S_N
Well-Known Member
Well I thought I'd share this, as although not brand new research it is recent and makes a great deal of sense when you think about it.
How many of us feed some kind of chaff (Alfalfa based or straw/hay based) and/or Sugar Beet in with our horses compound feed ration? I know I do and I always have. Most of us feed these to stop the horse bolting his/her feed or for the succulent value of the SB or the calcium in the alfalfa...... However, feeding these foods at the same time as the horses concentrate ration hampers the horses ability to fully digest the concentrated feed.
The reason being, is that these fiberous foods are more easily digestable - after all that is what neds are designed to digest - and therefore fibre passes through the system a lot faster than barley/oats/peas etc... BUT, if the cereal ration is fed at the same time as these fiberous foods, the fiberous food takes the cereal through the gut way too fast for the horse to digest it. Studies have shown that if a horse is fed alfalfa, SB and cereal together, then only 20% of the cereal is digested in the stomach and fore gut, whereas, if the cereal is fed on it's own, 80% (yes EIGHTY) is digested in the stomach & fore gut.
At the lecture I was at last week, we were told by this leading vet, that feeding 1/2 a scoop of Alfalfa isn't really going to do much to re-balance the Ca/P ratio. The horse should have plenty of access to good quality grass/hay/haylage/alfalfa, if this is an issue - as with growing horses - there may be a need to supplement the diet with Limestone powder or such like.
Pardon the pun, but it's all food for thought and I thought I'd share.
How many of us feed some kind of chaff (Alfalfa based or straw/hay based) and/or Sugar Beet in with our horses compound feed ration? I know I do and I always have. Most of us feed these to stop the horse bolting his/her feed or for the succulent value of the SB or the calcium in the alfalfa...... However, feeding these foods at the same time as the horses concentrate ration hampers the horses ability to fully digest the concentrated feed.
The reason being, is that these fiberous foods are more easily digestable - after all that is what neds are designed to digest - and therefore fibre passes through the system a lot faster than barley/oats/peas etc... BUT, if the cereal ration is fed at the same time as these fiberous foods, the fiberous food takes the cereal through the gut way too fast for the horse to digest it. Studies have shown that if a horse is fed alfalfa, SB and cereal together, then only 20% of the cereal is digested in the stomach and fore gut, whereas, if the cereal is fed on it's own, 80% (yes EIGHTY) is digested in the stomach & fore gut.
At the lecture I was at last week, we were told by this leading vet, that feeding 1/2 a scoop of Alfalfa isn't really going to do much to re-balance the Ca/P ratio. The horse should have plenty of access to good quality grass/hay/haylage/alfalfa, if this is an issue - as with growing horses - there may be a need to supplement the diet with Limestone powder or such like.
Pardon the pun, but it's all food for thought and I thought I'd share.