Queenbee
Well-Known Member
All last winter and this summer I've been crowing over the fact that bedding costs me about £2.30 a week as I use big bale straw and bens quite an easy and clean muck out. However, a couple of months ago I found myself mucking out considerably less bedding than I'd put in the day before and this has continued. I had therefore, a sneaky suspicion that it was being eaten as dessert by the beast and low and behold a couple of weeks ago I found him with a gob full! Now on the whole, I don't mind him having a cheeky nibble, but he is a ganet, he normally has his hay on the floor in the winter but with the summer grass, he's had to revert to a small holed large haynet for the daytime... Problem is, no matter what I do, he eats it fast, much faster than I'd like and double netting doesn't seem to help... So when he turns to his bed he is just as sodding greedy. As a result he is now on bed rations, not too bad as he has rubber matting, but the plump thick straw bed has gone, and he has a much thinner one now, he still has a nibble at his bed but not so much as the quantity just isn't there.
I'm not so worried at the moment during the summer while he is in at day, but for the winter I do like him to have a big bed... I am hoping that come the winter, he will be on more hay and as a result less inclined to eat his bed, but if not, I'm going to have to do something, obviously if needs be, I will have to switch bedding, but am debating spraying it with something to see if that helps... I considered and disregarded jeys as I'm sure I've heard that someone's horse still ate it and got ill... That's such a Ben thing to do, I won't risk it. But I was thinking of something perhaps designed for anti cribbing, has anyone used this method? Did it work?
I'm not so worried at the moment during the summer while he is in at day, but for the winter I do like him to have a big bed... I am hoping that come the winter, he will be on more hay and as a result less inclined to eat his bed, but if not, I'm going to have to do something, obviously if needs be, I will have to switch bedding, but am debating spraying it with something to see if that helps... I considered and disregarded jeys as I'm sure I've heard that someone's horse still ate it and got ill... That's such a Ben thing to do, I won't risk it. But I was thinking of something perhaps designed for anti cribbing, has anyone used this method? Did it work?