Getting weight off my fattie...advice please

Bertolie

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I need to get some weight off of my fattie and would appreciate any helpful advice and suggestions.

Leo is a 14.3hh, 19 year old, middle weight cob who I have weighed and body condition scored by Spillers twice a year. Back in February he weighed in at 529Kgs and a body condition score of 5.5 on the 0-9 scale (5 being optimum). Looking at him last night he is definitely looking as though he has put some weight on over the last few weeks and I really need to get it sorted.

He gets fed a cup (250g) of Spillers Lite balancer once a day plus a small handful of Dengie Good-doer chaff to mix his joint supplement in.

He is out 24/7 with my daughters 14.2hh pony, on approx half an acre of reasonable grazing - its approx 3 inches long and scrubby. I cant strip graze as Leo has no respect for fencing, an will go over, under or through the fence if he thinks he's hungry. I have been advised by vet not to use a grazing muzzle due to the fact he has a wave mouth.

I have been trying to ride him at least 4 times a week although sometimes this may only be for a 30-45 min hack around the block. He doesn't hack out alone so I am dependant on my daughter riding out with me. He hasn't done much since last October so is not that fit, so work will need to be upped gradually. We do have a small indoor school (not big enough to canter in) but I am really a happy hacker and I am at a loss as to what to do with him in the school!

Any advice or suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Spillers are due to come out to weigh again in 5 weeks time and I really would like him a little bit slimmer by then!
 
Either stable him for half the day or, if it's your own property, leave him in the indoor school for half the day. In either case give him a small amount of hay double or triple netted.
 
With my mare I had to stable her and muzzle her to get the weight off, it worked really well and she dropped loads initially without exercise, she'd had a lami attack and it was a huge wake up call.

She was stabled initially 24/7 as on box rest with soaked hay being put in in small holed haynets one inside the other, she had one slice in the morning and someone would throw another one in when it ran out. She'd have another one at night. She would also getting a small feed for vits.

She dropped from around 588 to 484 and we won Fat Horse Slimmer of the year! I always feel bad for it taking laminitis for me to realise about obesity in horses, it didn't help having people around me who when I said she needed to lose weight said oh no she's fine she's out 24/7 it doesn't matter! I learned my lesson and luckily for Lily she is ok now and having fun!

If you google Lily's Laminitis Blog you'll see my diary of dealing with the laminitis which is also really a diary of her weight management too and how we lost about 14 stone!
 
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