RachelB
Well-Known Member
Not your usual question, but my horse is fat and on a diet. She has been fine for a couple of weeks (before a couple of weeks ago she was being strip-grazed, mostly without my consent, by the owner of the other horse in the field - they have now been split up) but recently she has become really bad-tempered with regards to food. She gets fed a handful of foot supplement/balancer and a few carrots, once a day. She has apparently become bargy and is often found raiding the feedroom because people "forget" to close the door
although she can't get in the feed bins, she just attacks the hay stack! She is never rude with me because she respects me, but she's a BIG girl and will use her size against other people.
Those of you who have seen her pictures (recent ones posted in gallery a few days ago) will know HOW overweight she is, and those of you who have followed our saga over the past 18 months will know why she is fat (long story). I can NOT get the weight to shift now though other than by cutting her feed right down to the bare minimum. I cannot exercise her as she is lame again, and it will be a good six months when I do start exercising her before she is doing enough to start losing weight. If I put her on grass and muzzle her she manages to eat LOADS and I'd rather she was on a bare patch or she'll never lose the weight. I also can't stable her for part of the day, partly because she pees for England and I can't afford the bedding, and partly because I have to stuff her full of hay when she's in otherwise she colics. She's rather high-maintenance
So my question is, is there anything I can do to satisfy her appetite without hindering the weight loss? Would it be better for her to be on a smaller patch of ground with well-soaked hay to eat and a tiny bit of grass to nibble as it comes up, rather than keeping her on a large patch of bare ground with nothing else?
Opinions very gratefully received!
Those of you who have seen her pictures (recent ones posted in gallery a few days ago) will know HOW overweight she is, and those of you who have followed our saga over the past 18 months will know why she is fat (long story). I can NOT get the weight to shift now though other than by cutting her feed right down to the bare minimum. I cannot exercise her as she is lame again, and it will be a good six months when I do start exercising her before she is doing enough to start losing weight. If I put her on grass and muzzle her she manages to eat LOADS and I'd rather she was on a bare patch or she'll never lose the weight. I also can't stable her for part of the day, partly because she pees for England and I can't afford the bedding, and partly because I have to stuff her full of hay when she's in otherwise she colics. She's rather high-maintenance
So my question is, is there anything I can do to satisfy her appetite without hindering the weight loss? Would it be better for her to be on a smaller patch of ground with well-soaked hay to eat and a tiny bit of grass to nibble as it comes up, rather than keeping her on a large patch of bare ground with nothing else?
Opinions very gratefully received!