Auslander
Well-Known Member
I've seen so many threads, both here and on Facebook recently, where people are asking what expensive feeds they should be shovelling down their natives/cobs.
Perhaps I'm missing a trick here, but I don't get why people feel that native ponies and cobby types need loads of hard feed, when they have evolved perfectly to sustain themselves on very little, even when they're in foal/otherwise compromised. They don't need to be fed like blood horses (and even those probably don't need to be fed half of what they're getting, unless their workload is significant)
On the one hand, there seems to be a massive upsurge in interest in feeding high fibre, sugar free diets, which is great, and all that the majority of horses need. But, there's also a trend for people to feed native types as if they are racehorses - which isn't a good thing at all.
I believe that the nutritional needs of most horses are met by good quality forage, adequate grazing, and, sometimes, the addition of a simple high fibre feed/balancer - with supplementation only where there is a valid reason for doing so.
If your horse is thin, feed it more forage before going crazy on the hard feed. If your horse is fat, don't feed it, and work the ****** harder. If it's fresh and naughty, don't feed it, and work the ****** harder. If there's nothing amiss with your horses weight/behaviour/general health - carry on doing what you're doing.
And GO...
Perhaps I'm missing a trick here, but I don't get why people feel that native ponies and cobby types need loads of hard feed, when they have evolved perfectly to sustain themselves on very little, even when they're in foal/otherwise compromised. They don't need to be fed like blood horses (and even those probably don't need to be fed half of what they're getting, unless their workload is significant)
On the one hand, there seems to be a massive upsurge in interest in feeding high fibre, sugar free diets, which is great, and all that the majority of horses need. But, there's also a trend for people to feed native types as if they are racehorses - which isn't a good thing at all.
I believe that the nutritional needs of most horses are met by good quality forage, adequate grazing, and, sometimes, the addition of a simple high fibre feed/balancer - with supplementation only where there is a valid reason for doing so.
If your horse is thin, feed it more forage before going crazy on the hard feed. If your horse is fat, don't feed it, and work the ****** harder. If it's fresh and naughty, don't feed it, and work the ****** harder. If there's nothing amiss with your horses weight/behaviour/general health - carry on doing what you're doing.
And GO...