrots first. Not good on a shavings bed so he went to have his feed first with no carrots and once ate I would give him his dessert = carrots
heaven forbid I was late bringing them down I would get a VERY indignant neigh
Now he's more settled feed wise and has them mixed in with his feed.
A massive yes to carrots, our boys love them! Get 2 or 3 large carrots in every tea and breakfast. They also get apples, pears and other veg when its on offer in the supermarket!
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Eaglestone, Dengie have just brought out a new food approved by the laminitus trust that is supposed to be better than Happy Hoof, sorry can't remember the name though, would that be worth looking at?
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I think its called healthy hoof. Its looks and smells lovely, I was using on my boy but took him off it, as I felt his behaviour had changed on it. This happened to my friends horse aswell.
I don't very often feed him carrots but not for any specific reason. He gets apples, bananas, cauliflower, broccoli, swede, cabbage and pears also nectarines when I have them - just a bit in his tea
I will try and find out where I read this, but for those of you feeding brassicas (brocolli, cabage etc..) it's not good for horses. But as I say, I cannot remember atm where I read this, so it's somewhat unsubstantiated until I do.
Mine all get lots of carrots through the winter, but only a few through the summer - I'm more likely to feed parsnips in the summer.
I almost never feed apples - too much acid IMO (think I read that somewhere too...)