Soaked Oats Diet?

MrMeldrew

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What are the benefits, what type of horse does it suit and what are the details please?
Thanks
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Found the fact sheet:

Here's the fact sheet.

"This is a diet I reccomend for all horses but especially for horses that are not 'doing well' or showing dietary problems like spots or sweet itch or just simply being 'hyper'. It suits all horses and is much more cost effective as well as healthier.

OATS are classed as both as a herb and a food, they are a strength-giving, low in starch but high in minerals. Also rich in Vitamin B, they contain alkaloids, glycosides and fixed oils which are an important source of vitamine E. They are a nerve tonic and bone building and contrary to modern day thinking, are the best possible feed for horses that are in work. The best way to feed them is soaked as explained here.

Soaked whole oats, soaked for 12-24 hours in cold water, this makes the oat a living enzyme again, which enables the horse to digest them more easily. Because they are now a living enzyme and easier to digested, the energy is released into the system quicker and without any build up of lactic acid, so no tying up, and also the horses hold their weight better, also as the starches are broken down easier it does not affect the temperment, also the benefits of soaking inclunde the fact that any chemical residue from sprays etc...are washed away, but not the goodness of the oat, also as vit E is in the outer husk of the oat, after soaking it becomes absorbable. The oats should be drained if possible overnight or for at least 1 and a half hours before starting to feed, and enough can be put up to last a whole day. If they are put up for example at 5 pm and drained at 5 pm the next evening, once a routine is established it is very simple, all you need is a hessain sack and a spare dustbin.

In light work I would suggest approx 2 to 3 lb of oats twice a day with alfalfa (weigh soaked oats not dry) and of course good hay. The amount can be increased gradually if and when work increases.

Carrots are excellent for the liver and the digestive system and full of calcium. Always make sure they are sliced sideways to avoid choke, another good vegetable that horses like is turnips or swedes, cut half a turnip into the feed trough twice a week to let them play with it, it is very nutritous.

The best supplement to feed in seaweed, one 15ml measure once a day, it is high in minerals and trace elements. It is rich in copper iron magnesium and phosphorus silicon and sulphur. The iodine content, which is a supreme gland builder and conditioner, reduces excess fatty tissue and removes toxic elements, along with iron which of course is premier importance to the blood, promoting oxygen absorbtion and building red corpuscules.

Alfalfa is classed as a herb cos it is very deep rooting, it is a rich source of calcium and also contains chlorine, magnesium, phosph.. potass.. sodium and sulphur..it is also rich in vits. It is high in protein, it is also a diuretic and more importantly it has 8 digestive enzymes in it which stimulate the digestive system, enabling the proper assimilation of the nutrients provided. It is a very good 'balancer' to be fed with oats, although it is a complete feed in its own right. To add to the oat diet add a double handfull mixed in with each feed.

Sugar beet, prefably unmolassed helps to keep condition on, it is also good for keeping bowels working, and is high in calcium.

A bran mash twice a week with a small handfull of epsom salts to keep their system clean, this has become unfashionable due to modern day nutritionists, however it is as good for horses nowadays as it was in the past. Cider vinegar internally, is good for them, an egg cupfull daily, this is also excellent used externally for any sore and inflamed joints.

Salt should be available, the best source is rock salt, not the man made licks but the rock salt that is dug out of the ground and many feed merchants sell it.

For those horses that need to put on weight or hold condition boiled barley linseed and flaked maize are all good fattening foods.

And finally but equally important is good quality hay. If you have to feed haylage for some reason than feed good quality oat straw to bulk them up.

I realise that this diet is 'old fashioned' and that the modern day nutritionists say that it is bad for horses, however, as it was all that horses were fed in the past, and the horses were far fitter, healthier, les colics, ulcers, hardly any sweet itch, fewer cases of tying up, fewer cases of fractures and bursting, far less cases of laminitis, it think the evidence speaks for itself, and I am confident that you will be delighted with the results, apart from the fact that it will save you a lot of money!!

For the best source of unmolassed sugar beet and Alfalfa contact a company called simple systems tel no 01371 870753 Simple systems also provide grass nuts and other beneficial feeds.

Any futher questions or queries please do not hesitate to contact me

Ellen Collinson
Manor Farm
Saxby
Melton Mowbray
Leics
LEI 2RR"
 
Nope - they get what they need from them and the alfalfa - I had to read it through a couple of times to get my head round it but it is a complete diet for them and they do ever so well on it and it is cheaper then so many of the 'new' ready made mixes - which can be full of molasses and other stuff.
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I'm really interested in this - apart from being classified as an old f*!t, I have wanted to see if we could go back to the old feeding regimes which I have fond memories of!
One stumbling block - what seaweed is recommended? I used to get something which I think was called Maxavite.
 
Do you know if there are any equines that it is not suitable for such as ulcer prone horses?

Have you heard of any negative experiences?
 
[ QUOTE ]
I'm really interested in this - apart from being classified as an old f*!t, I have wanted to see if we could go back to the old feeding regimes which I have fond memories of!
One stumbling block - what seaweed is recommended? I used to get something which I think was called Maxavite.

[/ QUOTE ]

I too am an old f*!t. I get my seaweed off ebay

http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/SEAWEED-MEAL-900g-...=item4147662b37

As you can see, not costly at all, this size does my two for a month!
 
I have fed it to several horses and have not had an adverse reaction from any of them, the only thing I do different is to feed a broad vit/min instead of seaweed.

These days I don't bother to drain the oats, just feed them very sloppy
 
Ellen recommended this diet to a racing yard where I used to work, the horses looked fab and the staff said that there was a noticeable change in temperament when they changed from racemix to the soaked oat diet. Her herbal products are pretty good too!
 
[ QUOTE ]
The oats should be drained if possible overnight or for at least 1 and a half hours before starting to feed, [ QUOTE ]


Why do they need to be drained?
 
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