Hurricanelady
Well-Known Member
Hi all
I have a 5 month old Trakehner foal (sire 17 hh, dam 16 hh) who has had a growth spurt recently and got very tall. Farrier is visiting to trim the foal every 4 weeks and advised on Thursday last week that the near side fore was getting slightly too upright and possibly start of a club foot developing. Mare is in foal again, due June 2012. She is doing well and although was underweight after foaling, is now holding condition well and looking good.
The farrier lowered the foal's heel and advised cutting feed back. I previously had both mare and foal on Bailey's stud balancer (450 g per feed each x 2 feeds) plus 15 Kg haylage between them at night, 1 scoop speedibeet per feed for the mare, and very small handful of beet per feed for the foal. Both out on hay quality grass in a 2 acre field from 6.45 am to 4.30/5.00 pm.
This is my first foal and I realise now I shouldn't have had them on haylage. Have immediately switched to hay and prior to being able to contact Bailey's, moved them both onto low cal balancer over the weekend (450g mare, 250g foal per feed).
Bailey's have advised changing them back onto stud balancer, and increasing quality for mare to 1.36 kg a day, and for the foal to 1.14 kg a day until 6 months old, then increase to 1.36 kg a day till 12 months old. They have also advised giving foal assist to the foal for the next 30 days.
I'm confused over what to do - farrier and local feed company have said that it shouldn't be necessary to use (or increase quantity of) stud balancer, what is needed is to try and slow down this growth spurt. Bailey's have also said the pics look as if the foal has a touch of epiphysitis, which the farrier doesn't agree with.
Any advice much appreciated, I had not planned to wean until between end Dec-end Jan to give foal as much time as possible with his dam and try and have him gelded whilst he's still with her; but at the same time I need to support her current pregnancy and not leave him on too long to her/unborn foal's detriment. I have got the vet coming on Friday to review the situation.
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10150432124122079.414781.677887078&type=3&l=557efd1279
I have a 5 month old Trakehner foal (sire 17 hh, dam 16 hh) who has had a growth spurt recently and got very tall. Farrier is visiting to trim the foal every 4 weeks and advised on Thursday last week that the near side fore was getting slightly too upright and possibly start of a club foot developing. Mare is in foal again, due June 2012. She is doing well and although was underweight after foaling, is now holding condition well and looking good.
The farrier lowered the foal's heel and advised cutting feed back. I previously had both mare and foal on Bailey's stud balancer (450 g per feed each x 2 feeds) plus 15 Kg haylage between them at night, 1 scoop speedibeet per feed for the mare, and very small handful of beet per feed for the foal. Both out on hay quality grass in a 2 acre field from 6.45 am to 4.30/5.00 pm.
This is my first foal and I realise now I shouldn't have had them on haylage. Have immediately switched to hay and prior to being able to contact Bailey's, moved them both onto low cal balancer over the weekend (450g mare, 250g foal per feed).
Bailey's have advised changing them back onto stud balancer, and increasing quality for mare to 1.36 kg a day, and for the foal to 1.14 kg a day until 6 months old, then increase to 1.36 kg a day till 12 months old. They have also advised giving foal assist to the foal for the next 30 days.
I'm confused over what to do - farrier and local feed company have said that it shouldn't be necessary to use (or increase quantity of) stud balancer, what is needed is to try and slow down this growth spurt. Bailey's have also said the pics look as if the foal has a touch of epiphysitis, which the farrier doesn't agree with.
Any advice much appreciated, I had not planned to wean until between end Dec-end Jan to give foal as much time as possible with his dam and try and have him gelded whilst he's still with her; but at the same time I need to support her current pregnancy and not leave him on too long to her/unborn foal's detriment. I have got the vet coming on Friday to review the situation.
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10150432124122079.414781.677887078&type=3&l=557efd1279