noblesteed
Well-Known Member
Hi all,
Really stumped by my horse now! He is 13, connie x iberian.
He had mild lami in April when some nugget turned him out without his grazing muzzle. He was overweight at the time. He came in footy/pulses and had 3 weeks box rest, then 2 months turnout before he was sound. After the 3 weeks the vet fat-scored him as 2.75, tests for EMS and cushings were both negative.
He was fine all summer living out in his greenguard with no hard feed. He put on a little weight but nothing excessive. He had a suspected abcess on one foot in August.
A month ago we moved yards. He is now out in greenguard during the day, small haylage net at night with a bucket feed of Fast Fibre for vits/mins and so he can have less haylage- he gets about half a scoop with a handful of chaff. Since moving he has lost weight and now looks in good shape. No crest or fat pads. Last time the farrier came he said his feet hadn't grown much at all.
HOWEVER last week his feet became hot for about 2 days, then went cold. I was a little concerned as he was sluggish to ride and a few days later farrier found blood traces in the white line. He has had plastic frog support pads in front and still barefoot behind as feet haven't grown.
The farrier THINKS the lami is caused by the haylage as it's all that's changed. Toxins in it being released by horses' digestive system??? So I put horse on the last bit of hay we have, but he is still footy on his back feet. Our farmer said haylage has LESS sugar than hay (due to microbes 'eating' it) and our haylage is late-cut and quite poor this year. He said protein could be a possibility (he's a dairy farmer)???? But soaking haylage wouldn't make any difference only 'wake up' microbes and could make horse worse... I am a bit stuck as there isn't any hay round here...
Anyone else had any experience of haylage causing lami? And would a haylage balancer solve the problem?
OR alteratively could it have been the Fast Fibre? He wasn't getting that previously either.
Or something more sinister?
Really stumped by my horse now! He is 13, connie x iberian.
He had mild lami in April when some nugget turned him out without his grazing muzzle. He was overweight at the time. He came in footy/pulses and had 3 weeks box rest, then 2 months turnout before he was sound. After the 3 weeks the vet fat-scored him as 2.75, tests for EMS and cushings were both negative.
He was fine all summer living out in his greenguard with no hard feed. He put on a little weight but nothing excessive. He had a suspected abcess on one foot in August.
A month ago we moved yards. He is now out in greenguard during the day, small haylage net at night with a bucket feed of Fast Fibre for vits/mins and so he can have less haylage- he gets about half a scoop with a handful of chaff. Since moving he has lost weight and now looks in good shape. No crest or fat pads. Last time the farrier came he said his feet hadn't grown much at all.
HOWEVER last week his feet became hot for about 2 days, then went cold. I was a little concerned as he was sluggish to ride and a few days later farrier found blood traces in the white line. He has had plastic frog support pads in front and still barefoot behind as feet haven't grown.
The farrier THINKS the lami is caused by the haylage as it's all that's changed. Toxins in it being released by horses' digestive system??? So I put horse on the last bit of hay we have, but he is still footy on his back feet. Our farmer said haylage has LESS sugar than hay (due to microbes 'eating' it) and our haylage is late-cut and quite poor this year. He said protein could be a possibility (he's a dairy farmer)???? But soaking haylage wouldn't make any difference only 'wake up' microbes and could make horse worse... I am a bit stuck as there isn't any hay round here...
Anyone else had any experience of haylage causing lami? And would a haylage balancer solve the problem?
OR alteratively could it have been the Fast Fibre? He wasn't getting that previously either.
Or something more sinister?