stimpy
Well-Known Member
This winter I am feeding wheat straw to two of my ponies - they are fat geldings and I need to use the winter to get the weight off.
Their paddock now has nothing in it and they are showing signs of being pretty hungry and fall on the wheat straw when I feed them twice a day. I feed the straw, 2-3 slices, with half a slice of small bale haylage so they pretty much inhale the haylage fist and then start on the straw. For some reason I like the softer haylage to ht their empty bellies first but don't know if that is of any consequence to their digestion.
I am feeding wheat straw as I am having great difficult sourcing barley or oat straw. My local farmer has a wheat cross that is a bit softer than the 'normal' wheat straw but it has been baled into straw with the heads still on. Don't ask me why the heads are still on, but they are. Anyway, what effect will this have on the straw nutritionally? Should I avoid it and stick with the coarse plain wheat straw? Needless to say the fat boys like both versions, they will eat pretty much anything.
Their paddock now has nothing in it and they are showing signs of being pretty hungry and fall on the wheat straw when I feed them twice a day. I feed the straw, 2-3 slices, with half a slice of small bale haylage so they pretty much inhale the haylage fist and then start on the straw. For some reason I like the softer haylage to ht their empty bellies first but don't know if that is of any consequence to their digestion.
I am feeding wheat straw as I am having great difficult sourcing barley or oat straw. My local farmer has a wheat cross that is a bit softer than the 'normal' wheat straw but it has been baled into straw with the heads still on. Don't ask me why the heads are still on, but they are. Anyway, what effect will this have on the straw nutritionally? Should I avoid it and stick with the coarse plain wheat straw? Needless to say the fat boys like both versions, they will eat pretty much anything.