FinkleyAlex
Well-Known Member
Background info - M (20 year old PBA) used to live off thin air (decent grazing 8-4pm, 1/2 haynets at night and a handful of happy hoof for supplements). He went out on loan but stayed on the yard we'd been at for three years who knew of his history of laminitis (one episode about 7 years ago, never had it since as long as we kept his diet and turnout the same). I moved back home for the year and found out they'd allowed him to get very fat and he'd come down with low grade laminitis - with the vets advice we put him on a diet and got him slim again. I then got a phone call from the YO saying he was too thin - went to visit him and he was underweight with a lot of muscle wastage.
Brought him home and he put on a bit of weight over late summer (living out 24/7 on good grass) but seems to be going downhill again. He is turned out from 8-4pm on what is now relatively poor grazing thanks to the rain, but he is always has his head down - just the quality isn't great. He gets two huge haynets of hay a night, and 1 1/2 scoops of happy hoof, 1 scoop of Topspec cool conditioning cubes and some oil + NAF superflex. He is shiny, seems happy in himself but I can still see his ribs (he doesn't look like a rescue case but I'm definitely not happy with how he looks). The vet has done his teeth (a little sharp but nothing too bad) and blood tests showed everything was working fine, no worm burden was found (and he is regularly wormed).
Does anyone have any other ideas, bearing in mind he can't have 'proper' cereal feeds? I thought maybe he may have ulcers from the diet but the vet doesn't think he has so didn't want to test for it.
Brought him home and he put on a bit of weight over late summer (living out 24/7 on good grass) but seems to be going downhill again. He is turned out from 8-4pm on what is now relatively poor grazing thanks to the rain, but he is always has his head down - just the quality isn't great. He gets two huge haynets of hay a night, and 1 1/2 scoops of happy hoof, 1 scoop of Topspec cool conditioning cubes and some oil + NAF superflex. He is shiny, seems happy in himself but I can still see his ribs (he doesn't look like a rescue case but I'm definitely not happy with how he looks). The vet has done his teeth (a little sharp but nothing too bad) and blood tests showed everything was working fine, no worm burden was found (and he is regularly wormed).
Does anyone have any other ideas, bearing in mind he can't have 'proper' cereal feeds? I thought maybe he may have ulcers from the diet but the vet doesn't think he has so didn't want to test for it.