Oberon
Well-Known Member
Hi Oberon...
He's on 2:1 Calm & Condition to Fast Fibre... I'm not sure about the grazing aspect as there's been no tests run on the field - but the farrier is fairly local so maybe (I've no real idea) his suggestion was as much to do with area as a 'one supplement' cures all approach... Not sure...
In all fairness, all the horses on the yard appear very healthy and all are on the same field... 14 horses, 23 or so acres... We got him in May and he did go into a sheep pasture initially as he was in such poor condition - the grass was even more lush and he'd not have coped going into the herd... Two months and he was booted out into the main turnout and has continued to steadily improved in condition...
His feet are better than when he arrived - they weren't far off the bone... Just not good I guess... Maybe if he'd gone into boots rather than shoes it would have helped... Hindsight though...I didn't know they existed and no one on the yard or the farrier suggested them...
They were so bad when he arrived I'm a bit worried that normal turnout without shoes will put him straight back there - and I'm not sure boots would survive some areas of the field with the mud etc at the moment...
You're looking at the hooves and trying to help - that gives you a
BF horses do endurance. Hooves in the wild do 15 - 20 miles a day from the second day of life.
I've never heard of a case where a BF horse (with a good diet) has worn his hooves away - even in hard work.
It seems that your TB is not happy with the diet he is being fed.
Fast Fibre is great stuff. Calm and Condition is (I think) 13% starch/sugar - you need to stay under 10%, including his grass and hay intake.
I would recommend FF and changing the C&C for a good mineral supplement. Add micronised linseed (Omega's, gut health, joint health and coat).
If he needs more weight then try unmolassed beet or just some soya oil
(Horses get most of their calorie intake from fermenting fibre - so if you want more weight then add more fibre).
These changes alone may be all that's required to improve his hooves if you wish to keep the shoes on.