Jericho
Well-Known Member
I hate laminitis - arggghhhhhhhhhh.
Please can anyone give me some advice on what you would do. My farrier has just told me I should be worrying that my TBx mare who 3 mths ago was looking rather lean and ribby but looks great now should not be out on a 2 acre field 24/7 as the grass is too rich. I have this mare plus a Welsh A who is very prone to lami and a 3yr old Shetland - who hasnt had lami yet but am treating her like my Welsh A. Currently Welsh and Shetti are in tennis court sized field 24/7 very bare and on 2 slices of hay a day each. The TB is out in the rest of the field c2 acres very long, thick grass but full of weeds, buttercups, tough rank grass so not much nice grazing grass. We also have a small turnout paddock again the size of a tennis court but which used to be lawn and was until 3 years ago fertilised. This paddock gave my Welsh A lami last year when it was just her on it 24/7 so none are on that. All fields are linked so I could use a combination of all three . So do you think the TB is at risk (I know in theory all horses are at risk) she doesnt get anyother feed except half a scoop of Baileys No 4 to mix some Flyfree supplement in. Would you bring the TB in during the day or night with the 2 smaller ones so she has a break from the grass? What about the issue of stressed short grass producing more sugar? My farrier swears that this is not the case - lots of conflicting advice......
Sorry, it is all a bit confusing and am tying myself up in knots over best solution so advice from anyone with laminitic prone TBs or has a mixture of horses/lami ponies - I would love to hear your experiences.
Please can anyone give me some advice on what you would do. My farrier has just told me I should be worrying that my TBx mare who 3 mths ago was looking rather lean and ribby but looks great now should not be out on a 2 acre field 24/7 as the grass is too rich. I have this mare plus a Welsh A who is very prone to lami and a 3yr old Shetland - who hasnt had lami yet but am treating her like my Welsh A. Currently Welsh and Shetti are in tennis court sized field 24/7 very bare and on 2 slices of hay a day each. The TB is out in the rest of the field c2 acres very long, thick grass but full of weeds, buttercups, tough rank grass so not much nice grazing grass. We also have a small turnout paddock again the size of a tennis court but which used to be lawn and was until 3 years ago fertilised. This paddock gave my Welsh A lami last year when it was just her on it 24/7 so none are on that. All fields are linked so I could use a combination of all three . So do you think the TB is at risk (I know in theory all horses are at risk) she doesnt get anyother feed except half a scoop of Baileys No 4 to mix some Flyfree supplement in. Would you bring the TB in during the day or night with the 2 smaller ones so she has a break from the grass? What about the issue of stressed short grass producing more sugar? My farrier swears that this is not the case - lots of conflicting advice......
Sorry, it is all a bit confusing and am tying myself up in knots over best solution so advice from anyone with laminitic prone TBs or has a mixture of horses/lami ponies - I would love to hear your experiences.