KikiDee
Well-Known Member
The only time my good doer (sports horse but likely a bit of cob in there somewhere contributing to his ability to live on thin air) has ever been a perfect weight was over this summer drought we have just had where he was basically on a dirt paddock for 16 hours overnight (he did have something to eat but had to really work for it and zero goodness in the grass that was out there) and in during the day with hay. He's in full work with a varied workload of schooling (at least 20-25 minutes trot and 5-6 minutes canter), jumping once a week and 7-8 mile fast farm rides. It made me realise just how little he really needs! We are on dry sandy soil so our grazing is never lush but even so he will pile weight on just by looking at anything remotely green, it's a constant battle. If you're wanting her to actively lose weight you're going to have to be pretty tough for a few months, muzzle when out in the field and feed soaked hay when in, mix with straw if you need to bulk out rations. Unfortunately work alone often just doesn't cut it with native types.