MissSBird
Well-Known Member
Poor D has damaged one of her ligaments and has now been on box rest for nearly two months. The good news is, however, that she is allowed to go out in a small grass paddock next Tuesday. Ideally this should become 24/7 turnout.
D is an extremely good doer - she's a fell pony who lives on fresh air. It is a daily battle to control her weight. For the two months she's been in she's been kept on a very low calorie diet of hay that has been soaked for 12 hours and some straw based chaff. She's done very well on this diet.
Whilst she has never had laminitus to my knowledge (a miracle in itself since she was morbidly obese when we got her), I am concerned that just throwing her out onto our good grazing is just asking for trouble.
I'm planning on turning her out for short amounts of time at first, then slowly increasing this time to allow her body to re-adjust to a higher calorie diet once more.
Am I being a bit overly paranoid about this? How long would you take to build up from nothing to 24 hours of grazing a day?
Thanks for all the advice!
D is an extremely good doer - she's a fell pony who lives on fresh air. It is a daily battle to control her weight. For the two months she's been in she's been kept on a very low calorie diet of hay that has been soaked for 12 hours and some straw based chaff. She's done very well on this diet.
Whilst she has never had laminitus to my knowledge (a miracle in itself since she was morbidly obese when we got her), I am concerned that just throwing her out onto our good grazing is just asking for trouble.
I'm planning on turning her out for short amounts of time at first, then slowly increasing this time to allow her body to re-adjust to a higher calorie diet once more.
Am I being a bit overly paranoid about this? How long would you take to build up from nothing to 24 hours of grazing a day?
Thanks for all the advice!