onemoretime
Well-Known Member
And do you give it once a day or twice a day. Thanks
I give probably 40g once a day but that's only because I buy it in 120kg batches at less than the cost of brewers yeast and it will go out of date if I don't use it. The recommend dose the last time I looked it up was 15g per day for a horse. I would split that between feeds, but I only feed once a day.
I have four 20kg sacks available at £70 a sack if anyone near me wants one.
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Many thanks YCBM. I have just started feed it to her so given a 5mil scoop tonight and tomorrow morning. Going to build up slowly. sorry I can buy a bag from you it would be far too much for one horse but thanks all the same.
Yes I saw that as I bought mine from there but was unsure how much to give her. She is only 15.1 dutch mare. I am thinking a 15mil scoop in each feed - do you think that would be ok, I dont want to over do it? Sorry it was Progressive Earth I bought it from but has same instructions regarding 15mil scoop is 10 grams.Quickly checked on forageplus' site and they recommend between 10g and 25g and helpfully tell you that a 15ml scoop holds 10g
https://forageplus.co.uk/product/yea-sacc-1026-for-horses/
That sounds like a good starting point.
She put up a blog post stating she was wrong and apologising. The socials were then deleted.Did anyone see the post on the Equinatural FB page regarding feeding yeasts to horses and how it has a negative impact on the equine microbiome? She has since removed all her products that contain yea-sacc and Mycosorb from her online shop and deleted her FB page??
I can't even find any further information to back up her findings or supply a link to her post as it has all been removed.
I have fed yeasts all year round for many, many years and have never seen any negative "side effects", always positive improvements.
Did anyone see the post on the Equinatural FB page regarding feeding yeasts to horses and how it has a negative impact on the equine microbiome? She has since removed all her products that contain yea-sacc and Mycosorb from her online shop and deleted her FB page??
I can't even find any further information to back up her findings or supply a link to her post as it has all been removed.
I have fed yeasts all year round for many, many years and have never seen any negative "side effects", always positive improvements.
Depending on the individual, that's theoretically possible. Yeast binds to certain species of bacteria, which will affect the relative abundance of different species in the gut. That may be beneficial if those species are causing symptoms. Components of yeast are being researched as antibiotic alternatives, so anything that binds to those components (an example would be mannose rich fraction) will be affected and not just pathogenic bacteria. As the gut microbiome is as diverse as our genome, it's a very subjective thing. It's why I wouldn't feed yes sacc (or other S. cerivisiae spp.) 'just because'.