Emilieu
Well-Known Member
Am I right in thinking that feeds should be no bigger than rugby balls BEFORE soaking? Does it matter how big they are afterwards? Deano's grass nuts seem to be swelling to a ridiculous size!
I thought it referred to size of stomach , being the size of a rugby ball. So the feed shouldn't be bigger than that in its made up form?
But surely grass nuts are fibre which is digested in the hindgut? The horse doesn't ration himself to a rugby ball sized amount of grass in the field then stop to digest it!!
It refers to cereals which are digested in the stomach.
Yes but that is continuous small amounts like they are designed to eat.
Short feeds are munched in a different way to grass and hay.
If there is nothing more in the feed than haylage and hay, why feed it? There must be something that needs dygesting differently, surely.. (serious question).
As I understand it starch is best digested in the stomach whereas fibre is digested in the hind gut. If you give an overly large starch-based feed then the stomach may start emptying before the starch has been properly digested, with a two fold result. Firstly the horse will not receive the full calorie benefit from the starch because it has passed from the gut before it was fully digested and secondly the undigested starch can upset the delicate balance in the hind gut which may then lead to various problems including inefficient fibre digestion, laminitis etc.
Whereas if you feed a large fibre feed it is likely to be consumed more slowly in the first place due to the fibrous nature and even if the feed is passed through to the hind gut the fibre is still digested properly and there is no undigested starch to upset the balance of the gut.
Nobody told my cobs that their stomachs are only the size of rugby balls! From the way they nosh, I reckon they think they are Space-hopper* sized!
*sorry to all the young folk who may not know what this is!!!
As I understand it starch is best digested in the stomach whereas fibre is digested in the hind gut. If you give an overly large starch-based feed then the stomach may start emptying before the starch has been properly digested, with a two fold result. Firstly the horse will not receive the full calorie benefit from the starch because it has passed from the gut before it was fully digested and secondly the undigested starch can upset the delicate balance in the hind gut which may then lead to various problems including inefficient fibre digestion, laminitis etc.
Whereas if you feed a large fibre feed it is likely to be consumed more slowly in the first place due to the fibrous nature and even if the feed is passed through to the hind gut the fibre is still digested properly and there is no undigested starch to upset the balance of the gut.
I have found things so much easier since moving to Pure Feeds. I feed most of the horses here one stubbs scoop of Pure Easy and that is that. I spray warm water on it and then feed. One scoop equals 1 kg. The feed has a balancer and chaff in it already. Recommended feeding amount is around 2 kg a day for an average sized horse, so couldn't be easier!![]()