MurphysMinder
Well-Known Member
So what does he eat when shut in the pen overnight ?I would have thatched him but he’s got asthma so we don’t feed hay much, mostly grazing! So no hay/ straw to hand. I used to love thatching him!
So what does he eat when shut in the pen overnight ?I would have thatched him but he’s got asthma so we don’t feed hay much, mostly grazing! So no hay/ straw to hand. I used to love thatching him!
He’s on restricted grazing - so he’s eating as much as normal. He eats restricted grazing in intervals throughout the day. When he’s done with a section he comes in for a while and then goes out a few hours later for another strip. The vet has supported this routine for both weight management and the management of a sycamore tree nearby. Soon he will go out full time to a new pasture. Grazing 2x a day is much better for him than 2x hay nets. Hes asthmatic and the grazing lasts longer than a hay net for the same caloric intake.Hopefully the horse is ok this morning. As I read it they are in a pen rather than a stable, so no roof at the moment, and on pea shingle so no grazing. You don't mention hay OP but presume they have that rather than just soaked nuts ?
So what does he 'graze' on when he's in his pen?I would have thatched him but he’s got asthma so we don’t feed hay much, mostly grazing! So no hay/ straw to hand. I used to love thatching him!
Why did he need a bath?I always bathed him in the early evening as it was meant to stay warm and dry!
He’s always been on restricted grazing where the fence is moved in intervals to prevent him from become an absolute porker (as has occurred previously). This is literally no different to normal restricted grazing practices, only he is removed from the pasture overnight. Most people give 2x haynets a day, so surely they are aware these horses are done munching in a few hours and stand without food for 8 or more hours? Genuinely no different. This practice has been supported by my vetSo what does he eat when shut in the pen overnight ?
I would change my vet. No.horse should be standing for 8 hours without access to any kind of food.He’s always been on restricted grazing where the fence is moved in intervals to prevent him from become an absolute porker (as has occurred previously). This is literally no different to normal restricted grazing practices, only he is removed from the pasture overnight. Most people give 2x haynets a day, so surely they are aware these horses are done munching in a few hours and stand without food for 8 or more hours? Genuinely no different. This practice has been supported by my vet
I hate to break it to you but you are aware that the majority of the horses who come in over night eat for an hour and then have nothing left for the remaining ten hours in? He cannot graze continuously or he will become obese - how is this literally any different from him having a restricted portion of a pasture over night? The fields were bald from the hot summer and nothing grew.
I hate to break it back to you, but my horses have never run out of hay and then stood for 10 hours without anything.I hate to break it to you but you are aware that the majority of the horses who come in over night eat for an hour and then have nothing left for the remaining ten hours in? He cannot graze continuously or he will become obese - how is this literally any different from him having a restricted portion of a pasture over night? The fields were bald from the hot summer and nothing grew.
He has trickle feeders annd other edible enrichment and I’ve spoken to multiple vets thanks!I would change my vet. No.horse should be standing for 8 hours without access to any kind of food.
Oh look we’re being delusional!I hate to break it back to you, but my horses have never run out of hay and then stood for 10 hours without anything.
I think you're making assumptions on people's management that may or may not exist. And there's absolutely no need to become aggressive, rude or swear.He has trickle feeders annd other edible enrichment and I’ve spoken to multiple vets thanks!
It’s either he stays in for eight hours without hay but with trickle feeders, or has access to sycamore leaves and possibly gets AM, or he gets given hay, soaked or unsoaked and goes into an asthmatic crisis.
I’m happy with where I’m placing my bets thanks. This is for a matter of weeks until I can get him onto a pasture which doesn’t have a toxic tree present.
Also… are you getting up and feeding your horse overnight? Of course you’re not. Get off your high horse ffs!
Of course you’re dropping in a Hay net which is empty in a matter of hours and prentending to yourself your horse has hay all night. They dont. No one is able to give a hay net 7x a day to keep them constantly munching! Unless you’re fortunate to have 24 hr turnout (which I will in a few weeks).
I'm so sorry but that vet wouldn't be attending my horses.He’s always been on restricted grazing where the fence is moved in intervals to prevent him from become an absolute porker (as has occurred previously). This is literally no different to normal restricted grazing practices, only he is removed from the pasture overnight. Most people give 2x haynets a day, so surely they are aware these horses are done munching in a few hours and stand without food for 8 or more hours? Genuinely no different. This practice has been supported by my vet
Me too .I really think we are being deliberately provoked on this thread. I'm out.![]()
just looked at this thread. It rained, old horse was cold and shivering because owner didn't rug it. Is it really necessary to tell the world about it, just make sure you take better care of him.. Seems to be someone that wants to argue about anything,Surely this is a windup?
Yep, just noticed it was posted at midnight, windup from someone with too much spare time is my thought…Surely this is a windup?
Horses’ guts aren’t designed for long periods without anything going through (even starving them overnight before veterinary procedures can lead to colic), therefore many, many horses are stabled with ad lib hay precisely to prevent this, or ulcers, or stress or compulsive vices. These are all-too-possible risks.I hate to break it to you but you are aware that the majority of the horses who come in over night eat for an hour and then have nothing left for the remaining ten hours in? He cannot graze continuously or he will become obese - how is this literally any different from him having a restricted portion of a pasture over night? The fields were bald from the hot summer and nothing grew.
Plus wouldn’t you just fence off the sycamore ….
The majority of vets recommend that horses are removed from sycamore pasture after 6 hours. I believe some research has gone into this, suggesting horses with access to grazing longer than this are more likely to suffer from sycamore poisoning.What got me was that the sycamore’s aren’t a problem until he’s been out for 6 hours and then the horse must come in because of them. What do they do past the 6 hour mark to all of a sudden become a problem?
The majority of vets recommend that horses are removed from sycamore pasture after 6 hours. I believe some research has gone into this, suggesting horses with access to grazing longer than this are more likely to suffer from sycamore poisoning.
Like other posters my porky overweight natives never go without forage though. Although we dont deal with equine asthma, I have a hay allergy so have to feed haylage. They also get chopped straw overnight to prevent them going without. They have multiple small holed nets so there is always forage left by the morning.