Michen
Well-Known Member
My horse was diagnosed with mild laminar inflammation and bruising of the medial palmer processes, believed to be a concussive type laminitis from overloading the front feet due to a compromised hind hoof (via MRI).
My vet told me to keep him in the same routine, stabled part of the day and turned out the rest.
He is not overweight but will now be rested as opposed to work, whilst the vets don't feel the inflammation is grass induced as such, I expect this now makes him more sensitive/prone so I have begun soaking his hay for 12 hours overnight. However I'm worried that as he doesn't actually need to loose weight, that he will be without the nutrients he actually needs?
I'm not even sure if I'm doing the right thing by soaking, I have also increased the time he spends stabled from 7 hours to 12, to keep him off the grass longer.
Is there an optimum soaking time to reduce sugars by a certain amount without making it totally lack nutritional value?
My vet told me to keep him in the same routine, stabled part of the day and turned out the rest.
He is not overweight but will now be rested as opposed to work, whilst the vets don't feel the inflammation is grass induced as such, I expect this now makes him more sensitive/prone so I have begun soaking his hay for 12 hours overnight. However I'm worried that as he doesn't actually need to loose weight, that he will be without the nutrients he actually needs?
I'm not even sure if I'm doing the right thing by soaking, I have also increased the time he spends stabled from 7 hours to 12, to keep him off the grass longer.
Is there an optimum soaking time to reduce sugars by a certain amount without making it totally lack nutritional value?