NeverSayNever
Well-Known Member
this is a genuine musing... i am new to having a native foal (sec A) and got thinking earlier...
why do so many owners of native foals and yearlings rug them, and feed them youngstock mixes or youngstock vitamins? i recently spoke to a feed company nutritionalist on the phone who assured me that my foal "needed the youngstock balancer her company sell to grow properly and he would be nutritionally deficient without and risk his development". So what about the ponies on the welsh mountains? That live on fresh air and sparse grass, and thrive! Do they really do well? If so, why do we need to feed up and rug our native youngsters? Does doing so mean we are extending their life expectancy and protecting them, whereas a pony wild on a mountain would perhaps not live and be fit for so long? surely im still doing this by providing a cosy shelter and adlib hay for my baby?
why do so many owners of native foals and yearlings rug them, and feed them youngstock mixes or youngstock vitamins? i recently spoke to a feed company nutritionalist on the phone who assured me that my foal "needed the youngstock balancer her company sell to grow properly and he would be nutritionally deficient without and risk his development". So what about the ponies on the welsh mountains? That live on fresh air and sparse grass, and thrive! Do they really do well? If so, why do we need to feed up and rug our native youngsters? Does doing so mean we are extending their life expectancy and protecting them, whereas a pony wild on a mountain would perhaps not live and be fit for so long? surely im still doing this by providing a cosy shelter and adlib hay for my baby?