FionaDenmark
Active Member
But is eating the straw from her bed and her feed as usual. So it must be the quality of the hay? It doesn't seem musty or dusty at all and the quality has always been great with zero weeds.
I don't think so as the hay is locked behind a door. I do have cats but they haven't been in there. No pee smell either.Anything peeing on the hay ?, cats, foxes etc.
I got the delivery about 2 weeks ago and she's eaten quite a few bales of it already. Same supplier for 6 months. I did notice though that she didn't touch the hay in the field today either.Is the hay new to you, or is it new refusal of hay she's been eating?
It's Danish hay. It was very dry over here during the summer but I don't think we reached drought status. It could be bitter though.Am just wondering, if made during the drought it may be quite bitter.
Yep it's pretty gutting when they won't eat it because of the price. Mine costs 40 danish crowns a small bale which is about 6-7 quid.I've had 2 large bales which mine wont eat. It smells weird, I'm wondering if it has been treated with preservative, possibly too much. Pretty gutting as it's so expensive. The hay has been random this year as the supplier is getting it from anywhere they can so I've changed to haylage now.
Duh of course. I presume it would depend on the grass varieties, the soil type, etc., as to the effects of a lack of water, so it's probably not possible to say one way or another whether it was or wasn't dry enough to affect the taste. But it's just one possibility that unfortunately you can't do much aboutIt's Danish hay. It was very dry over here during the summer but I don't think we reached drought status. It could be bitter though.
I bought some lucerne (alfalfa) hay once that smelled like fumes (from a vehicle) when I got it home and was putting it away. I took it back, explained what it smelled like, and the seller was p*&^d off with me. (He was awful even at the best of times.) When I said I'd have a sack of lucerne chaff instead, he whinged that that was made from the same hay, but it smelled fine to my nose (which is a good nose) so I disregarded what he said.I've had 2 large bales which mine wont eat. It smells weird, I'm wondering if it has been treated with preservative, possibly too much. Pretty gutting as it's so expensive. The hay has been random this year as the supplier is getting it from anywhere they can so I've changed to haylage now.