Michen
Well-Known Member
Can anyone tell me roughly how much a Stubbs scoop (unsoaked) weighs?
Nope but if you are figuring out how long a bag will last based on feeding that rate I'd say you'll probably use far less than the RDA
It really swells when soaked and despite its low calories it's a wonder feed!
No was just trying to work out how much to feed him scoop wise ? says 100g per 100g for maintenance or 200g for weight gain/competition.. so was thinking about 600g. He’s approx 430kg..
Should prob buy some scales!
A round Stubbs scoop is roughly 1kg of unsoaked pellets. I feed about half a scoop to get 500gms
Pink mash is not magic for all horses though. One of my mares, the one with hind gut issues (the pink mash blurb proclaims that it is good for the hind gut) went loopy on it. The other two didnt go loopy but it did nothing for them, though they did all like it.
Over hyped, IME.
Fair enough, but when I was chatting to the vet nurse at clinic about the pink mash and its effect on my mare, she said that pink mash had had the same adverse effect on her horses.might be for you, but its been magical almost for the 6 of mine that have had it, so its always worth trying. It was instrumental in resolving hindgut issues in one
Recently took on a slightly underweight 16.3/17hh horse. He gets a very specific double handful of pink mash, single handful of grassnuts and 100gm of linseed with unmolassed chaff (dengie meadow grass) with salt and vit/mins.
We have next to no grass, in overnight with adlib hay and hay put out in field.
He had packed on weight on that minuscule amount. Hes not in work just but but hes gone from seeing the top of the shelf of his ribs and ribs to being nicely covered and super shiny. I think we've had him approx 5wks now
So yeah no help at all but it works magic!
Fair enough, but when I was chatting to the vet nurse at clinic about the pink mash and its effect on my mare, she said that pink mash had had the same adverse effect on her horses.
So like with all feed changes, take it slowly and be prepared to ditch it if it doesn't work out (no matter what the blurb says). I took too long to make the connection...
we were feeding it to some gut issue ones but we had a nutritionist come to the yard (who is not linked to any feed companies) and he advised us to knock it off as he said you get the same effect with speedibeet and a good balancer. he said the linseed would give benefits, but nothing more than just feeding it in a normal feed would. and their vitamin thing is just a normal vitamin that most people are giving in their balancer or other feed anyway. His view was it's another product that sells the waste from an industry to horse people for a good mark up. Also the soya can be dodgy for some.
It has linseed in it, it would do my spotty horse's head in. The super fibre is soya hulls and I'm very wary of soya since my TB did so badly on feed with it in.
.
I read a study, a while back, that said the soya hulls aren't inflammatory, it's other parts of the bean. Trying to find it to post it....I found out after my TB got thin on a soya containing feed that soya is inflammatory, and I wondered why we would want any horse fed a known inflammatory substance.
Some manage it well, of course.
.
Pink mash is not magic for all horses though. One of my mares, the one with hind gut issues (the pink mash blurb proclaims that it is good for the hind gut) went loopy on it. The other two didnt go loopy but it did nothing for them, though they did all like it.
Over hyped, IME.