Ms.Cameo.22
Active Member
excuse me but i really don't think i need to consider my options but if you really don't believe me then fine i won't ask you to.
The girth needing doing up tighter after the saddle is initially put on is NOT necessarily a sign that the horse loses weight quickly. As JFTD said that is irrelevant. It needs as much exercise as it is able to have and the owner is able to give it, and it needs feeding in a way that will keep it healthy and enable it to lose weight.
The OP has posted asking for advice and look to be a new member, and they are getting some unhelpful comments when what they want to do is learn how to deal with a problem
She does
The girth needing doing up tighter after the saddle is initially put on is NOT necessarily a sign that the horse loses weight quickly. As JFTD said that is irrelevant. It needs as much exercise as it is able to have and the owner is able to give it, and it needs feeding in a way that will keep it healthy and enable it to lose weight.
The OP has posted asking for advice and look to be a new member, and they are getting some unhelpful comments when what they want to do is learn how to deal with a problem
Which is why I said that the girth going loose during exercise is NOT losing weight.....
But you were also advocating taking her out of a starvation paddock and not stabling her for so long. Of course I agree that the key to it is more exercise, but some with challenging metabolisms (and I guess this applies to fat people as well as horses) cannot always rely on exercise alone to lose weight, it has to be in conjunction with healthy eating.
OP you have been given some good advice about management & there are other useful sites that will help you sort out a suitable diet for her. I would also be asking your vet to look at testing for Cushings & EMS.
excuse me but i really don't think i need to consider my options but if you really don't believe me then fine i won't ask you to.
My point about the paddocks and stabling was that op said the horse loses weight quickly - therefore it's simple to keep the weight down without having to impact the horses welfare, by simply providing the right balance of exercise and diet - rather than stabling for hours on end, to then turn out on a starvation paddock..
Personally I think it's a load of rubbish that horses 'puff themselves out' whilst being girthed up intentionally. More likely to just be movement of gas in the gut before, during and after exercise.
OP says the horse loses weight extremely quickly and easily. Therefore I struggle to see why she is bothering having the horse on a starvation paddock, and stabled long hours. She should simply exercise it and give it some sort of pleasurable existence.
It does seem odd, Moomin, that you have never tacked up a horse that blows himself out.
OP - can you put a track system in, it doesn't need to be complicated but you can use electric fence to make walkways around a bigger field.
You don't get gas around the rib cage, but some horses/ponies who are actually tender around the chest area (neck problems) will expand their rib cage as you go to tighten the girth. If you hold the strap long enough they will exhale and you can do the girth up firm enough.
No one has said they don't believe you. However as, seamingly, a novice owner there are a couple of things for you to consider. Management obviously being the primary one, and also your confusion over exercise/weight loss/girthing.
Do you have a good instructor or knowledgeable YO who can help you?
IK was talking to Moomin1
IK was talking to Moomin1
You don't get gas around the rib cage, but some horses/ponies who are actually tender around the chest area (neck problems) will expand their rib cage as you go to tighten the girth. If you hold the strap long enough they will exhale and you can do the girth up firm enough.
Christ some people are being petty and argumentative on here.
OP, if I were you I'd turn the horse out more if you can, with a grazing muzzle if too much grass, and work her every day, maybe even twice a day. If you don't have time it might be worth paying someone to ride/lunge her for you until she drops the weight, then you should be able to keep on top of it yourself. Good luck!