nicole1968
Well-Known Member
which balancer would anyone say is the best between top spec and blue chip
None.
Completely unnecessary, ingredients are unsuitable for most horses, particularly metabolically challenged or laminitic. It's a purely market driven product.
If you are going to feed at the recommended rate, it is far too much for most horses.
Far better to stick with a good mineral supplement and a good forrage/fibre based diet. Far better for your horse.
neither, baileys stud balancer! Both of above cost a bomb!
None.
Completely unnecessary, ingredients are unsuitable for most horses, particularly metabolically challenged or laminitic. It's a purely market driven product.
This is utter rubbish, I think you need to understand the reasons/ indications and suitable times for feeding a balancer. They are particular useful in the feeding management of laminitic horse and ponies as certain balancers have a very low starch content. A bag of H+P nuts could be much more damaging to a laminitic!
None.
Completely unnecessary, ingredients are unsuitable for most horses, particularly metabolically challenged or laminitic. It's a purely market driven product.
This is utter rubbish, I think you need to understand the reasons/ indications and suitable times for feeding a balancer. They are particular useful in the feeding management of laminitic horse and ponies as certain balancers have a very low starch content. A bag of H+P nuts could be much more damaging to a laminitic!
Well said.
None.
Completely unnecessary, ingredients are unsuitable for most horses, particularly metabolically challenged or laminitic. It's a purely market driven product.
This is utter rubbish, I think you need to understand the reasons/ indications and suitable times for feeding a balancer. They are particular useful in the feeding management of laminitic horse and ponies as certain balancers have a very low starch content. A bag of H+P nuts could be much more damaging to a laminitic!
Yes - you are absolutely right - a bag of h&P nuts is not suitable feed for a laminitic either!
Actually I have 2 laminitics - both sound. I won't feed any balancers at all and in my personal opinion there is no real justificaiton for feeding balancers to laminitic or metabolically challenged horses.
A balancer that is mass produced cannot possibly balance your specific forrage or diet. To do that you need to have minerals specific to the circumstances in your area to address shortfalls and issues in your soils and grasses - for example high iron, low copper and zinc......
So, no, it is not rubbish. Suggest you have a look at Sarah's site
Sarah Braithwaite of the UKNHCP has introduced a new service "Forage Plus" which provides a bespoke equine nutritional service.
Her site is http://forageplus.com/
Yes - you are absolutely right - a bag of h&P nuts is not suitable feed for a laminitic either!
Actually I have 2 laminitics - both sound. I won't feed any balancers at all and in my personal opinion there is no real justificaiton for feeding balancers to laminitic or metabolically challenged horses.
A balancer that is mass produced cannot possibly balance your specific forrage or diet. To do that you need to have minerals specific to the circumstances in your area to address shortfalls and issues in your soils and grasses - for example high iron, low copper and zinc......
So, no, it is not rubbish. Suggest you have a look at Sarah's site
Sarah Braithwaite of the UKNHCP has introduced a new service "Forage Plus" which provides a bespoke equine nutritional service.
Her site is http://forageplus.com/
so in that case no multi vit/min supplement is any good either.
My laminitic has a lite balancer, he's on no grass and just soaked hay so has no nutrition goodness at all so that is where the balancer comes in.
The big horses get no hard feed so just get topspec for goodness. Without that they would have no goodness which would result in crap overall health.
It would be imposable to make a supplement off short falls between every horse as grazing varies from time off year, batches off hay being different nutritional value and so on.
so in that case no multi vit/min supplement is any good either.
My laminitic has a lite balancer, he's on no grass and just soaked hay so has no nutrition goodness at all so that is where the balancer comes in.
The big horses get no hard feed so just get topspec for goodness. Without that they would have no goodness which would result in crap overall health.
It would be imposable to make a supplement off short falls between every horse as grazing varies from time off year, batches off hay being different nutritional value and so on.
You can only do what you can do within the parameters you can control..
The ideal is to base on a forrage analysis and then get the supplement balanced to your specific forage.
I feed washed unmolassed SB, B Yeast, Mag Oxide, specific mineral mix. linseed meal, sprinkle seaweed, some herbs - and the big lad gets sprouted oats (somethng new I am trying) - and they look very well on it and have plenty of energy. And ad-lib hay of course.
Thae hay is unsoaked for the laminitics - it turned out getting adequate minerals was more important than soaking the hay it seemed.
If you look closely at the balancers, the ingredients are often what you migh
t not want to feed your horse.
If you look at a popular balancer the ingredients are:
Contents
Black Oats 44 %
Non GM Soya 27 %
Lucerne Meal 10 %
Micronized Beet Pulp 5 %
Vitamins and Minerals 4.5 %
Molasses 3.5 %
Vegetable Oils 2.5 %
Yeast 1 %
Oligosaccharides 1 %
Sodium Bicarbonate 0.5 %
Oat Bran Concentrate 0.5 %
MT.X+ Microscopic Binder 0.3 %
Seaweed Meal 0.2 %
I would not be feeding my laminitic black oats, or soya or lucerne meal - or molasses for that matter.